Flynn Effect
Flynn Effect
BIBLIOGRAPHY
The term Flynn effect refers to the worldwide phenomenon of markedly increasing mean performance on standardized IQ tests over time. Most current IQ tests are designed to have a population mean of 100 and a standard deviation of 15 at the time they are developed. The mean and standard deviation are set by administering the test to a large group of individuals designed to be representative of the population as a whole (a process referred to as “standardization” or “norming”). However, a growing body of evidence suggests that the mean population performance on IQ tests has improved markedly over the decades since they were first introduced in 1905. Over a period of several years after an IQ test is introduced, the test’s mean of 100 becomes obsolete and IQ scores become elevated overall. Periodic renorming of IQ tests (typically at twelve- to twenty-five-year intervals) have helped mask the magnitude of this IQ increase. To compensate for improvements in performance over time and to ensure that the mean score is 100, individuals in the standardization group for a newer IQ test typically have to answer more (or harder) questions to obtain the same score on the new test as on an older test.
The degree and scope of the phenomenon of improved IQ test performance was not broadly known until James Flynn (b. 1934), a political scientist at the University of Otago in New Zealand, wrote two seminal articles on the topic that appeared in Psychological Bulletin in 1984 and 1987. Flynn reviewed dozens of studies in which groups were administered two or more IQ tests that were standardized at different times. Flynn noted that in these studies the groups’ mean performance on a test with newer standardization samples was nearly always lower than their performance on a test with older standardization samples.
Flynn has estimated the size of the Flynn effect on the Wechsler and Stanford-Binet series of IQ tests (the most widely used IQ tests in the United States) as being at about 3 points per decade or about.3 points per year (Flynn 1984, 2006). This rate of improvement has been remarkably consistent across different time periods and tests within these series. However, the rate of improvement is not uniform across all varieties of IQ tests, or even on subtests within a particular IQ test. The largest gains (.5 points per year or more) have been found on Ravens Progressive Matrices, a nonverbal pattern recognition IQ test. Lowest gains (near 0 points per year) have been on Wechsler Verbal IQ subtests such as vocabulary, information, and arithmetic.
Because of the time and cost involved in administering standardized IQ tests, they are typically administered only to students who are being considered for special education or gifted and talented programs. The Flynn effect has been found to particularly affect the educational classifications of students who are being tested for eligibility for these services shortly before and after a revised IQ test comes out.
The impact of the Flynn effect on children being tested for mental retardation services in the early 1990s was quite substantial. The IQ criterion for mental retardation is typically an IQ of 70 or below, which is two standard deviations below the mean of 100 on current IQ tests (allowances for measurement error typically permit a score of up to 75). When the Wechsler Intelligence Scale for Children–Third Edition (WISC–III) supplanted the Wechsler Intelligence Scale for Children–Revised (WISC–R) in 1991, the test norms for the WISC–R were nineteen years old. Tomoe Kanaya, Matthew Scullin, and Stephen Ceci (2003) found that children in the mild mental retardation and borderline IQ ranges scored more than five points lower on the WISC–III than on the WISC–R, which is similar to what was found with children in the average range of intelligence. This five-point difference in scores more than doubled the number of children who were eligible for mental retardation services on the basis of their IQ scores. This is because about 2.27 percent of children would be expected to obtain an IQ score of 70 or below on the WISC–III at the time of its standardization, whereas the obsolete WISC–R was only capturing the bottom 0.87 percent of children by 1991. Scullin (2006) found that in forty-three states and in the United States as a whole, a long and steady decline in the percentage of schoolchildren receiving mental retardation services during the 1980s and early 1990s ended and indeed reversed around the time of the introduction of the WISC–III.
As the norms of an IQ test grow older, the Flynn effect increases the number of children eligible for learning disability services in areas in which the criterion for eligibility is a significant discrepancy between children’s IQ scores and their performance on an achievement test. Higher IQ test scores relative to achievement result in an increased likelihood of finding a significant discrepancy. Similarly, more children become eligible for gifted and talented programs over time as it becomes easier to meet the criterion. Once a newly standardized test is introduced, these trends reverse themselves and it becomes harder to meet the IQ–achievement discrepancy criterion for learning disability and the IQ threshold for gifted and talented services.
As documented by Ulric Neisser (in The Rising Curve, 1998), the Flynn effect raises some important nature vs. nurture questions about the relative strength of genes and environment in determining intelligence, and about IQ as an estimate of intelligence. The Rising Curve was written in response to Richard Herrnstein and Charles Murray’s best-selling book The Bell Curve (1994), in which the authors argued that intelligence is assessed well by IQ tests and that low IQ is related to a wide range of negative life outcomes, from criminality to risk for divorce. Herrnstein and Murray used behavioral genetics data to make a case for a strong genetic influence on IQ, including ethnic differences in mean IQ scores. Neisser counter-argued that IQ scores have been increasing at too rapid a rate to be explained by genetics alone, which suggests that there are strong environmental influences affecting IQ scores. Neisser’s book noted that possible non-genetic explanations for the Flynn effect include increasing environmental complexity, new schooling techniques, and improvements in nutrition.
Just as there is no consensus about the origins of the Flynn effect, there is conflicting evidence about whether the Flynn effect is continuing unabated. In the United States, comparison study data for the Wechsler Adult Intelligence Scale–Third Edition (standardized in 1995) suggested that perhaps the rate of IQ increases in the United States was diminishing. Longitudinal data from IQ-test–like draft-board examinations of all draft-eligible males in some European countries also documented a leveling-off of IQ score gains during the 1990s. However, data from comparison studies for the Stanford-Binet Intelligence Scale–Fifth Edition and Wechsler Intelligence Scale for Children–Fourth Edition (both normed around 2001) suggest that the best estimate of the rate of IQ test improvement in the United States is currently still around.3 points per year (Flynn 2006).
SEE ALSO Intelligence; IQ Controversy; Psychometrics; Scales
Flynn, James R. 1984. The Mean IQ of Americans: Massive Gains from 1932 to 1978. Psychological Bulletin 95 (1): 29–51.
Flynn, James R. 1987. Massive IQ Gains in 14 Nations: What Intelligence Tests Really Measure. Psychological Bulletin 101 (2): 171–191.
Flynn, James R. 2006. Tethering the Elephant: Capital Cases, IQ, and the Flynn Effect. Psychology, Public Policy, and Law 12 (2): 170–189.
Herrnstein, Richard J., and Charles Murray. 1994. The Bell Curve: Intelligence and Class Structure in American Life. New York: Free Press.
Kanaya, Tomoe, Matthew H. Scullin, and Stephen J. Ceci. 2003. The Flynn Effect and U.S. Policies: The Impact of Rising IQs on American Society via Mental Retardation Diagnoses. American Psychologist 58 (10): 778–790.
Neisser, Ulric, ed. 1998. The Rising Curve: Long-Term Gains in IQ and Related Measures. Washington, DC: American Psychological Association.
Scullin, Matthew H. 2006. Large State-Level Fluctuations in Mental Retardation Classifications Related to Introduction of Renormed Intelligence Test. American Journal on Mental Retardation 111 (5): 322–335.
Matthew H. Scullin
Cite this article
Pick a style below, and copy the text for your bibliography.
|
Optometry and eye care in India.(Letter To Editor)(Letter to the editor)
Magazine article from: Indian Journal of Ophthalmology; 5/1/1998; ; 700+ words
; ...there should be better utilisation of optometry in India. For this to happen, a certain clarity has to be brought to its role. Optometry continues to be defined and described...misinterpreted, and sometimes belittled. Optometry has been in the process of interpreting...
|
|
COLUMN: U. Missouri-St. Louis optometry school celebrates milestone
News Wire article from: University Wire; 12/18/2006; ; 700+ words
; ...ST. LOUIS -- The campus' School of Optometry celebrated a milestone this year, when...Students who have taken advantage of the Optometry School's eye care may be aware of that...passed the National Board of Examiners in Optometry examination, the first time in the nation...
|
|
National Optometry Hall of Fame Selects Six for 2000 Induction.
PR Newswire; 6/2/2000; 700+ words
; ...June 2 /PRNewswire/ -- The National Optometry Hall of Fame selection committee has...degree at the Pennsylvania College of Optometry, and later his Ph.D. from the University...Haffner has been a strong voice for Optometry on multiple fronts, among those most...
|
|
Researchers from New England College of Optometry, College of Optometry detail new studies and findings in the area of optometry.
Newspaper article from: Health & Medicine Week; 4/27/2009; 700+ words
; ...In this recent article published in the journal Optometry and Vision Science, scientists in the United...Johnson and colleagues, New England College of Optometry, College of Optometry (see also Optometry). The researchers concluded...
|
|
INDIANA UNIVERSITY OPTOMETRY STUDENTS LOOKING TO BENEFIT FROM NEW VIDEO-CONFERENCING CENTER
News Wire article from: US Fed News Service, Including US State News; 2/25/2009; 700+ words
; ...release: The Indiana University School of Optometry and The Vision Care Institute LLC have...professional-level training opportunities for optometry students with the opening of a satellite...extraordinary facility at the IU School of Optometry," said Dr. Sarita Soni, interim dean...
|
|
Polish educators to tour Pennsylvania College of Optometry.
PR Newswire; 10/6/1989; 700+ words
; ...EDUCATORS TO TOUR PENNSYLVANIA COLLEGE OF OPTOMETRY PHILADELPHIA, Oct. 6 /PRNewswire/ -- Another step toward opening the first optometry school in Poland will take place Monday...will tour the Pennsylvania College of Optometry and its clinical facility, The Eye Institute...
|
|
State Program with Out-of-State Dentistry, Medicine and Optometry Schools Expands Options for N.C. Students.
PR Newswire; 9/14/2006; 700+ words
; ...residents studying medicine, dentistry and optometry at certain out-of-state institutions...the areas of dentistry, medicine and optometry in out-of-state education programs...for these degrees will be available. Optometry Career Conferences North Carolina students...
|
|
Optometry Backs Bill to Expand Access to Eye and Vision Care in Medically Underserved Areas.
PR Newswire; 4/18/2007; 700+ words
; ...links between highly qualified doctors of optometry and communities in rural and urban areas...effective by the exclusion of doctors of optometry, the nation's frontline providers...other vision conditions. "Including optometry students in the National Health Service...
|
|
Optometry Career Conferences Set for Five N.C. Campuses in October.
PR Newswire; 9/27/2007; 684 words
; ...students interested in earning the doctor of optometry degree are encouraged to attend the 2007 Contract Programs Career Conferences on Optometry sponsored by the N.C. State Education...residents of the state pursuing doctor of optometry degrees at four out of state campuses...
|
|
Twintech rises to optometry challenge
Newspaper article from: New Straits Times; 11/23/2008; 529 words
; ...Times 11-23-2008 Twintech rises to optometry challenge Edition: New Sunday Times...Curve Memo: Excellence in education OPTOMETRY is a healthcare profession concerned...doctorate degree (in North America). Optometry is not offered as a diploma level qualification...
|
|
Behavioral Optometry
Encyclopedia entry from: Gale Encyclopedia of Alternative Medicine
Behavioral optometry Definition Behavioral optometry is a system of eye care that emphasizes visual training...a range of different circumstances. Origins Behavioral optometry traces its roots to the writings of Dr. William H. Bates...
|
|
Syntonic Optometry
Encyclopedia entry from: Gale Encyclopedia of Alternative Medicine
Syntonic optometry Definition Syntonic optometry uses colored light shone into a patient's eyes to treat...other dysfunctions. Origins The founding father of syntonic optometry is Dr. Harry Riley Spitler, who developed the discipline...
|
|
Optometry
Book article from: The Oxford Companion to United States History
Optometry. The word “optometry,” from the Greek optos and metron meaning “...spectacles and lenses launched what would become professional optometry in the United States. Two developments by Americans, bifocal...
|
|
optometry
Book article from: The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition
optometry , eye-care specialty concerned with...vision due to refractive error. Modern optometry also includes the fitting of contact...grinds and fits the lenses. The word optometry came into use in 1904 with the organization...
|
|
SIC 8042 Offices and Clinics of Optometrists
Encyclopedia entry from: Encyclopedia of American Industries
...having the degree of O.D. (Doctor of Optometry) and engaged in the practice of optometry. Establishments operating as clinics of...the Association of Schools and Colleges of Optometry (ASCO), there were nearly 30,000 full...
|