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Robert J. Sternberg
Researcher at Cornell University
Publications - 1102
Citations - 93470
Robert J. Sternberg is an academic researcher from Cornell University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Creativity & Human intelligence. The author has an hindex of 149, co-authored 1066 publications receiving 89193 citations. Previous affiliations of Robert J. Sternberg include Ohio State University & University of Amsterdam.
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Journal ArticleDOI
468 Factor-Analyzed Data Sets: What They Tell Us and Don't Tell Us About Human Intelligence:
TL;DR: Carroll as discussed by the authors conducted a massive reanalysis of 477 data sets, representing analyses of human abilities, with reo spect to country of origin (most being from the United States, but others coming from England, Canada, Germany, and Australia, as well as fewer from non· English-speaking countries), date of original publication, age levels of subjects (ranging from 6 months to 71 years), genders of subjects, and types of samples (students, military personnel, infants, prisoninmates, people in variou.
Journal ArticleDOI
Still Searching for the Zipperump‐a‐Zoo: A Reflection After 40 Years
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors describe chronologically their attempts over a 40-year career to understand the nature of human intelligence and explain how later attempts built on earlier ones, with each attempt revealing the earlier one to be too limited and narrow in the questions it asked.
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Would You Rather Take Orders From Kirk or Spock? The Relation Between Rational Thinking and Intelligence
TL;DR: It is concluded that rational thinking is a part of intelligence, but not a major part, and an alternative concept, practical intelligence (or the lack thereof), may better accomplish the goals that Stanovich wishes to achieve with his concept.
Book ChapterDOI
Epilogue: Another Mysterious Affair at Styles
TL;DR: In The Mysterious Affair at Styles, Agatha Christie created a convoluted murder mystery the first involving her famous detective Hercule Poirot with a surplus of suspects and an abundance of reasons why each suspect might be the guilty party as mentioned in this paper.