Mark C. Fox
Florida State University
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Publication
Featured researches published by Mark C. Fox.
Journal of Experimental Psychology: General | 2013
Mark C. Fox; Ainsley Mitchum
Secular gains in intelligence test scores have perplexed researchers since they were documented by Flynn (1984, 1987). Gains are most pronounced on abstract, so-called culture-free tests, prompting Flynn (2007) to attribute them to problem-solving skills availed by scientifically advanced cultures. We propose that recent-born individuals have adopted an approach to analogy that enables them to infer higher level relations requiring roles that are not intrinsic to the objects that constitute initial representations of items. This proposal is translated into item-specific predictions about differences between cohorts in pass rates and item-response patterns on the Ravens Matrices (Flynn, 1987), a seemingly culture-free test that registers the largest Flynn effect. Consistent with predictions, archival data reveal that individuals born around 1940 are less able to map objects at higher levels of relational abstraction than individuals born around 1990. Polytomous Rasch models verify predicted violations of measurement invariance, as raw scores are found to underestimate the number of analogical rules inferred by members of the earlier cohort relative to members of the later cohort who achieve the same overall score. The work provides a plausible cognitive account of the Flynn effect, furthers understanding of the cognition of matrix reasoning, and underscores the need to consider how test-takers select item responses.
Aging Neuropsychology and Cognition | 2010
Mark C. Fox; Neil Charness
ABSTRACT Few studies have examined the impact of age on reactivity to concurrent think-aloud (TA) verbal reports. An initial study with 30 younger and 31 older adults revealed that thinking aloud improves older adult performance on a short form of the Ravens Matrices (Bors & Stokes, 1998, Educational and Psychological Measurement, 58, p. 382) but did not affect other tasks. In the replication experiment, 30 older adults (mean age = 73.0) performed the Ravens Matrices and three other tasks to replicate and extend the findings of the initial study. Once again older adults performed significantly better only on the Ravens Matrices while thinking aloud. Performance gains on this task were substantial (d = 0.73 and 0.92 in Experiments 1 and 2, respectively), corresponding to a fluid intelligence increase of nearly one standard deviation.
Aging Neuropsychology and Cognition | 2009
Katinka Dijkstra; Neil Charness; Ryan E. Yordon; Mark C. Fox
ABSTRACT The objective of the current study was to compare the trajectories of physiological levels of stress and self-report measures of mood in younger and older adults and to examine how a stress induction would affect performance. The current study examined physiological and subjective indicators of stress and mood before, mid-way through, and after being exposed to a stressful computer task. Stress levels and negative affect increased after stress induction relative to levels before and after the stressful task. Practice on the task helped to improve performance (accuracy and reaction time) but high workload measured during the task mitigated accuracy in younger and older adults, whereas it enhanced response speed in younger adults.
Psychological Bulletin | 2011
Mark C. Fox; K. Anders Ericsson; Ryan Best
Psychological Bulletin | 2011
K. Anders Ericsson; Mark C. Fox
Journal of Experimental Psychology: General | 2016
Ainsley Mitchum; Colleen M. Kelley; Mark C. Fox
Telemedicine Journal and E-health | 2013
Neil Charness; Mark C. Fox; Amy Papadopoulos; Cindy Crump
Intelligence | 2009
Mark C. Fox; Roy W. Roring; Ainsley Mitchum
Archive | 2010
Neil Charness; Mark C. Fox
Archive | 2009
Neil Charness; Michael Champion; Ainsley Mitchum; Mark C. Fox