| Literature DB >> 25653868 |
Abstract
The association between myopia and high intelligence has been the subject of much vexed debate in academic circles, particularly over the last two decades. This debate has risen from the observation that, over recent centuries, the prevalence of myopia amongst most populations has coincided with a marked increase in the average level of intelligence in these populations. The relationship between myopia and intelligence and theories surrounding this association is examined by the authors. Additionally, the various factors that confound the myopia and high intelligence debate, such as genetics, educational levels, ethnicity, and environmental factors were also explored by the authors. Whilst most studies found a positive correlation reaching statistical significance between myopia and high intelligence compared to emmetropes and hyperopes, further research is required to determine whether this association is causal.Entities:
Year: 2015 PMID: 25653868 PMCID: PMC4306218 DOI: 10.1155/2015/271746
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Ophthalmol ISSN: 2090-004X Impact factor: 1.909
Description of key elements and validity of main intelligence tests.
| Test | Developer | Format | Age | Areas tested | Scientific reliability and validity |
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| Raven Progressive Matrix Test | John C. Raven | Nonverbal | 5–elderly | General intelligence | Demonstrates good convergent validity and slightly impaired discriminant validity [ |
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| Otis Test | Arthur Simon Otis | Multiple choice—verbal and non-verbal areas tested | Pre-kinder–18 | Verbal, quantitative, and spatial reasoning ability | Easy to administer but some concerns about less reliable accuracy at higher levels [ |
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| Stanford-Binet IQ Test | Alfred Binet | Verbal and nonverbal subtests | 2–85+ | Knowledge | Substantial split-life reliability compared to other tests [ |
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| California Test of Mental Maturity | Elizabeth Sullivan | 253 items in 16 subtests over 2 × 45 minute periods | 5+ | Logical reasoning | Some concerns about difficulty of items and validity in extrapolating results to predict school performance [ |
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| Wechsler Intelligence Scale for Children | David Wechsler | Verbal test taking 48–65 minutes | 6–15 | Verbal comprehension | High levels of convergent, construct, and discriminant validity [ |
Summary of study results linking myopia and high intelligence.
| Study | Country | Number of | Age (years) | Range of myopia | Intelligence test performed | IQ | Test/school | Significance level∗ |
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| Young 1955 [ | USA | 633 | 6–17 | Not specified | Stanford-Binet | Average | N/A |
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| Nadell and Hirsch 1958 [ | USA | 414 | 14–18 | Not specified | CTMM | Higher | N/A |
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| Hirsch 1959 [ | USA | 554 | 6–17 | Not specified | Stanford-Binet | Higher | N/A |
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| Young 1963 [ | USA | 251 | 5–17 | Not specified | Stanford-Binet | Average | Higher | CC = −0.11/0.10 |
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| Grosvenor 1970 [ | New Zealand | 707 | 11–13 | ≥−1.00 D | Otis Test | Higher | Higher |
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| Karlsson 1976 [ | USA | 2527 | 17-18 | Not specified | Lorge-Thorndike IQ Test | Higher | Higher |
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C. P. Benbow and R. M. Benbow 1984 [ | USA | 416 | 13 | Not specified | Scholastic Aptitude Test | Higher | Higher |
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| Rosner and Belkin 1987 [ | Israel | 157 748 | 17–19 | ≤6/7.5 VA | Verbal Otis Test, Raven Matrix Test | Higher | Higher | Strongly positive association |
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| Williams et al., 1988 [ | New Zealand | 537 | 7–11 | ≥−0.5 D | WISC-R IQ Test | Higher | Higher |
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| Teasdale et al., 1988 [ | Denmark | 15 834 | 18 | ≥−0.25 D to ≤−7.5 D | Group IQ Scores | Higher | Higher |
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| Dolezalova and Mottlova 1995 [ | Czech Republic | 225 | 14–18 | Unknown† | School test scores | Higher | Higher | Unknown† |
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| Saw et al., 2004 [ | Singapore | 1204 | 10–12 | ≥−0.5 D | Raven Matrix Test | Higher | N/A |
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| Saw et al., 2006 [ | Singapore | 994 | 7–9 | ≥−0.5 D | Raven Matrix Test | Higher | Higher |
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| Dirani et al., 2010 [ | Singapore | 1143 | 9-10 | ≥−0.5 D | Raven Matrix Test | Average | Average |
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| Akrami et al., 2012 [ | Iran | 137 | 10–14 | ≥−0.5 D | Unspecified school tests | Average | N/A |
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* P score < 0.05 denotes statistically significant result.
∗∗CC: correlation coefficient.
†Data unavailable in English language at time of the literature review.