V. Egan et al., SIZE ISNT EVERYTHING - A STUDY OF BRAIN VOLUME, INTELLIGENCE AND AUDITORY-EVOKED POTENTIALS, Personality and individual differences, 17(3), 1994, pp. 357-367
Although brain volumes calculated from magnetic resonance (MR) imaging
have been found to correlate with IQ. the relationship between MR-der
ived brain volume and other mental processes has not been examined. Fi
fty normal-ability adults had their brain volume calculated using MR s
canning, along with tasks measuring IQ, memory, and information-proces
sing speed, and an auditory evoked potential (AEP) task. All MR scans
were corrected for artefacts arising from inhomogenous coil response.
Of the three AEP components measured, only P3 latency and amplitude we
re associated with measures of mental ability. Out of the 50 adults te
sted, 40 had usable MR records. Corrected for height and weight, total
brain volume was associated with Full-Scale IQ (r = 0.32, P < 0.025);
when this correlation was corrected for restricted range, the correla
tion increased to 0.66. Although there was no systematic pattern of as
sociations between brain volume and individual measures of memory or i
nformation-processing speed for the bivariate correlations, adjusted R
2s from exploratory multiple regression suggested that while informati
on-processing speed shared 7% of test variance with brain volume, memo
ry might account for 22%, and the complete test battery might account
for as much as 32%. Our study therefore suggests a partial dissociatio
n between mechanisms underlying intelligence, in that brain volume is
associated with mental ability and memory, but not especially with inf
ormation-processing speed.