Speakers
Roberto Colom
- University of Madrid
Paper
Roberto Colom is
Professor of Psychology at the Universidad
Autónoma de Madrid (UAM) and
researches the psychometric,
cognitive, and biological bases of intelligence (cognitive ability)
and personality.
William T. Dickens -
University of Maryland
Paper
William T. Dickens is the Thomas Schelling Visiting Professor in the
Public Policy School at the University of Maryland a Non-Resident
Senior Fellow in the Economic Studies Program at The Brookings
Institution, and a consultant to the New York Federal Reserve Bank.
His areas of expertise are labor markets, wage determination,
unemployment, monetary policy, inner-city employment problems,
effects of trade on employment and wages, intelligence testing, and
psychology and economics.


James Flynn -
University of Otago
Paper
Author of six books, Prof Flynn has combined political and moral
philosophy with psychology to clarify problems such as justifying
humane ideals and whether it makes sense to rank races and classes
by merit. Professor Flynn has been profiled in Scientific American
and ran for the New Zealand Parliament in 1993 and 1996 as Alliance
candidate for Dunedin North. Research Interests: Humane ideals and
ideological debate; classics of political philosophy; race, class
and IQ.
Han L. J. van der Maas -
University of Amsterdam
Paper
Professor and Chair of the Psychological Methods group at the
University of Amsterdam.
Jelte M. Wicherts - University of Amsterdam
Jelte Wicherts studied psychological methods at the University of
Amsterdam. In 2002 he received his MSc (cum laude)
with a thesis on the equivalence of various questionnaires across
administration methods (paper&pencil vs. computerized). In March
2007 he received his PhD (cum laude) from the
Psychological Methods Department of the University of Amsterdam with
a thesis entitled: Group differences in intelligence test
performance. Currently he is an assistant
professor at the Psychological Methods group. In April 2007 he
received a Veni-grant (208.000
euros) from the Netherlands Organization of Research (NWO). He is a
member of the Editorial Board of the journal Intelligence.

Linda Gottfredson - University of Delaware
Linda S. Gottfredson is
professor in the School of Education and Affiliated Faculty in the
Honors Program at the University of Delaware. She
serves on the editorial board of Intelligence and the board
of directors of the International Society for Intelligence Research.
Dr. Gottfredson
is perhaps most widely known for her clear, rigorous, and forthright
analyses of individual and group differences in intelligence,
especially as they affect life chances and public policy. Her
current research focuses on the role of patient intelligence in
health self-care, including adherence to treatment, self-management
of chronic illness, and accident prevention. She received her PhD in
1976 from the Johns Hopkins University.
Discussants
Richard Nisbett - University of Michigan
Richard Nisbett is the Theodore M. Newcomb Distinguished
Professor of social psychology and co-director of the Culture and
Cognition program at the University of Michigan at Ann Arbor. Dr.
Nisbett's research interests are in social cognition, culture,
social class and aging. he received his Ph.D from Columbia
University and his A.B. from Tufts University. In 2002 he was
elected to the National Academy of Sciences.
David Grissmer - University of Virginia
David Grissmer is a senior management scientist at RAND. He
holds a Ph.D. in physics from Purdue University. His education
research includes teacher supply and demand, teacher compensation
and attrition patterns, analysis of national test scores to
determine the causes of changing trends, analyzing state test scores
to determine causes of state differences, and effects of class size
reductions. He is currently working with the Office of Science and
Technology Policy in the White House to assess the federal research
and development portfolio on children and methods of improving
research on children. His current work also includes developing
estimates of the number and location of children at educational risk
in the U.S. and analyzing achievement patterns in central city,
suburban, and rural schools.


John Loehlin - University of Texas, Austin
John Loehlin is Professor Emeritus of Psychology and Computer
Science at the University of Texas at Austin. He was born in India
in 1926 of U. S. missionary parents, and attended mission schools in
that country. He received an A.B. in English from Harvard in 1947,
and a Ph.D. in Psychology from the University of California at
Berkeley in 1957. He has served as president of the Behavior
Genetics Association and of the Society for Multivariate
Experimental Psychology. His research has chiefly focused on
the genetic and environmental contributions to individual
differences in normal human personality traits and abilities; he has
also been concerned with racial differences and with computer
modeling.

Eric Turkheimer -
University of Virginia
Eric Turkheimer received his B.A. from Haverford College in 1976 and
studied clinical psychology and behavior genetics under Lee
Willerman and John Loehlin at the Univeristy of Texas at Austin.
After completing his Ph.D. at the University of Texas in 1985 and a
clinical intership at the University of California, San Francisco in
1986, he accepted a faculty position at the University of Virginia
where he currently Professor and Director of Clinical Training.