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The matrix reasoning item bank (MaRs-IB): novel, open-access abstract reasoning items for adolescents and adults
Author(s) -
Gabriele Chierchia,
Delia Fuhrmann,
Lisa J. Knoll,
Blanca Piera PiSunyer,
Ashok Sakhardande,
SarahJayne Blakemore
Publication year - 2019
Publication title -
royal society open science
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.84
H-Index - 51
ISSN - 2054-5703
DOI - 10.1098/rsos.190232
Subject(s) - mars exploration program , verbal reasoning , psychology , matrix (chemical analysis) , measure (data warehouse) , computer science , artificial intelligence , cognitive psychology , data mining , cognition , physics , materials science , astronomy , neuroscience , composite material
Existing non-verbal ability tests are typically protected by copyright, preventing them from being freely adapted or computerized. Working towards an open science framework, we provide 80 novel, open-access abstract reasoning items, an online implementation and item-level data from 659 participants aged between 11 and 33 years: the matrix reasoning item bank (MaRs-IB). Each MaRs-IB item consists of an incomplete matrix containing abstract shapes. Participants complete the matrices by identifying relationships between the shapes. Our data demonstrate age differences in non-verbal reasoning accuracy, which increased during adolescence and stabilized in early adulthood. There was a slight linear increase in response times with age, resulting in a peak in efficiency (i.e. a measure combining speed and accuracy) in late adolescence. Overall, the data suggest that the MaRs-IB is sensitive to developmental differences in reasoning accuracy. Further psychometric validation is recommended.

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