From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Lee A. Thompson is an American psychology professor known for her work in
behavior genetics and the biological
processes involved in intelligence.
Thompson earned her B.A. from Case Western Reserve
University in 1982, then attended University of Colorado at
Boulder, earning an M.A. in 1985 and her Ph.D. in 1987.
She currently teaches at Case Western and is on the editorial board
of Intelligence.
Thompson co-authored a widely-cited twin study on communication disorders which
found higher concordance in monozygotic twins
than dizygotic twins. [1]
In 1994 she was one of 52 signatories on "Mainstream Science on
Intelligence," an editorial written by Linda
Gottfredson and published in the Wall Street Journal, which defended
the findings on race and intelligence in The Bell
Curve. [2]
Thompson has published studies with other signatories, including Douglas Detterman, Robert Plomin, and David
Lubinski.
She has worked on studies attempting to locate DNA markers associated with high and low intelligence quotient. [3]
Thompson has also used fMRI to localize areas in the brain related
to concentration. [4]
References
- ^ Lewis BA, Thompson LA. A
Study of Developmental Speech and Language Disorders in Twins.
Journal of Speech and Hearing Research Vol.35 1086-1094
October 1992.
- ^ Gottfredson, Linda
(December 13, 1994). Mainstream Science on
Intelligence. Wall Street
Journal, p A18.
- ^ Robert Plomin1, Gerald E.
McClearn1, Deborah L. Smith1, Sylvia Vignetti1, Michael J.
Chorney2, Karen Chorney2, Charles P. Venditti2, Steven Kasarda2,
Lee A. Thompson3, Douglas K. Detterman3, Johanna Daniels4, 5,
Michael Owen4, 5 and Peter McGuffin4DNA markers associated with
high versus low IQ: The IQ quantitative trait loci (QTL) project.
Behavior Genetics Volume 24, Number 2, March 1994 Pages:
107 - 118
- ^
Lewin, Jonathan S.; Friedman, Lee; Wu, Dee; Miller, David A.;
Thompson, Lee A.; Klein, Susan K.; Wise, Alexandria L.; Hedera,
Peter; Buckley, Peter; Meltzer, Herbert; Friedland, Robert P.;
Duerk, Jeffrey L. Cortical Localization of Human Sustained
Attention: Detection with Functional MR Using a Visual Vigilance
Paradigm. Journal of Computer Assisted Tomography. 20(5):695-701,
September/October 1996.
External
links