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Journal of Intelligence

Journal of Intelligence is an international, peer-reviewed, open access journal on the study of human intelligence, published monthly online by MDPI.

Indexed in PubMed | Quartile Ranking JCR - Q1 (Psychology, Multidisciplinary)

All Articles (945)

In this study, we aimed to investigate the cognitive and affective-emotional factors underlying math achievement in a sample of 169 Japanese elementary school children. Using structural equation modeling, we examined the contributions of fluid and crystallized intelligence, verbal and spatial working memory, and affective-emotional variables, including general anxiety, test anxiety, math anxiety, and math self-efficacy. We found intelligence to be a strong positive predictor of math achievement, while among the affective-emotional variables, math self-efficacy emerged as the only significant predictor of math achievement. Interestingly, intelligence mediated the association between affective-emotional factors, such as math anxiety and self-efficacy, highlighting its central role in children’s math achievement. These findings underscore the strong relationship between intelligence and self-efficacy in educational contexts, suggesting that self-efficacy is closely linked to cognitive abilities to support children’s success in math. Educational implications are discussed, emphasizing the need to strengthen math self-efficacy alongside cognitive abilities.

4 February 2026

Standardized solution of Model 5. MATH-REAS = Math Reasoning (Personalized Task); MATH-SKILLS = Math Skills (Personalized Task); MATH-KNOW = Math Knowledge (Personalized Task); CATTELL-A = Cattell Culture Fair Intelligence Test, Subtest A; CATTELL-B = Cattell Culture Fair Intelligence Test, Subtest B; VOCAB = WISC Vocabulary Subtest; SIMIL = WISC Similarities Subtest; NST = Number Span Task; WST = Word Span Task; LST = Listening Span Task; MST = Matrix Span Task; CBT = Corsi Block-Tapping Task; DMT = Dot Matrix Task; CMAS = Children’s Manifest Anxiety Scale; TAS = Test Anxiety Scale; AMAS = Abbreviated Math Anxiety Scale; J-MAS = Japanese Math Anxiety Scale; MSE = Math Self-Efficacy Scale; Math = Math; g-factor = general intelligence factor; gF = fluid intelligence; gC = crystallized intelligence; WM-V = verbal working memory; WM-S = spatial working memory; GA = general anxiety; TA = test anxiety; MA = math anxiety; SE = math self-efficacy factor.

Spiritual Intelligence: A Scoping Review with Concept Analysis on the Key to Spiritual Care

  • Cristina Teixeira Pinto,
  • Ângela Coelho and
  • Sara Pinto
  • + 2 authors

This study explores the concept of spiritual intelligence from an evolutionary perspective, providing a comprehensive and updated definition. A concept analysis was conducted following Rodgers’ Evolutionary Method, supported by a scoping review in accordance with the Joanna Briggs Institute methodology. Studies explicitly addressing spiritual intelligence, regardless of population, setting, or discipline, were included across quantitative, qualitative, mixed-methods, and review designs. Four databases—PsycINFO, PubMed Central, Scopus, and Web of Science—were searched for publications up to 15 December 2025, using the term “spiritual intelligence.” One-hundred-twelve articles met inclusion criteria and were analyzed through narrative synthesis and inductive analytical processing. Spiritual intelligence emerged as a construct encompassing adaptive cognition, higher consciousness, problem management, and personal growth, often referred to as Spiritual Quotient or Existential Intelligence. Antecedents included self and transcendental awareness, existential questioning, and search for meaning and purpose, while consequents comprised enhanced health, performance, self-awareness, and humanitarian orientation. Defining attributes were equanimity, life-wisdom, transcendental awareness, spiritual consciousness, meaning and purpose creation, and existential questioning. This evolutionary analysis traced the concept from theory to application, revealing its positive influence in daily life. Equanimity and life-wisdom were identified as core attributes, highlighting implications for training and integration of spiritual care in professional practice.

3 February 2026

PRISMA-ScR flow diagram (Page et al., 2021).

The ATHENA (Advanced Tool for Holistic Evaluation and Nurturing of Abilities) competency framework proposes a multidimensional approach to human performance structured around five interdependent dimensions (cognition, conation, knowledge, emotion, and sensori-motion), operationalized through 60 fine-grained facets. Although ATHENA is grounded in contemporary psychological theory and supported conceptually by multivariate research in intelligence, creativity, and skill acquisition, empirical evidence regarding the clarity and practical comprehensibility of its facets remains limited. This study investigates the extent to which instructional designers and human resource development (HRD) professionals—two groups who routinely operationalize competencies for learning, assessment, and workforce development—understand and evaluate the semantic clarity and usability of the 60 facets. Seventy-five practitioners completed a structured evaluation of the ATHENA framework facets, which are designed to be used in a hybrid intelligence system for competency management. This article presents the theoretical background, methodological design, and results concerning users’ comprehension of the framework’s components. The findings support, in general, the compatibility of ATHENA’s facets and practitioners’ conceptions.

3 February 2026

Mean distribution of appropriateness of facet definitions.

Working memory capacity (WMC) has long served as a central indicator of individual differences in complex cognition. However, growing evidence suggests that a substantial portion of its predictive power may reflect attention control (AC)—including goal maintenance, interference management, and inhibition—rather than storage capacity alone. This review synthesizes findings across six domains: (1) perception and sensory discrimination, (2) learning and problem solving, (3) cognitive control and decision making, (4) retrieval and memory performance, (5) multitasking and real-world performance, and (6) clinical applications. Across these areas, WMC-related effects frequently align with demands on AC, though the strength and nature of this alignment vary by domain. We highlight the importance of incorporating reliable AC measures and recommend latent-variable approaches to more clearly separate storage, control, and representational processes underlying complex performance.

2 February 2026

Schematic illustration of the maintenance and disengagement components described in Shipstead et al. (2016). The diagram depicts two proposed control processes—maintenance and disengagement—organized under a broader attentional-control framework.

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Grounding Cognition in Perceptual Experience
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Grounding Cognition in Perceptual Experience

Editors: Ivana Bianchi, Rossana Actis-Grosso, Linden Ball
Critical Thinking in Everyday Life
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Critical Thinking in Everyday Life

Editors: Christopher P. Dwyer

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J. Intell. - ISSN 2079-3200