Mankind Quarterly,
Vol. 46, No. 1 (Fall 2005)
pp. 29-69
The
Flynn Effect in the Caribbean: Generational Change
of Cognitive Test Performance in Dominica
Gerhard Meisenberg, Elliott Lawless, Eleonor Lambert
and Anne Newton
Mental ability, as assessed by standardized tests,
is not fixed in time. Large IQ gains have been recorded
in many industrialized countries during the 20th century,
but very little is known about IQ trends in the less
developed countries. The present study investigates
generational changes in mental test performance on
the Caribbean island of Dominica. In a cross-sectional
design, Raven's Standard Progressive Matrices were
administered to two age groups: young adults between
the ages of 18 and 25 years, and older adults between
the ages of 51 and 62 years. Raw scores were 23.3
± 11.4 points for the older generation and
36.1 ± 10.9 points for the younger generation.
Compared to the current British norms for their respective
age groups, the average IQs of these two cohorts were
estimated as 61 and 73, respectively. Since the age-specific
British norms reflect a rising IQ trend in Britain
already, the real gain in Dominica is not 12 points
but approximately 17 to 19 points. The results on
a vocabulary test suggest similar cohort gains in
word knowledge. Differences between the Afro-Caribbean
majority and the native Caribs were small. Data are
presented to show that the difference between the
two age groups represents a cohort effect rather than
an aging effect. The implications of the Flynn effect
for economic development and cultural evolution are
discussed.