6.11 Other tests or measures
Ang, S. A., Rodgers, Wanstrom, L. (2010).  The Flynn Effect within subgroups in the U.S:  Gender, race, income, education, and urbanization differences in NLSY-Children data.  Intelligence, 38. 367- 384
Beaujean, A. A., & Osterlind, S. J. (2008). Using item response theory to assess the Flynn Effect in the National Longitudinal Study of Youth 79 Children and Young Adults Data. Intelligence, 36(5), 455- 463.
Bocerean, C., Fischer, J. P., & Flieller, A. (2003). Long-term comparison (1921-2001) of numerical knowledge in three to five-and- a-half year-old children. European Journal of Psychology of Education , 18(4), 405-424.
Bradmetz, J. & Mathy, F. (2006).  An estimate of the Flynn Effect: Changes in IQ and subtest gains of 10-yr-old French children between 1965 and 1988. Psychological Reports, 99(3), 743-746.
Colom, R., Lluis-Font, J., & Andres-Pueyo, A (2005). The generational intelligence gains are caused by decreasing variance in the lower half of the distribution: Supporting evidence for the nutrition hypothesis.  Intelligence, 33 (1), 83-91
Flynn, J. R. (1987). Massive IQ gains in 14 nations: What IQ tests really measure. Psychological Bulletin, 101, 171-191.
Flynn, J. R. (1998b). Israeli military IQ tests: Gender differences small; IQ gains large. Journal of Biosocial Science, 30, 541- 553.
Gobet, F., Campitelli, G., & Waters, A. J. (2002). Rise of human intelligence: Comments on Howard (1999). Intelligence, 30(4), 303- 311.
Howard, R. W. (1999). Preliminary real-world evidence that average human intelligence really is rising. Intelligence, 27(3), 235- 250.
Howard, R. W. (2001). Searching the real world for signs of rising population intelligence. Personality and Individual Differences, 30( 6), 1039-1058.
Khaleefa, O., Abdelwahid, S. B., Abdulradi, F., & Lynn, R. (2008). The increase of intelligence in Sudan 1964- 2006. Personality and Individual Differences, 45(5), 412-  413.
Lynn, R. (1982). IQ in Japan and the United States shows a growing disparity. Nature, 306, 291−292.
Lynn, R. (1989). A nutrition theory of the secular increase in intelligence: Positive correlations between height, head size, and IQ. British Journal of Educational Psychology, 59, 372−377.
Lynn, R. (1990). The role of nutrition in secular increases in intelligence. Personality and Individual Differences, 11, 273−285.
Lynn, R. (1998). In support of the nutrition theory. In Ulric Neisser (Ed.), The rising curve: Long- term gains in IQ and related measures (pp. 207−218). Washington DC: American Psychological Association.
Lynn, R. (2009). Fluid intelligence but not vocabulary has increased in Britain, 1979–2008. Intelligence, 2009, 249−255.
Lynn, R., & Hampson, S. (1986). The rise of national intelligence: Evidence from Britain, Japan and the U.S.A. Personality and Individual Difference, 7, 23−32.
Lynn, R. (2009). What has caused the Flynn effect? Secular increases in the Development Quotients of infants. Intelligence,37(1),16-24
Must, O., Must, A., & Raudik, V. (2003). The secular rise in IQs: In Estonia, the Flynn effect is not a Jensen effect. Intelligence, 31(5), 461- 471.
Nettelbeck, T., & Wilson, C. (2004). The Flynn effect: Smarter not faster. Intelligence, 32(1), 85- 93.
Nijenhuis, J. T., & vanderFlier, H. (2007). The secular rise in IQs in the Netherlands: Is the Flynn effect on g? Personality and Individual Differences, 43(5), 1259-1265.
Resing, W. C. & Tunteler, E. (2007).  Children becoming more intelligent: Can the Flynn effect be generalized to other child intelligence tests? International Journal of Testing, 7(2), 191-208.
Ronnlund, M., & Nilsson, L. G. (2008). The magnitude, generality, and determinants of Flynn effects on forms of declarative memory and visuospatial ability: Time- sequential analyses of data from a Swedish cohort study. Intelligence, 36(3), 192-  209.
Ronnlund, M., & Nilsson, L. G. (2009). Flynn effects on sub-factors of episodic and semantic memory: Parallel gains over time and the same set of determining factors. Neuropsychologia, 47(11), 2174- 2180.
Shayer, M., & Ginsburg, D. (2009). Thirty years on - a large anti- Flynn effect? (II): 13-and 14- year- olds. Piagetian tests of formal operations norms 1976- 2006/7. British Journal of Educational Psychology, 79, 409-418.
Shayer, M., Ginsburg, D., & Coe, R. (2007). Thirty years on - a large anti- Flynn effect? The Piagetian test Volume & Heaviness norms 1975-2003. British Journal of Educational Psychology, 77, 25-41.
Sundet, J. M., Barlaug, D. G., & Torjussen, T. M. (2004). The end of the Flynn effect?  A study of secular trends in mean intelligence test scores of Norwegian conscripts during half a century. Intelligence, 32, 349-362.
Sundet, J. M., Borren, I., & Tambs, K. (2008). The Flynn effect is partly caused by changing fertility patterns. Intelligence, 36(3), 183- 191.
Sundet, J. M., Eriksen, W., Borren, I. & Tambs, K. (2010).  The Flynn effect in sibships: Investigating the role of age differences between siblings.  Intelligence, 38, 38–44.
Teasdale, T. W. (2009). The Danish Draft Board's intelligence test, B circle divide rge Priens Pr circle divide ve: Psychometric properties and research applications through 50 years. Scandinavian Journal of Psychology, 50(6), 633-638.
Teasdale, T. W., & Owen, D. R. (2000). Forty-year secular trends in cognitive abilities. Intelligence, 28 (2), 115- 120.
Teasdale, T. W., & Owen, D. R. (2005). A long-term rise and recent decline in intelligence test performance: The Flynn Effect in reverse. Personality and Individual Differences, 39(4), 837-843.
Teasdale, T. W., & Owen, D. R. (2008). Secular declines in cognitive test scores: A reversal of the Flynn Effect. Intelligence, 36(2), 121- 126.
Voracek, M. (2006). Phlogiston, fluid intelligence, and the Lynn-Flynn effect. Behavioral and Brain Sciences, 29(2), 142+.
Wicherts, J. M., Dolan, C. V., Hessen, D. J., Oosterveld, P., vanBaal, G. C. M., Boomsma, D. I., & Span, M. M. (2004). Are intelligence tests measurement invariant over time? Investigating the nature of the Flynn effect. Intelligence, 32(5), 509- 537.
Wicherts, J. M., Dolan, C. V., & Van der Maas, H. L. J. (2010a). A systematic literature review of the average IQ of sub-Saharan Africans. Intelligence, 38, 1-20.
Zajonc, R. B., & Mullally, P. R. (1997). Birth order:  Reconciling conflicting effects. American Psychologist, 52(7), 685-699.