The concept of general intelligence (Spearman’s factor g) is similarly suspect. The authors favor multiple intelligences. Although Duncan et al.
+(2) have located a center in the lateral frontal cortex that activates during high-g and low-g spatial, verbal, and perceptuomotor tasks, Sternberg
+(3) has argued that localization is like saying we understand a computer because we have located its chip. Markman
+(4), reviewing this book, acknowledged that the "perceptual and motor abilities of the new generation of robots are impressive" but stated that "it has not been shown that this kind of sensorimotor coordination will provide a better framework for understanding high-level intelligence than the techniques currently being pursued in cognitive science." Perceptual and motor abilities are essential prerequisites for intelligence to develop and function, say Pfeifer and Scheier, pointing out that mental rotation of objects, for example, often seen as the epitome of a high-level cognitive task, is actually a motor act.