When I was 8 years old my primary school teacher was convinced that I was gifted because I was always the first to finish a test and because I often seemed to get bored in class. One day I was taken out of class to take an IQ test for this reason. I have no memories of the test itself and no one ever told ma what the conclusion was. Around the age of 15 it also became clear that I had ADHD, despite this I was still holding up in school and I started taking medication. I am now 19 years old and a few months ago my parents told me that I had scored below average on this IQ test in primary school. The primary school psychologist (that had tested me) had told my parents that I would certainly not be able to go to university. My interest in science grew as I got older and when I asked my math teacher last year if I would be capable of studying engineering he said I definitely was. I have now completed my first year at the university. I am convinced that such IQ tests do not tell the full story at all. I had concentration problems and when I was 8 in primary school I had no idea what kind of test I was even taking. Don't let some number distract you from your goals!
Well, IQ tests are quite awful at judging the IQ for people with ADHD for numerous reasons. First of all, the motivation isnt there, at least not as much and especially not if you didnt know that you were even taking an IQ test. Secondly, an IQ test only works because of the time limit. Someone who has a hard time concentrating during that time ends up not using all of it and thus getting a worse result. Its like asking a someone to take a reading test who as dyslexia. On average, people with ADHD have a lower IQ score because of these two things. What Im trying to say is that no, it didnt work on you, but it honestly isnt meant *to* work on *you* . IQ is a never will be precise - it's always been a bit weird and have about a 20 point accuracy which means you can get a score that says you're retarded even though you're just slightly below average, but it's even less precise on people with ADHD. Anyway, I bet that if you took the test now, knowing that you were taking an IQ test and while being on medication would give you a *way* higher score...
i dont want to enter into a debate. Im just gonna stick from whats in the video. in your case, yes maybe your G factor was low. But, your S factor was so big that you were able to do whatever you want. Thats way there is all of this explanation in the video. We know the G factor isnt the only factor.
Learning disabilities absolutely effect your score. Unmedicated ADHD could definitely have had a negative effect. And you were probably not very motivated either. A single IQ test by itself is not enough, a more thorough neuropsych test might have found the ADHD, come with additional observations beyond just a number etc. There are plenty if gifted kids with learning disabilities and it makes it way more complicated to interpret. Even with an average IQ, disabilities will affect score.
I was born in '81. I still remember in my kindergarten class there was a poster on the wall that read "It's not your IQ, it's your I WILL". That has stuck with me as demonstrably true my entire life.
Psychologists talk about the practice effect. I had a stroke (when I was 39, a long time ago) and did two sets of psychometric testing two years apart. Each was 3-4 hours and left me exhausted, it was one-on-one testing with a psychologist and part of it was determining IQ. Although there was a slight improvement in the second test, it was explained away as possibly the practice effect, you know what is coming so it is much easier. The interesting thing is that they "reconstructed" what my IQ, etc. was before the stroke, it was a 5 IQ point range with a level of confidence of 95%. It has always seemed strange to me that they could be that precise. Of course, all serious IQ tests will give a range and a level of confidence as it is based on statistics.
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I took an IQ test once that had a time limit and there was a clock in the room. I don't like time pressure so I panicked and ended up with a not too bad but still very depressing score. They made me take another test and told me it wasn't timed, I did way better, was proud of myself. They actually lied to me, it was timed, but by not telling me I just got a way better score and still finished in time. So many factors as to why someone would get a bad or good result in a test.
When my school did an iq test in second grade, I fucked around during it because I didn't want to take the test. Weirdly I still did above average, though I don't know the actual score, that's just what my mom tells me. Shes said she was surprised it wasn't higher, but was still happy. Now I have completely changed my view as an adult on test taking and how seriously I take assessments. I haven't taken an IQ test since, nor do I really care to, but I would be curious if I would score higher
Being proud of yourself does not make you more successful at most a little bit happier for a short while before reality kicks in. I know that these are very heretic thoughts these days, but I don't care. Truth beats social acceptance. Not being very amiable does not prevent you from being successful. History is full with successful bastards. Newton who invested in slaves, Steve Jobs, Elon Musk and almost all American presidents present and past.
The time limitations indicates whether someone can think faster on their feet to solve problems vs those who need more time. So even if scored higher, in a real world scenario, time cannot be controlled in this fashion.
It's actually really interesting that the IQ test has a baseline relative to the average of all scores, which means it measures your intelligence relative to others & not some fixed constant.
That's called a probability distribution, in the case of IQ a normal distribution. Parameters for the function are the mean and variance of the sample, and the output is the distribution, which is determined by the mean and variance which are not constants by definition of sampling. 100 is a completely arbitrary number used as the mean of the distribution. In other words, the data is normalized so that the distribution centers around 100. That makes it easier for interpretation I guess, otherwise it would be centered around 0
@@tear728 The point is that it's not a metric of intelligence. 50cm is objectively half of a meter, but you can't say X IQ is half as intelligent as Y IQ. It's a ranked quotient of measurable performance, not a metric.
My father was a psychologist. Growing up, he regularly administered various IQ tests on me. I became quite competent at standardized testing. To this day, I discount the value of these tests as I know I effectively cheated on them throughout the rest of my life. I learned test taking strategies and practiced the common types of questions so I am able to identify patterns of questions/answers favored in each test, which positively impacted my results compared to many others who did not have this experience.
iq tests can be learned but you still need to know the subjects to do well for SAT/ACT. For example, no more than 5 people get a perfect score for the International Math Olympiads Annually.
@@blue-xb1cq that's true. However there are a multitude of benefits to constantly practicing long mental acuity tests, such as not having test anxiety, learning to pace yourself, and knowing how to prepare.
Motivation is such a huge factor. If someone's not interested in a certain topic and not motivated to improve they can have as high of an IQ as they like and still be bad at it
Given how most schools are run, I feel like using IQ tests to indicate school success is a lot like saying "If you're good at taking tests, we can determine that you are good at taking tests."
In high school I'd say about half of the kids in my AP classes were just good at taking tests but then the other half over performed in pretty much everything they did. Point being there were quite a few kids who weren't just good at tests but seemed to be good at everything.
I (33) have a learning disability. My IQ is approx 80. I got tested twice in school. It is mainly due to the fact that my mother drunk alcohol during her pregnancy (FASD spectrum/Fetal Alcohol Syndrome) Everything is harder in my life. No matter how hard I try, I always fail. I needed to visit special ed class till 18, I never had many friends, I never had the ability to visit college or achive high education, I only work at sign holder jobs...or fast food...I also never had a girlfriend. A low intelligenc is a severe punishment for your whole life, which affects every aspect of your life negatively.
@MasParaQue Thats the problem...I would like to have a family, travel the world, study science, have a girlfriend...but I cant due to my disability...I just want to be normal and
there are a few things. your personal life depends on many factors and your single example cant be used to derive general statements. yes, low intelligence limits your possibilities. one cant deny that. regarding the girlfriend issue: im not saying it has no influence, but there are many other more decisive factors for it. i know a lot of people who have the same struggle and have pretty high IQ. (ofc thats not any helpful advice, just pointing it out)
I (52) have a learning disability and an IQ of 143. I had not finished high school and have no post secondary education. I taught myself how to use computers and now work in cybersecurity. One key point is I left my home country to get away from my non existent educational scores. I am not trying to make you feel bad. Since we have similar starts in life I would be interested in mentoring you.
Back in high school, I took several iq tests and would always score somewhere around the 132 range, so naturally I was walking around like the big brain on campus. Then I grew up and realized I'm dumb as hell, but just a really good test-taker.
Thinking you're not as smart as you actually are is a good indicator of high intelligence (sorry!) However, there is a big difference between 'bright' Hi-IQ and 'Clever' Street smarts 🙂
@@johnyoung3511Which perfectly illustrates how bs the test is. Arguably so-called "street smarts" represent a more natural gauge of human intelligence than parsing sentence structure.
The IQ test I took really screwed me over in life. Took one when I was smaller - mind you, I went to a "special" school since I have Cerebral Palsy - and some subjects we simply didn't get (like geography) because the board "assumed" we wouldn't be able to "handle" it. I'm not even ashamed to say it now: according to that test, my IQ was 73. Because of that, I wasn't allowed to later on study what I wanted to do. I later found out that (at least in my country) those tests were only ever done on people with disabilities. No "normal" friend I have was ever obligated to take it. English isn't my first language, so excuse any grammatical errors.
The fact that you can speak and write in two different languages shows that the IQ test was BS. I am convinced that anyone is capable of doing whatever they want as long as they are willing to put in the work. Someone with a "high" IQ might find it easier but that doesn't mean they will be better. I don't know if you watch American football but it reminds of two players. Jerry Rice and Randy Moss. I know nothing of their IQ's just using them as an analogy. Jerry Rice would be your lower IQ guy who worked harder and is the greatest wide receiver in NFL history. Randy Moss would be the high IQ example who found everything easy but because of that didn't work as hard. Moss should hold all NFL records but he was lazy. If he knew the ball wasn't coming his way he would take plays off and not run his routes. He was dropped from a couple teams because of his work ethic. Rice played into his 40's and was still exceptional. While you might have to work harder to get there you have no limits on what you can do. Sorry if my example doesn't make sense.
I'm sorry to hear that. Try not to let it get you too down though. IQ doesn't mean much in all honesty. People with lower IQ's are still absolutely capable of living happy, healthy, productive lives. Never give up, my friend! (Also your English is fantastic. It's better than many native speakers lol. Which leads me to believe your score is likely not accurate, it's probably quite a bit higher)
Here's a (depressing) little fact about me. Some decade ago, when I was 12-13, I volunteered to take an IQ test at my school, and was generally considered a 'gifted kid' with outstanding grades in a lot of subjects, as well as an appetite for knowledge that shocked my teachers at the time - Books would be devoured in a matter of hours, I never studied and aced everything anyways because, as it turns out, what I did on my free time (devouring random wikipedia articles, essentially) was effectively studying. Then, my parents divorced, my grandparents and dogs died, and I went through a maaaajor depressive episode lasting, well, it's still going over a decade later, but the worst of it was age 14-19, where I was actively suicidal. For 'fun', I took a new IQ test when I was turning 20. My IQ when I was ~13? 144. My IQ after a major depressive episode a few years later? 106. My IQ today, another few years after that? 112. I don't want to blame depression or anything like that, but I do think it played a very large factor in killing my motivation for study - and notably, it killed a lot of my memory. I couldn't tell you a thing I did age 14-19 with any level of real accuracy other than scream at my divorced mother twice and moving house five times.
You are not alone with this. The effects of depression on memory is no joke. I feel like my fluid intelligence and memory are at 0. I do the things i know and like extraordinarily well but everything new seems scary and an insurmountable challenge. For me the saving grace is hiking, backpack travel and fishing etc. There's no preset constructs, no budgets to make and face, no other people who are locked in the same ditch. Just the vast nature and world with it's everchanging mysteries and challenges thrown at you that you have been created to overcome. The modern society is killing us slowly and the world with us. We're living the last chapter of Plato's Republic.
Depression can cause permanent damage to the prefrontal cortex. I am certainly not making recommendations, but a Harvard study found that neurogenesis caused by cubensis mushrooms can repair the damage.
Dear Derek, I wanted to thank you for the content you create. Your videos "How Quantum Computers Break The Internet... Starting Now" and "Math's Fundamental Flaw" motivated me to complete my remaining subjects for my Computer Science degree in Argentina, which I had left untouched for a few years. Thank you very much.
One of the worst things that happened to me in my childhood was scoring well on an IQ test as a small child. Severe ADHD and no executive function led to a lot of shame because people had something to point to to “prove” I was just being lazy. Even after I was diagnosed with ADD at the age of ten. Edit: I turned 10 in 1981 (just for perspective). Neurodivergence in the 70s and 80s was just called being contrary.
I had a similar experience. I tested above the "gifted" level in elementary school and was put into GATE classes. This was a part-time thing. GATE was amazing. I got to use computers and do darkroom photography and all kinds of cool stuff. But this only made me more bored of "regular" school then I already was. My grades suffered, and they kicked me out of GATE as a result, which obviously only made things even worse. I was also eventually diagnosed with ADD and put on Ritalin. That didn't help either. I developed coping strategies and they either became second nature to me or I just grew out of it. Not sure. My grades never really recovered. If I hadn't gotten way more second chances than most do, I shudder to think what would have happened to me.
Exact same. Diagnosed with ADHD in 3rd grade, never medicated. Tested for gifted (my schools version of BETA) and got in easily. Being able to cut normal class likely saved my hide for the next few years. It all came to a head in 6th grade which led to me leaving public school and going to a private school with a much harder curriculum which held my interest. Went back to same public school for HS and breezed through it, now have a 4 year degree with a decent job. If I hadn’t gone to that Private school there’s a solid chance I’d have flunked the 6th grade. Was definitely a rough time in life.
I was just simply bullied for always busting the bell curve, so in order to have friends, I learned to hide my smurts until well into adulthood. Now I embrace it and don't give a flying fark if anyone cares. It's a genuine part of who I am, so you should embrace your story too. ❤
I am suing the National Aeronautics and Space Administration for illegal discrimination because _they thought_ I have ADHD, bipolar, depression or some other mental disability. I don't believe that nonsense because I feel one with everyone. Google me, I am winning 🏆 and I really am _that guy._
I remember taking an IQ test in elementary school (close to 30 years ago now) to be tested into the "gifted program." I was admitted in but one section of the test was simply naming pictures of objects, and the one I explicitly remember was being shown a picture of an outlet, but at ~8 years old I'd only ever heard of it referenced as a something to be "plugged" in to e.g. "Go plug this fan into the wall." So I said "plug" and they tried coaxing the right answer of "outlet" out of me by saying things like 'well that's what you do to connect something to it....' but I simply never heard the word "outlet" at that point in my life so I got it wrong despite obviously knowing what it is. That's always stuck out to me and honestly since that point I'd never put much stock in to mine, or anyone else's, IQ.
As a university psychologist, I've been teaching about IQ for more than 35 years. I'm afraid you missed one of the most important correlations; social class. You came close with mentioning IQ (and especially SAT) training classes; who can afford those? Even going back to Binet, the test was easier for rich kids (and urban kids).
Hypothesis: The reason those rich kids are rich is _usually_ because their parents are smart. Take blue-collar workers who won the lotto. Meaning, average or below-average IQ people who suddenly can afford to send their kids to the best schools and academic programs. See how well their kids do on IQ tests compared to kids who've had money in the family for generations. Pretty sure the latter group will do better. Earning and holding on to money for decades takes intelligence, which is passed down from generation to generation. Blue-collar lotto winners typically blow through their money and are back to being broke within one generation, due to not have high IQ like the rich kid families.
@@thebellcurve3437isn’t it easier to hoard wealth that’s been there for generations compared to when one suddenly acquires it? they’d have had more experience with it as a result of their past etc. many more factors that’d be easier to maintain owing to them already being there for years. wouldn’t this be the opposite for the other case, where people would have to invest way more to actually maintain the wealth gained?
@@thebellcurve3437 The video this comment section is for shows there is basically no correlation between IQ and the ability to hold onto money and only a very weak correlation between IQ and the ability to make money, so your hypothesis doesn't seem to be supported by the evidence
@@thebellcurve3437 I'm not living in a country where the wealth of parents decide which (level) school you can follow. There is no financial blockade for a blue collar son to go to university and gets his PHD. I agree that this was different before ww2. Reason my dad could NOT go to the university as a blue collar workers child. The study and working employment from me, my brother and our child contradict youre assumption that children from blue colar workers (schooled to do theit job) are at disadvantage. I suppose only choldren from those workers who do work for which you do not need schooling and are not schooled will really be at a disadvantage.
@@kuqho First, you are showing your bias by saying "hoard wealth". Rich people with any semblance of intelligence do not "hoard wealth", they do not have thick packs of $100 bills or millions of dollars in gold and jewelry lying around their house. Perhaps rich celebrities do this for social media photo ops, but MOST rich people have their money invested; meaning they do not just have it amassed in material form for the sheer joy of marveling at their wealth. People with generational wealth use their money to make more money. Investments are not hoards; they are financial instruments. Second, yes it is easier to hold on to money if you grew up in a wealthy family, because your wealthy parents taught you how to be smart with money, they taught you financial management skills. Poor folks who win the lotto typically have no such skills which is why they blow through their winnings in a few years and are back to being average or below-average income people.
I’m actually pretty grateful for IQ tests. I struggled as a kid in school, mostly because I found everything terribly boring, I was simply unable to focus on anything and I just didn’t care enough to even try to pass. My teachers wanted me to repeat a year in primary school, the school psychologist *strongly* recommended that I dropped from school as soon as possible and learned a trade. That made no sense to my parents, but being from poor families in Spain, my parents had very little in terms of education, they weren’t sure. They took me to see a therapist. My IQ tests were the convincing evidence for them that the school was wrong, so I changed schools. I went from bottom of my class to great student in 3-4 months, I went to college, got a Bsc and a Msc in electrical engineering, and now I work designing medical devices. When I look back at my schools “advice”, I’m pretty certain that I’d be so miserable that It’s not even funny to think about it.
Yep IQ tests are mainly used to test the potential for certain cognitive challenges in children (including demonstrating their absence). This is where they're truly useful.
Similar thing happened to me, I have severe ADHD and pretty much failed every class as a really young kid and my school honestly considered putting me in special ed. I got an assessment which included an IQ test and my result disqualified me from being put in special ED. Now I'm about to finish an undergrad degree in Physics and Computer Science.
neurodivergence can also affect your IQ scores negatively, what would have happened if you had no interest in doing the IQ test and just half assed it ? they would think you really were mentally challenged, when in reality you just couldn't focus on things that didn't motivate you maybe because of undiagnosed ADHD. they would never have know to change you to a school that peaked your interest or that you could succeed in a field that you felt a lot more motivated to pursue.
Not necessarily, tradesmen can earn good money, at least where i live. The brother of my best friend, who is about the same age as me got his master tradesman certificate and started a business, and he got a year long waiting list for contracts, that's how swamped tradesmen are in germany. He barely even gets to do actual work himself, there is just so much administrative/clerical work going hand in hand with fulfilling contracts here.
ADHD is a separate issues. Fun fact - did you know that there are only a handful of countries (can be counted by the fingers of your hands) that actually accept ADHD as an actual disease that requires treatment? In a shithole like Russia, for example, it does not exist essentially.
As a young adult I was told was an IQ test only measures your ability to take an IQ test. The fact that there are methods to raise your score also show it isn't a raw stat like in an RPG game but I can see it being able to show the general capability of someone.
It's only accurate if you don't train for it, and there are many things that can still skew it even then. IQ is only a reliable measure for populations, not individuals. (that's not to say it says nothing, just that it can be off by 10-20 points which is a lot). There are also several types of intelligence it doesn't properly measure, such as creative thinking and long-term problem solving. As for income, bravery and tenacity is very important, and it doesn't measure that either.
Love how you treat that subject, it's easy to view the IQ test as the most important value determining factor of a person or as totally unreliable (for my part, I did that because I don't like the idea of worth [which I unconsciously linked to IQ] being objective and measurable on a certain scale). As you said, most of the discussion around it isn't really motivated by logic and much more by irrational assumptions and therefore, extreme views transcent.
One thing you failed to mention was how the free online test corresponded to the actual test. Were they accurate? How much did the scores differ? How similar were the questions? Did your score improve if you took the test multiple times? All these questions seem really interesting to me and I would appreciate it if you could answer some of them. Otherwise this was an awesome insight into the IQ world. Great job!
I took one online IQ test at age 12 and one official one at age 17. Both gave exactly the same number and relatively similar questions (of course, both asked for my age).
Online tests tend to have a higher average score because people who already enjoy this kind of thing are more likely to take them. So the number may not necessarily be inaccurate but possibly inflated.
The practice part really matters. When I did this as a kid I got 9 or 10 points higher after practicing some tests to get used to the question types. Which in itself illustrates that intelligence testing is hard.
@brianmcdaniels8249 I was told *_absolutely not_* to try and practice, as it can skew results. I took one as an adult on only 4 hours of sleep and still scored proximally within the same standard deviation of my childhood score.
@@brianmcdaniels8249 This all proves that most things in life are learnable if spend enough time on those problems. And it's impossible to really make methods to measure everyone fairly. Not only my solution for the early life science is to divide subjects and tests for them. However with change of life XVIII century system that we have in school isn't the greatest measure. I'm from Poland and our scholar system, as everywhere, is evolving but veeeeeery slowly. It needs to be revamped, because our society is starting to collapse in my opinion. We couldn't handle it pretty much very soon. So I guess IQ tests shows the factor that a person can be good at, but it's important to be as well-rounded as possible and care about many things at the same time. You never know in what type of scam you will fall. If people keep being well-round and train their imperfections it will help our society not to collapse.
Duckworth studied children and adults in challenging environments, including West Point military cadets, national spelling bee contestants, and rookie teachers in difficult schools. In each study, she and her research team asked the same question: “Who is successful here and why?” Across numerous contexts, one characteristic emerged as a significant predictor of success: grit. Grit is the quality that allows an individual to work hard and maintain focus-not just for weeks or months, but for years.
Amen. I'm a former special education teacher and a school psych intern. I recall working with an individual during COVID. This child was the only individual that regularly showed up to her resource meetings. One day she was feeling down about her math efforts and I had to squash that real fast because she was in fact making huge gains. I started to review with her how far she had progressed over the years and she began to cry. She explained to me that she hadn't realized how far she had come. Then I got emotional and explained that I was not worried about her because she had an extreme amount of grit and, already in elementary school, learning to overcome barriers and personal challenges. Her effort and grit still inspire me when I'm feeling down on myself.
I took an IQ test a while ago and I debated a lot about whether to take it, because, if we're being honest, I think most of our motivation to take such a test is to get a result that validates our belief that there's something special about us. A high score can give you a lot of self-esteem and confidence. But the opposite can also happen with a low score, given how many insults we throw around based on IQ and intelligence. It's not likely that knowing this number is gonna be relevant to you other than in this way, so I'm still not sure if most people should test their IQ.
You get that same measurement every day in school. Kids know if they are finishing tests earlier and scoring higher then the rest of the kids. Same is true for the kids on the other end of the spectrum that struggle.
@@GonzoDonzo That's a good point but at least you're mixing intelligence with effort. In fact, it seems like reacting to a child's intellectual successes and failures by focusing on effort rather than intelligence leads to better outcomes, especially more tenacity, less quitting, and more focus on solving problems rather then impressing authority figures (growth mindset Vs fixed mindset, according to Carol Dweck). With IQ tests, you're trying to isolate the concept of G as much as possible, and I'm not sold that that's something most people should do.
I'm 71 now. Took a Stanford-Binet test at age 10, so I got into a gifted program at school. I am convinced that higher IQ just makes it easier to learn. It does not mean you WILL learn, WILL succeed. WILL make a good income, etc. People with lower IQs can do all of those, they just have to work harder. I have always been exceptionally lazy, so I excel at things that interest me and I enjoy. You could see this as just being more efficient: Not bothering with things you don't like. I didn't graduate from high school with a very high GPA, but aced the ACT. I graduated from college with honors because I concentrated in a field of study I enjoyed. I worked in medical research for 11 years, and my boss asked if I would like to attend the medical school he taught at. I declined because I knew from the doctors I worked with that that path was very strenuous, with limited rewards. About that time the first personal computers became available, which had always interested me. I ended up shifting to computer programming, and did very well in that field for the rest of my working life.
My experience almost exactly, up to the college grad thing. I took my first college class at 17, and still lack one semester for a 4-year degree almost 50 years later.
i'd say that's correct but then when you add in certain variables things get... confusing. like for example, i'm autistic and last time i took an iq test it was pretty high, i can't remeber the exact value but i'm fairly sure between my lowest and highests tests i took in between 112 and 154 in terms of score, so i'm gonna guess my latest was around 130-140... but the thing about autism as many know is that unless you're hyperfixated on something, learning can be excruciatingly hard for an autistic person, and in my case i also have fairly poor memory, stuff i may have learned with passion years ago i completely forgot about, naturally part of that is just not having put to practice that knowledge enough, but just to give an idea, i even forgot how to ride a bike... twice. the best way to view iq is in terms of untrained potential, what you could possibly do -assuming equal motivation and ambition as of at the time of the test- at the time of taking the test and how well before any training and preparation. like if i started, i dunno, playing the flute right now? i might do better than most other beginners... but the path forward after the beginning is completely an incognita due to far too many variables with in my case the biggest one being my mental condition. and the worst part is that stiuff like this will make people expect more of you when you in truth you can achieve less in the long run, just because you can achieve more in the short run(and even then it depends on the context)
absolutely, same problem, I can pick up skills and once I get it it becomes so ingrained that it just becomes a part of my everyday interaction with the world, however I can't study to save my life.
This is known as the discipline problem. Smart people don't have to struggle to learn as kids, so we don't learn a good work ethic. Thing come so easily to us, that we usually don't learn how to work hard. Meanwhile people not as smart struggle, and so they learn discipline, work ethic, etc. This is why then tend to do super well in school, up until they hit college where suddenly most "smart" people need to do things like study. But they never learned *_how_* to study because... well... they never needed to previously, where other kids have mastered the skill. This is why you *_really need_* to separate kids by abiltiy from a *_very young age_* and that way you can challenge them. Because everyone *_needs_* to be challenged, so they can *_learn_* to deal with the adversity of difficult subjects. This is the *_real_* reason so many people of above average intellect, don't have successful lives. Because they don't learn how to deal with the stresses of hard work and so when they're older everyone expects them to already know how... and they fail. Parents need to know what their kids are capable of, and ensure they are *_challenged._* I'm one of those lucky few who can even get through college without studying... but that kind of level is *_very rare_* and I do not have the discipline to force myself to study things I'm not interested in as a result.
Thought anyone else might find this interesting but as a child I scored a 129 (scaled to adult test scores) on a formal IQ test given by a psychology and later in life, while suffering from severe depression and recovering from a concussion a year prior, I scored a 102. 2 years later it was up to 117 and I feel like it's slowly getting back to the original 129. It's weird to be able to see the impact of things like clinical depression and concussions on cognitive functions like that.
@@popcornyummbecause some schools like to measure that if they are interested I mean I’m 14 and have had my iq measured 5 times now I think my most recent score was 135 and my first one was 129
Yeah. I scored 115 and in prolonged times of chronic stress (over years) I really felt myself getting dumber and dumber / slower and slower. Chronic stress can ("temporarily") lower your IQ by -14 points. Also had/have a Lyme disease infection that can cause psychomotor retardation. It's definitely not static but I think the plasticity is more downward than upward. I do think each one of us has a different upper limit which is genetically determined.
well the video clearly show that there are other factors other than residual factors and I think that's why there are people that think IQ test are completely useless,I mean think about it those other factors can add up like more than dozens of points, and a difference of 10 point can put you on above average tier or in genius tier but on the other hand the corelate on different meta analysis are too big to say that it is just a coincidence so I think that there need to be a better way in scoring so we can get a better more accurate result such as increasing the points so that the other factors other than g factors wont put you on genius tier while you actually should have on above average tier and it is interesting to see that taking multiple test will make you lingering on your original test so I think to get more accurate result the test should be done multiple times and not just one time
As a teacher. . . . Some kids just don't care, can't be bothered to listen, or are distractible. The key is to make them like you and your subject, so they'll try. Base intelligence matters and training it matters but effort also matters. The "really smart" ones do/have all three
And learning is a skilll. You need to learn how to learn effectively. Sort of like learning how to study, how to learn names, how to memorize lists. Many people don't know this. And, of course, some people have natural talent for these things, but natural talent is paltry compared to what it can become if trained
30:12 I feel like you should've mentioned Lewis Terman's "genetic studies of genius" here. This was a longitudinal study where kids in the Bay Area (since Terman worked at Stanford) were given IQ tests, and Terman would keep tabs on the highest scorers and compare their eventual life outcomes to the general population. Contrary to his expectation, the vast majority of his "Termites" had mundane adulthoods and fared no better than a random sample of people with similar socioeconomic backgrounds. And the real kicker: two eventual Nobel Prize winners, physicists William Shockley and Luis Walter Alvarez, grew up in the Bay Area and were tested, but did not score high enough to be included in the study.
Some funny stuff happens in a lot of those Stanford studies. When they went back to the marshmallow test kids 40 years later, that study that supposedly showed that patience as a kid helps you later in life, the results showed no statistical difference between the patient kids and the impatient ones in any meaningful category.
He didn't really mention individual studies, because he looked at meta-analysis studies. Lewis Terman's results might have shown no correlation, but 20 other very similar studies (as you can see in the video) gave significantly different correlations. You really need a sample size of 8 billion to get any accuracy, even then there will be flaws in the testing strategy.
Children develop at different rates, and just a few months equivalent development can make a huge difference in their scores. Even if kids are the exact same age, to the day, the differences in how fast they develop makes the results extremely unreliable. Wait until they're at least 25 if you want meaningful IQ test results.
I never thought about motivation being a factor but its so obvious once you said it. Being genuinely motivated and interested in something can make a world of difference in your performance across-the-board, it's like your working memory and attention span increase dramatically when you're actually interested and motivated lol.
As that part of the video played, and an image of a card with text "what number comes next" was shown, my first thought was 'i dont care [what number comes next]' it made me chuckle. Motivation is definitely a huge factor, and certainly motivation arising from possible negative consequences. I wonder how many people were motivated to pass because a fail would mean forced sterilization.
I must say, that this report about IQ is the very best I've watched until now. Thank you for that. And anyway, I love your approach to your many different themes.
Took an IQ test as a young high school student. The results were that I was a lot more “intelligent” than I had self assessed up to that point. As a result I started taking education and responsibility a lot more seriously. Which helped me succeed in places that others didn’t. The downside is that I suppose the opposite could result for somebody with a lesser result. Lesson is that the education and responsibility part will probably do more than the actual IQ part, so do the right thing, and study, make responsible decisions, and you’ll be fine!
Rick Rosner who is one of the highest modern IQ people had basically the negative experience you are talking about. He thought he was super genius, then his result was maybe 130-140 so very good but nothing crazy. This led him to not care much about things since he was not going to be smart enough to change the world. Only later he learned that the test he had taken had a maximum score which is what he had received. His IQ wasn't 130, it was some unknown amount above 130. He went on to lead a super weird life including going back to high school to do it over as the cool kid and suing who wants to be a millionaire. recommended rabbit hole if you have time.
The fact that you took education and responsibility a lot more seriously is a measure of your IQ and not the result of the IQ test. The test result may have given you a boost in motivation and confidence for a while but with or without it your IQ would have probably taken you on a very similar path. In any case, you can't tell someone with a low IQ to be responsible and try to learn more things because it's not something they would do even if they know it would help them in life.
I took a paid “official” iq test at 18 and got 132. Always had great grades in school with minimal effort. Yet I always had trouble keeping jobs later in life because I was so miserable working and having to make some efforts. I always thought that being so good in school and being “intelligent” actually trained me to take life easy and to dislike making any effort for stuff that aren’t fun to me. So in a way my higher than average IQ became something that hurt me in my life. I had episodes of acute depression from just working 6 months in 40h/week jobs. I just quit everything at 28 and went back to do the only thing I ever liked doing which was being in school lol! Went to university in psychology, did 2 years in economics etc. After having used all my grants I just stopped school again and barely did anything for a few years. Meeting my gf was a blessing as she was ok with me being a stay-at-home dad. So in the end I never actually worked a real job for more than a few combined years in my 39 years.
I know that feeling dude. I got 135. My grades in high schools were great with little to no effort. But when in Uni, I enjoy the first half, but then kinda meh for the rest. I am "good" in many topics, but never "great" in a specific topic. That what makes me struggle to find a job, unemployed for like 2 years My tips is that people like me needs to realize, this condition is a blessing and also a curse. Then, just do your best
Here’s a way it can be useful. When I was a kid teachers wanted to place me in special education due to failing grades. My mother had me take an IQ test and it came back well above average, proving it was not due to any intellectual challenges. This led to a bunch of tests until we finally found that my poor performance in class was actually due to moderate hearing loss! I couldn’t hear what the dang teacher was saying and so had a harder time learning.
How does moderate hearing loss work and how was it not noticed earlier? I mean if you couldn't hear the teacher, then there must have been others that you couldn't hear as well.
This is like how it was for me, except it was poor, maybe moderate, eyesight. I remember, I think, about once every year me and a few other students would meet with the school district’s nurse and they would test the eyesight. I did not do too good then and I knew that, and every time after the last few meetings they would ask something along the lines of “do you had trouble seeing”, to which I always denied, mainly because I did not want glasses. My grades suffered because of that, as well as some othre difficulties.
Something similar happened to my dyslexic brother (at a time and country this was not even well known), and my mom just put the test in front of them and said ‘well see, it’s not him who is lacking, is you who are unprepared to teach great minds’ (he cringes hard at this till today 🤣) then sent him to a Montessori school where he thrived
My IQ was tested to be around 150. I always did well in classes but I was (and still am) extremely depressed. I buried myself in work to get over it but it just made it harder to take a break. Higher IQ or perceived intelligence in general can lead to more pressure. It’s not surprising that the higher of intelligence one has, the more likely they will have depression or anxiety.
For everyone searching for a comment that isn't someone gloating about their high IQ and wants to feel normal, I was tested by a psychiatrist for ADHD and took an IQ test as part of it at age 16. I am completely average. IQ of 101. I remember feeling pressured by the time limits, but that's about it.
I think one of the other important factors to consider about IQ testing is that when people see those results as fixed, and choose to integrate that into their sense of identity, it causes issues for people all throughout the spectrum. People at both ends of the spectrum may experience a reduction in effort and growth as a result of their scores, either because it's low and they think they're not smart enough to try, or because they score highly, think they're smart and don't need to work as hard. Much like all metrics, it's a useful indicator of performance, but like you suggested, it is moveable and doesn't define someone's character. Someone who gets a high score still needs to work to maintain their advantage, and those who get lower scores can work to improve their scores and better their outcomes.
THIS i was told throughout my childhood that i was a VERY gifted kid i remember getting tested in all sorts of ways, and because i had that mentality i stopped trying as hard, i still tried tho just not as hard i eventually fell behind. im an adult now and i do genuinely believe im an idiot at 25 i struggle to do a fair amount of basic math. its difficult to explain but i sort of got retaught math several times different ways and it made me confused when i was young, and even now i get like very anxious when i have to do math even with a calculator. I personally believe i was a very intelligent kid but thought my environment and a couple of other factors, mainly environmental and mental health have made me less intelligent. i used to read at a college level in 5th grade understand complex ideas and have conversations about things that would baffle others. and now i work in a factory because i couldn't go to college. and i see the kids that were considered my peers on an intellectual level doing amazing things, working for and with schools in their 20s
@@joewaun894 Maybe you have had educated parents that pushed you to study and so on. Or alternatively you had one or few subjects you were good at and not the rest? Your parents are a HUGE factor in childhood, intelligence is about 0,2 heritable in childhood (much higher in adulthood), meaning parents and environment have a big effect.
@@joewaun894 I think it varies. My parents told my brother and I had scores that now seeing the spectrum, was impossible (or extremely unlikely). But, I just looked at how I did in general vs the people around me and adjusted accordingly. So, your personality is probably another big factor on how the score impacts you.
I'm also surprised they didn't discuss ADHD. It would cause someone to do worse on standardized tests but still have a high intelligence. Other things like generated anxiety disorder would also prob have the same effect. Research routinely shows that standardized tests are poor indicators of working knowledge and intelligence. It favors a certain subset of person.
so in other words ignorance is bliss? personally i feel the spirit of these tests is to see how smart someone is and studying for it like the video creator did should have no affect. if you can affect the score by education and studying then i feel the spirit of the reason for the test is not met and the mechanism to be flawed, but thats just my opinion and we all walk around with bias.
My friend's uncle was a card carrying member of Mensa and very proud of how "intelligent" he was. He used the fingers on his right hand to test if a hedge trimmer was working. Luckily the doctors were able to succesfully re-attach all 4 fingers.
So, He is getting more sensory inputs to classify that the trimmer is working. his method gives you three main sensory inputs (Visual, audio, pain) while other methods are giving you mostly 2 inputs. That's how intelligence works
I am a member of Mensa since 1978 Some are very successful and others fail There are members that are unemployed while others own companies. There are bus drivers and a 747 pilot One thing they have in common is that they are easy to get on with. They are interested in just about everything. For me, it is more about the social aspect. For others, it is a support group for patients...
I always defined "IQ" as "Interest Quotient" meaning interest in the things that IQ tests use for measurements. When interested in intellectual things, then the intellectual things of "Intelligence Quotient" tests are much easier. But that is all the tests measure - intellectual curiosity in various high-minding thinking and scholarly things. Common sense, drive, ability to take advantage of opportunities (or make them, actually) - success is spelled by far more things than "brains". Indeed, "How do you define success." is a common employment interview question. Which helps judge how rounded a candidate is in day-to-day necessities. "A good family life" is an entirely valid and very telling response.
I took an IQ test in the 80s before elementary school (it was mandatory for acceptance in the school I was going to go). I got a very high score and the only thing that brought me was totally unrealistic expectations about my performance and education. The pressure from the school and my parents racked up and made me learn to HATE school. It took away my enjoyment of learning and being creative because I felt I was being forced to do and say things I didn't want to just because I was "smarter" than the other kids. Teachers felt intimidated or offended if I said something they didn't expect; they were much more demanding about my performance and the other kids were hostile because the adults around me told me I had the "duty" to show and "use" my intelligence, so I did and that obviously didn't sit well with them. People tend to react negatively to people that they think or are told are smarter than them. High IQ has been completely worthless for me because it has always been a barrier between myself, my perception of myself, the perception others have of me and my ability to have meaningful relationships.
Same thing for me during first school. Didn’t do anything for me except show how I’m good at getting high scores on iq tests. Taken by social services at birth, mentally disabled mother who took substances during pregnancy, never met my birth father as he fell off a building in 2016, was misdiagnosed with autism and it was FASD etc etc. I’m going with one of my oldest passions to study and become an electrical / electronic engineer.
imo it's unethical to give iq tests to children because of this. either they get absurd expectations on them, or they get labeled as stupid and thrown onto the margins.
Very relatable for me, I was given an IQ test early on as a child and scored quite high myself. So all the adults decided to bump me 2 grades in school. This was disastrous because while I had a very strong grasp of mathematics, my ability to read and comprehend was not so good, and no one ever bothered to check that! So I then got send back to where I started the next year, putting me a grade behind instead of 2 ahead. In so many ways this ruined my early life.
Same happend to me. IMO, the measured IQ does not tell you anything about success in later life. IT can even be detrimental to a child to tell them "you're really smart" over and over again. They stop trying, because they know they are "better". In the end, they lose track of what's taught in school.
people always brag about themselves. i always put myself down. i realized theres two type of people. one whos over confident and brag about themselve and those whose has low self esteem and put themselves down. kind of like one who is fearless and the other is terrified of risk. need to be in the middle to best the best of both world?
@@BlueRice There's a wide range in between. People often mistake low self esteem with humility, and any positive description of yourself, or showing confidence, as bragging. There's no problem with "bragging" as long as you know your worth and describe it fairly to others. That "fair" part is actual humility. Don't exagerate it, don't devaluate yourself either, be fair to your worth : be humble. That's the difference between humility and low self esteem. A humble person can brag, as long as it's true, fair, without exageration. A low self esteem person won't brag, because that person doesn't believe it has anything worth bragging about. When describing themselves, the humble person will fairly moderate its positive sides to avoid wrongly exagerating them, just like it does with its negative sides, while the low self esteem person will overly moderate, or rather, wrongly devaluate its positive sides, and exagerate its negative sides. Humility is fair moderation, low self esteem is exagerated devaluation. Also, a humble person moderates towards truth, not towards pleasing whoever's listening. That would be hypocrisy, deforming the truth and your beliefs to try to control how others perceive you. Often out of _fear of their negative reactions_ (learned from past traumas that generally don't apply anymore, but stay ingrained). I see that as a mistake that people often make, I believe that catering to others is very different from humility. But most people don't really know their worth, or estimate it differently. There's worth based on your own judgement, or based on others'. Good confidence lets you believe in your own judgement and base your worth on it. But it doesn't mean you'd disregard others' judgement. It means you do what you believe to be true, and will disregard others if you believe them to be wrong. Confidence is not bragging. Confidence is believing in your own judgement, it's different from high self esteem, but tends to go together because, as there's worth to find in most people, one leads to another. A confident person will describe itself positively, just like a bragger. But one has fair and moderated judgement while the other has not and exagerates it to get others' attention or advertise himself higher than he actually is to feel better. There's a range of confidences, between those who only listen to their own judgement and ignore others' and those who ignore their judgement and only listen to others'. There's a range of humilities, between those who assume they're the best without any second thought, and those who make sure to check or be moderate if there's any doubt and try to be as fair as possible. A bragger would be a confident person with low humility, but a person can be both confident and humble, describe itself positively, without it being bragging. Yes, risks should be accounted for, otherwise you'd be an idiot. But do not fear them, it will only hinder your decisions. Evaluate the risks, fairly, make a good, fair decision, and act upon it. If your fear makes every risk seem like a fatality, remember that most people gueninely don't care too much about what each other does or says just like you don't care too much about them. People are generally just looking for entertainment, and sometimes for some meaning : a cool story, a cool moment, a cool activity, a cool compagny, cool relationships... You might create an impression, but it really doesn't matter, they don't really care about it, that's not what they're looking for
@@brocolive1950 Nice comment. But one deginition I see a little different. I define bragging as telling things about yourself you cannot prove or cannot fullfill. (And may be even claiming the results of the work from other people as your own work) Confidence is telling people exactly what you can and if asked you'll prove it. And NOT claiming the results from other people as youre own.
138 tested twice with the Stanford-Binet however I struggled in public school and dropped out of high school. Lots of issues with teachers. I eventually got a GED and then a college degree but still struggled socially and was later diagnosed with PTSD. So even if a person is intelligent other issues can effect their ability to be successful in life. I am happy to have had the opportunity to help other people and I think that is a better measure of life success than intelligence or money.
Along the way, standardized tests have allowed me to compete with people from much better origins and means. The SAT/ACT showed I could compete in the same colleges. The MCAT showed I could compete in medical schools, and the STEP 1 showed that I could hang in the most prestigious residencies. Without any one of these tests, I would have been limited by the recommendations that I could get from current instructors-- and if my instructors weren't as prestigious as someone else's, then I would have been at a disadvantage for something not within my control and that would have little bearing on my eventual performance. This was the major reason many of us wrote letters in protest of the STEP-1 becoming a non-scored pass/fail exam... how would someone from less prestigious medical school compete for desirable residency spots against someone who went to Harvard or Yale? You'd have to shell out 3-4-5x the in medical school that I did to match with those same residency programs where I interviewed. It's stupid.
The editing of this video was actually really bad. Which is a little bit ironic. Also, graphics have nothing to do with editing. The graphics were good yes
@@Ben21756 i really noticed how bad it was in this particular video. Just one example look at how obviously fake his video chat with British glasses dude is. At some point they even have a jump cut edit on his screen WHILE Derek is supposedly looking at the guy live. And there are a bunch of other edits and comments that Derek made that are completely out of place and do not add anything of value. In terms of editing and production this video stands out as one of his worst to me. But yeah the graphics are slick.
That is an absolutely valid question and one of the biggest arguments against IQ tests. They are biased toward the demographic that they are testing. You don't think the SAT and ACT are for white, middle class kids? That IQ relates to success is not about intelligence, it's about social bias.
@x.elliek.x yes and no. IQ tests are designed by highly intelligent people, and the answers have to be made with information, and that information must be known, by the test designer. This is why truly, many people have immeasurable intelligence, meaning, they could create their own problems other people can not solve.
Here’s the thing: I used to be a middle school music teacher and went through all the special education and teaching strategy classes. What they don’t tell you is that a student’s IQ generally predicts their success in a traditional classroom setting, and is honestly a pretty poor judgment of individual intelligence outside of that very specific environment. When I was still an observing teacher prior to student teaching, I was in a music classroom doing recorders and a non-verbal autistic student was participating. As soon as they started their ear training exercises, he was the only kid that got every note right in less than a second and would patiently wait for the class to catch up to him. He had perfect pitch and knew exactly what he was doing, but due to his communication skills he struggled in classrooms that were simply a whiteboard and a lecture. When you gave him a recorder in an open classroom though? He became an extremely gifted young musician who was having a ton of fun and learning a lot!
So it’s really interesting to me that music tends to be a strength for nonverbal autistic individuals. That’s fascinating that sometimes they’re so keen to musical abstraction
Due to the nasty side effects of a head injury, I quickly dropped to the bottom of the class, failed a grade, and soon dropped out of school altogether. Over the years I was regarded as being a hopeless case, basically the dumbest and lowest IQ student of every class. When In my 40's I was still interested in Einstein's theory of Special Relativity(SR), and thus had also heard that the speed of light was the fastest speed possible. But the rest that I had heard on TV about it, made no sense to me. So I decided to figure it all out by myself by starting from scratch and thus analyze motion to determine exactly what it is. Holy smokes ! It turned out to be no more difficult than learning how to ride a bicycle to discover the SR phenomena by oneself, and at the same time derive the SR mathematical equations, including the Lorentz Transformation equations. So it is very annoying when you can do something like this, yet meanwhile people think that you are nothing but an absolute idiot.
Strange. Women tend to have higher GPAs but lower IQ so there’s def third confounding factors. I think it has to do with how (relatively) easy school is and how you can brute force it with memory. (Which would explain some women struggle in college compared to HS despite the “grades being transferable”)
@@maxwellscott-bz8bf lower standard deviation in iQ Not lower If you want to investigate this, you might want to see what population is school selecting for, Maybe age and maturation rate has to do something with it regarding gpa
Don't let IQ control your life. I was homeschooled, dropped out of multiple classes due to a lack of motivation, and worked in fast food for a good chunk of my life. Since then, I have taught myself to code in over 10 different languages, built close to 200 game projects and applications, and started my own programming business. Anyone can learn anything with enough time and effort, and I believe that a person's motivation to learn is the main factor that contributes to success.
My SAT scores rose 300 points on the 1600 point scale just because I could afford to take the test a second time. I ended up surpassing a classmate of mine who initially scored higher than me, but could not afford to take the test twice. That doesn't strike me as particularly fair. IQ seems like a fine tool for research but it needs to be used carefully and always taken somewhat skeptically, especially when comparing people across demographics.
This! I took the PSAT (optional) as practice. I can be a bit of a slow test taker due to excessive anxiety. I felt I did poorly on that test so I bought a used SAT prep book, spent the summer going through the book myself, and on the actual SAT my math/language combined score went up about 150 points (almost the maximum possible, to an 800 language and 760 math). Obviously I did not get that much smarter in one year, I simply familiarized myself with the test.
As has been said in the video IQ tests seem trainable like the sat. I think it all boils down to how much motivation or anxiety you had compared to the first time around.
When I was a freshman in college, I took the IQ test and scored 122. Last month I took the test as a 2nd year grad student and scored 149. My bachelors degree was in Electrical Engineering and my graduate degree is in Microelectronics Engineering, both highly numerical and might have played a role in my presumed improved ability to recognise patterns , but a 27 point difference between my 19 and the 30 year old IQ scores ( a bump from highly intelligent to near genius) is too large for me to take the test as a serious measure of intellectual prowess.
Not that it matters, but EE also. I agree a score jumping that much across the distribution is pretty suspect, assuming equal levels of mental readiness and motivation each test. About how much of your tests were rote pattern recognition? This is something that is purposefully improved upon immensely after a years long curriculum for a field like this.
"too large for me to take the test as a serious measure of intellectual prowess." So what's the point of talking about it? it's not like you are, by yourself, a sample of data worth studying So is your comment just for the sake of showing off big numbers and achievements?
As a high school teacher, one semester I was given an English special educcation class to teach. I soon discovered that it was emotional intelligence that was lacking. I brought in the book "Bambi" realizing that it was possible that a parent may not have read to them. They were transfixed Also I spent a great deal of time telling them that interpersonal skills, ie,. being kind and nice to people, being co-operative, etc. and learning a skill would be much more important than knave intelligence. I hope that helped in their future lives.
I scored an extremely high IQ and performed terribly at school. Many years after I graduated school, I now tutor students from middle school to university level and am known to be one of the best tutors in my area. I learned more after my schooling than I ever did at school. I don't put that to having bad teachers, because they couldn't all be bad, but I hated the method of education when I was a child. I now teach children, they way I like to learn. I not only teach them how to do something, I also spend as much time teaching them why they're learning that particular something. I find that this point is very important for about 80% of the kids I teach/taught.
Hard agree here, I strongly believe that if you aren't willing to tell someone WHY they are learning something, that thing probably isn't worth learning. Even for random stuff that individually isn't useful, you can say something like, "Learning how to deal with a wide assortment of random tasks will improve your ability to quickly solve basic problems in day to day life." That's all it takes, just knowing the teacher's personal opinion on what they are teaching makes such a huge difference. When I was in school my worst subjects were always the ones with teachers who shrugged off every question and ordered me back to some standardised crap.
I've seen studies about the effect of self-fulfilling prophecy. They gave kids an aptitude test, and the higher-scoring kids did better. But they shuffled the results. Some kids who got a low score were told they scored high, and they did better than some who actually scored higher. Tell a kid they are smart, and they believe you. Tell a kid they are dumb, and they believe you. Both then get busy proving it.
Depends on their temperament. Disagreeable+industrious people would want to prove you wrong if you called them dumb, agreeable people would be more likely to accept it
My brother, a year younger than me, was having difficulty in school so we both got tested. We were told that his IQ was higher than mine. I didn't know this until decades later when my mother told me that the therapist recommended they switch our IQs to motivate him to do better. Both were still above average, but he loved thinking he was smarter than his older sister. Although he got his master's degree, etc., his life was turbulent, he had addiction issues, and ended up dying a year ago from smoking meth laced with fentanyl. Unfortunately back when this advice was given, the psychological world of medicine did not understand learning disabilities, ADHD, etc. I think he may have been on the autism spectrum, possibly. Also, many of his issues were spiritual as well. I also recently learned that the woman who lived across the street was practicing witchcraft, which explains a LOT about things that happened back when we were kids. We're more than just iQs...
The scenario you described isn’t a self-fulfilling prophecy. If the kids were randomly split into two groups, and one was told they were smart, and the other was told they were dumb before taking the test, and the results showed a significant difference, then that would indicate that. Switching test scores after the fact is just confusing and may lead to underestimating or overestimating themselves. I do think we should tell all kids that they have intelligence that could appear differently than their peers, and we are trying to help them raise the other types of intelligence to round out their skills
when i was entering university i was tested for my dyslexia and my results were all over the place, some showing direct evidence and some completely opposing. the examiner made me take an iq test and it turned out that i was correcting my own disability. it made me think how many other kids suffer in school like i did myself where teachers fail to recognise learning disabilities early on because of this.
I've experienced a similar thing with dyslexia and ADHD in my own life, while on the subject Dyslexia is all too often called a disability without second thought. if anyone ever took the time to understand why our brains do some of the things that make things like reading so much harder, they would realize in some way are brains are so good at one thing it actually effectively causes what looks like a disability from outside observers. I would like to clarify that each case is unique and no one is the same.
Same, got my adhd diagnosis at 18, never suspected I had it till online school started and I really really started being unable to focus at all. Never had an issue till 10th grade but after 12th decided to get tested
I am suing NASA for discriminating on the basis of perceived mental disability. I am winning 🏆 and any of you can Google me if you need proof. But if anyone puts their faith in the Imaginary Bum™️ who took an Impossible Longshot™️ *this guy* is _going to land 🛸 the big 🤯 one._
@@kylepetersen6520 This is a completely overlooked area. Highly intelligent people with disabling syndromes often "mask" their disabilities extremely well. For a time that is. As a result they very often do not get the support they need. And once they are worn out from the strain of compensation, and the underlying disabilities start to show, they still don't get the support they need, as many psychology professionals are unable (or unwilling) to understand that neurodivergency shows differently with highly intelligent people. It's a case of double discrimination.
I've taken a variety of these styles of tests at various points in my life and the only thing they've ever told me is what I already knew: I'm incredibly good at taking these kinds of tests. I genuinely enjoyed receiving/discussing my results each time, but in none of those instances was it actually helpful to me. The gifted and talented program at my schools didn't teach me how to work through the adversity of finally encountering material I wasn't inherently good at learning. None of the tests (until just this past April) were able to identify my Autism Spectrum Disorder, and my exceptionally bonkers Wonderlic score still didn't score me the job that had me take it. I'm not saying these tests are useless; I actually think they have plenty of uses. But I also think people really lean on them far too much for their own good.
Wow. Maybe you need to study a bit more on what autism is and how people with autism process things. My nephew has it. If you give him one objective he is incredible at it. One would think even genius level. But try and throw multiple objectives at him with maybe some time pressure or obstacles he is not familiar with. And he shuts down. Either or autism does not affect the majority of the population so an IQ test would not be a standard reliable test for someone with this issue. Unless the Dr was simply wanting to compare growth of that individual. Not a comparison of general population
@@gtmddn Cognitive function is part of the psych eval that is used to determine whether someone has ASD, to what extent, and how it manifests. If you had done any research you would know that autism doesn't manifest the same in all people, nor do the symptoms impact everyone to the same degree.
@@just_gut oh I'm not saying it is a specific problem effecting all equally. Most issues like this infact don't effect all that have them in the exact same ways. But there are enough commons that one can say most all people with it are affected to some degree in that specific manner. My example was the problem with multi tasking. And trying something new. If my nephew has no reference. Good luck getting him to do the whatever. But as soon as he has reference. Then he will try it. Ie watch his dad do it. But am did not nor do I claim to know anything about it other than my experience with my nephew
It seems strange to me that people trying to identify a "g factor" that was static from birth would include vocabulary in the test, since that is... pretty obviously not something you're born with, and that changes drastically over a lifetime.
Ginny Yurich from 1000 Hours Outside talks about the correlation between time spent outdoors and how intelligent a child grows up to be. I’d love to see a conversation between you two. I love her.
I know someone with a 163 IQ and they fail at school due to finding it boring and then fell off being because they didn’t learn more advanced topics in subjects such as math. This person will actually pick up on new concepts extremely fast and excel in most things even outside of traditional school subjects. They have so much potential but due to the non-stimulating factor of most subjects to them, they rarely continue studying it. Having a high IQ is great but also can be something that negatively effects someone if they don’t have the best teachers and environment to help them stay interested in developmental years.
I know someone with a 142 IQ that had a 2.3 GPA in high school, and still ended up going to college a few years later and got a 4.0 and they're making a good 6-figure salary these days. Why did they do so bad in high school? They were bored out of their mind, it wasn't interesting or stimulating to them. Their parents paid zero attention to them, and better parents may have pushed them a bit and put them in more advanced classes or found other ways to challenge them.
Fail at school meaning fail the exam? If so, then they r not high IQ. High IQ, lack of interest, not studying yet excel at the test no matter what.... not failing.
I took 3 official tests from childhood to adulthood, and I had a significant drop in the second one I took after a traumatic experience, being in a bad mental state overall. I think what you can truely measure in most cases is how well the adults around you took care of you as a child. If your parents are resourceful, you are also more likely to have a good career anyway. But the most important aspect seems to be how well you can focus, which is easier to do if you had a routine as a kid. People who are into science and reading studies in their free time aren't in survival mode, either. I remember two questions during one of the tests that stood out to me as something that could not possibly measure intelligence. One was to name something Goethe has written, the other was what wood and alcohol have in common (although, there were other questions like this one, too). Those are questions that are specifically targeted to experience, and the first one would also lower the score of someone from a different culture.
I have seen experiments done with a group of students why did quite some practice tests before, as well as a control group who just went in as is. The group that did a lot of practice scored significantly better. Mood, health, a different way of thinking and even anxieties heavily bias those tests as well. Like you said, all this also heavily depends on you were being raised. One of the reason why IQ tests work very bad for people who are gifted for example. It also says very little in what way someone is intelligent in. There are people who have super high IQ score, but are unable to solve very simple and basic practical problems.
The real problem with IQ and IQ tests are the anthropic biases associated with it. Dolphins are smart, but making an 'IQ' test for dolphins is not the same as making one for humans, and without a general way to measure intelligence, we're just tooting our own horns. I remember when I took an IQ test the first question was "Donkey?" Not a Shrek joke, just basic definitions. Needless to say, I said a donkey is an &$$. I scored below average-
@@assarlannerborn9342 Depending on the score you get, that is somewhere between 6-10%. I call that pretty significant. Also keep in mind that those numbers are averages. We don't know the standard deviation from those numbers.
IQ measurement is very important in clinical settings, specially when we're dealing with degenerative brain diseases or Cranioencephalic Trauma. Being able to access one's general cognitive ability is crucial to deliver the best care possible to that patient.
In this case, it's more like the pain scale, no? Where the point isn't to measure something objectively, but to have some relative scale that can show changes.
Exposure to certain factors play a major role as well. Example is 8:03 . I have no idea what "sanguine" means. That does not make me stupid...I've just never heard anyone use that word nor have I needed that word to function in life. I just looked it up and this is the definition....optimistic or positive, especially in an apparently bad or difficult situation. There are many ways and words I would use to describe this definition. So it's not like people don't know or comprehend the meaning...many may just not have heard that specific word before. ------- Side Note: Last time I had my IQ Test done was when I was 16 and my score was 163. I got that score and I the only award I ever got in school was Perfect Attendance For A Week...LOL. I skipped out a LOT. Last grade I passed was 4th grade. I wasn't failing cause I was dumb...I was failing cause I was screwing up being a wild child. Basically my point is that I saw IQ Test as a puzzle...and I like puzzles. But for someone to have a chance at solving a puzzle is some hint of the answer. Many people may noy know the word sanguine, but if they had used it in a sentence or paragraph I think most would have figured out what it meant.
I believe focus and interest play a huge role in this. I went to high school with guys that got terrible grades and couldn't take a test to save their life. But they could take apart an engine and put it back together practically blindfolded. I rarely ever did my homework but listened in class and tested well, I usually got higher grades, but i get distracted so easily completing an engine would be very difficult for me.
I've got ADHD and have a really weird smattering of results on IQ test I took for my diagnosis (I was diagnosed as a result). I did very well in maths, and relatively poorer in English, purely because I could only ever do well in a subject that I actually cared about. Those worksheets we got in maths where it was basically the same question 30 times, I think I never finished one of those ever. I think I did well in the subject because in class I got distracted and worked on my own maths problems that were way harder than what we were looking at in class because the problems were actually interesting. I wish that maths was taught in a way that encouraged problem solving in a way that suited me better. I'm deeply grateful for my teachers for just letting me not do my work and find stuff out my own way but a setting that encouraged working on relatively few, difficult problems could have helped a lot!
I had an issue where I was almost always right the first time. Then I would second guess myself. I could convince myself I was wrong. It depended on the subject. My computer classes I could talk to my teach after a test and explain why I thought my answer was right and usually catch a break by them. I love math because there's almost always a right answer that can be checked.
Motivation plays a huge role in everything you do, iq tests differ from school tests in the way that people are forced to take school tests but choose to take an iq test
The best way i heard IQ described is its like a combination of the acceleration of a car and its top speed. You can go a very distance from your starting point with a fast car that either accelerates quickly or has a high top speed but what really matters is the direction the car is going It doesnt matter how fast you are going if you are pointing the wrong direction.
you see crystallised intelligence come into place here, fluid iq gradually decreases after the 30 age mark unlike the other. It stays put and has a slow increase too!! so in my experience of people around me fluid iq does help in contribution for a persons success but it isnt all. Crystallised iq matters too in a persons achievements. Humans are adaptable to environments and it is beautiful if you think about it.
@@TheHunt-t8o One of the smartest and most successful people in the world have outlawed fluoride from their water. Do with that information what you will.
It would be interesting to know what your average IQ was for the tests you took online to compare it to the actual test results and see how accurate these online tests were at determining a persons IQ
@@amind1317 I was told 121 at age 9, and have had to go thru some stuff with therapists, phycologists and they said it's most likely much higher than that and I have been sleeping in ditches homeless.
I agree that iq test is flawed but intelligence does have differences in different ppl. This is common sense and it does sound unpleasant but it’s true. It’s just iq test may not necessarily be the way to measure one’s intelligence. Einstein was determined to have a learning disability in middle school but turned out his super smart
@@amind1317 u can be smart but not able to access education or skill training programs. Or he directed to the wrong direction. If Einstein never was found by Max Plank, he would be a clock fixer forever
@@amind1317 if u know ur iq is high and u got a better learning ability, u can start to learn skills such as trading skills and etc or whatever skill because obviously u can learn faster than others but if u don’t learn no matter how high ur iq is, u still have no skills. If someone is tall but never got into nba, that doesn’t help much neither
There are 4 major parts of a person that determine how well that person does in society, and each major part has 4 aspects. Some of those aspects you are born with, others can be learned, but they are: 1. BRAIN POWERS: A. Intelligence (learning, analyzing) B. Knowledge (education, experience) C. Wisdom (judgement, logic) D. Creativity (originality, cleverness) 2. DISCIPLINE SKILLS: A. Initiative/Passion B. Persistence/Resilience C. Efficiency/Adaptability D. Precaution/Common sense 3. SOCIAL-EMOTIONAL STATE: A. Merciful v. uncaring B. Empathic v. shallow C. Reliable v. dishonest D. Open-minded v. biased 4. INFLUENCE/CHARISMA TRAITS: A. Appearance/attractiveness B. Confidence/ego C. Communication/motivation D. Mojo, Cool, Hip, Trendy, Noticeable So yeah: An IQ test measures Intelligence... 1/16th of everything that determines a person's value to society. It's not particularly useful in determining outcomes, especially when all 16 of these aspects can be targeted for any life purpose whose outcomes and successes may not be measured by the traditional determinants of success, such as money, fame, and power. Also, just to add, obviously things such as (1) wealth/lineage/social status, (2) nationality, ethnicity, religion, and gender, and (3) access to opportunities are even greater determinants than the items above. Finally, I intentionally omit complicating/distracting factors such as physical skills and strength, or sexuality and morals from the equation.
That bit on motivation, training, test strategy, and anxiety hit the nail right on the head. It can be a very significant impact if all of those are in your favor or if they're working against you. I've been a good SAT-style (multiple choice, timed, reading/math/logic) tests ever since my elementary school started doing state level testing for school districts once a year way back when I was a kid. For me it was just a fun challenge and by the time I ran into standardized tests that caused other people to stress (PSAT, SAT, ACT, LSAT, multi-state bar exam) and actually mattered for some purposes, the "test" part of it was a walk in the park for me, and my only weaknesses were any actual knowledge gaps or making mistakes. Meanwhile I know folks who got immobilized by anxiety or just weren't used to the format had problems with the form of the test even if they had the knowledge down as well or better than me.
I took an IQ test on several sites on Google. Every time something is different. 114 times 66 times 145 times 119 times. They are different. Also, I am an Arab. I am 14 years old. I have never taken a real test.
Predictive Ability = Ability to Abstract into Concepts to glean out any "Patterns" (ideally, into Mathematical Expression/s) to determine its "Ongoing" Presence. . . . Life (Abstracted) = Expressions of Math, Cycling over Time. {Abstract: Abstract ↔️ Mathematical Expression}, and the "Power" of Abstraction = [(Abstraction)Nested] ^Power}. And, the "Power" of Intelligence = the Power of Nesting Abstraction = Regenerating more Powerful Intelligence. Interestingly, thus the "Ultimate Power of A.I." = the Power of "Regenerating A.I.," ever more & more Powerful A.I. at any time - over time.
Mathematically Proven: that being Nice, Forgiving, Retaliatory (only to swiftly swat down, clearly, bad acts - most of the time) and Clarity (of Intention) is the Only way to "Guarantee" the ----- evolutionary ----- Survival of the Species. {Where, the most: Rational = Selfish = Profitable = Nicest Strategy/Behavior in time, over time.) 👍 :-) (Any observable dissolution or disharmony in culture (or, relationships suggests an irrational breakdown [due to excessive noise (error) among the actors] to the inevitable detriment of All { 👎 :-( . . . ::-( }, if not corrected soon enough. Check out lessons learned from the science of "Game Theory."
I had super high anxiety on tests...I'd pace in circles all day before a test. I'd go potty like 3 times in the ten minutes before class... I'd go home and sleep after a test. I'm also diagnosed as mentally disabled. Yet I had many professors marvel that I was the only student who ever had received a perfect grade on one of their tests (and then of course I did that on all the rest of their tests). But I think the professor (berkeley phd for context) who said it best when he gleefully announced only one student had passed his first test (and with 100 percent), "for a smart guy you sure have said some of the stupidest things I've ever heard in my class." And we all laughed our heads off because heck yeah. I think anxiety is a superpower. I always performed my best, although in crazy vibrato, when soloing in front of thousands or when the bases were loaded with two out while everyone in the stands is trying to taunt me. Bring it on.
As someone with an aptitude for abstract learning; the older and more experienced I get the more I appreciate how many people there are that would likely score significantly worse than me in an IQ test but are far better equipped than I am at solving totally different categories of problems.
I’m kinda the opposite. Now I know my IQ and what that generally means for how my life is going. It just confirms a lot of my suspicions. Everyone I’ve ever worked with has been 25 IQ points lower than me. The office lady keeps screwing up my truck route because she’s an idiot. The warehouse guys that keep screwing up my truck load so I can’t unload it (which to me seems like an impossible mistake to make) really are 90 IQ morons! I should always expect incredible mistakes from these people! The guy that keeps screwing up my payroll? Must be 100-110 IQ, that explains it. My regional manager who somehow blames me for these problems and refuses to understand my explanation? He’s probably 115 IQ! Compared to me, he’s a total dumbass. The mechanics that keep failing to make repairs? Well, they’re 110 IQ, what do you expect? Why doesn’t HR pick my applications for high IQ jobs that I apply to that I’m qualified for? They’re kinda dumb, maybe that’s why.
It reminds me of the Mensa tests I did earlier on in my life, and how my mind have focused on different areas during life. Like math, physics, logic was a main part of my life until I was teenager, then other things took a larger role.
After completing the test in Belgium, I was invited to the HP Mensa Club and a short video about their evenings was shown to me. I did not join the Club, all the HP youth were so depressed with their schools and teachers, honestly, I cannot do anything for them.
Besides motivation, I believe that sleep hygiene, nutrition and how you feel in general when taking the test also can influence your score. It's a snapshot on how smart you are on that current time, and therefore it can be given a different score at a different time. It might be a good idea to make another video where you retake the test, but at a different company and with a couple of months in between to compare the results.
absolutely. Honestly natural intelligence exemplified in an IQ test negligibly has any effect on your life. As a 144 IQ individual who's in a Computer Science class with a 160 IQ individual we both discussed the topic and agreed that if we left our test results and successes in the subject down to chance and natural ability compared to working hard and understanding each and every concept of the subject, as Computer Science is a mixture of many subjects all in one, we would be performing a lot worse in the class compared to our very capable class mates. Natural 'intelligence', if that's how you'd like to identify IQ, is no substitute for hard work and devotion to a subject.
Good idea. Rich people do that. Poor people can not. ps I had your same idea 20 years ago. Nothing has changed. ps Trump ‘the supposed billionaire, wants YOUR MONY? Why? Because he wants to ‘use your ignorance against you’! Sad but true.
@@robert-wr9xt As someone who grew up poor, made my own way and was fed this nonsense that I was owed the world all my life I'll tell you this. If you've spent time around poor people, you'll realize that they kneecap themselves due to their low IQ. They don't have a low IQ because they were kneecapped. In the majority of cases, they are just lazy.
When I was very young, my teachers considered me a dimwit. At some subsequent point early on, I took an IQ test or similar, and it was then clear that I was far from being an idiot, and my teachers had a new label for me, underachiever. Progress takes interesting forms.
@@MadScientist267 Presumably you just watched a 30 minute video explaining why the number isn't useless. It sounds like there may be personal factors making you bitter about this topic
@@ianmccurdy1223 No I'm just aware of the limitations of such a concept. An IQ test measures the extent of the "vision" at the time it was created. It's got a *lot* of issues which is what makes it barely more than an "at a glance". It's nowhere near comprehensive enough 🤷♂️ Don't project your shortcomings on me lol
I heard the phrase "IQ is what an IQ-test measures" and I think that has some valid point. All in all, I think that many competencies you need to get a decent IQ-score are cometencies you need in school-tests or at work. Concentration, performing under time-pressure, knowing when to leave a subject for later und carry on, getting from one topic to another and so on...
iq tests don't need to "measure" anything other than the metric itself, though. the fact that an "abstract" number that isn't a direct measurement of any real-world quantity would have strong correlations with other traits such as job performance is enough to make it useful
A person need never take any lessons or schooling to do an iq test. For an iq test it worked out with problems that a person can not be taught the answer to. Iq is the ability for a person to see and I derstand on their own no training. Things like spelling math, ring good at history or any other school lessons take no iq at all just memory somthing that even a compleat morón can have a plenty
@@FrankthegbThe tests score you on something and that something has incredibly much better correlation and predictive success at guessing ability to do other real-world skills than most other approaches, such as structured and unstructured job interviews, especially if you're hiring someone for a job that is non-repetitive and requires an ability to solve novel complex problems.
I was tested at 24 for some careerforce services, and I scored in the 137. Post Covid, at 38, my score was 103 as I was tested for ADHD. - I have disabling RA, was in pain, and had not slept the night prior due to pain. Still - I appreciate the results and what the meant. Most scores were nearly the same, but processing speed went down. It was very low, and brought the score down to 103. As Covid wrecked me badly - I got type-2 diabetes post covid, and felt a huge mental shift after having it - we did not really dive into what the cause was. I still do not know what would cause such a dramatic shift. My take away: I was very laid back as a kid, and as an adult, I weight things more seriously and do work more slowly - almost by choice or habit. So my speed is slow, but I feel more sure and secure than I did as a kid. So with a lower IQ, comes happiness. And stability.
I did the WAIS IV test a couple of years ago as part of an ADHD assessment. The clinician who was administering the test didn't properly explain some of the exercises. I can only imagine how much poor communication could affect the results for someone who's first language isnt English.
I took the WAIS IV test, too, but in Korea (I'm Korean). The WAIS IV test is translated and modified slightly to match the cultural background of the region. For instance, I was asked to name some kings and presidents of Korea and some local historical events. It was a modified version called the K-WAISIV test. I'm pretty sure everyone gets their own version of the test depending on their nationality and cultural background.
I was tested at a university while I was in highschool. I was the top student in my class in mathematics and computer science (went on to build embedded systems, electronics, ASIC's, FPGA's, etc.. and was top engineering student in my class in college), my parents wouldn't tell me my IQ test results until a decade or so later when I found the paperwork. I think it explains why I excelled in vector calculus, spherical / non-euclidean geometry. I was playing with transcendental mathematics, spherical triangles, fractals, chaos theory, julia / cantor sets as a hobby in middle school. Always loved computer science and algorithms. My visual / spatial geometry IQ tests were off the scale. My overall IQ test was 175. I also have weird stuff going on like I have suffered ASMR type stuff since I was a child, and I never told anyone, but ruffling of papers, whispers, or teachers writing on chalkboards, all sorts of stuff were triggers for me. I believe I have some sort of genetic difference, like borderline aspergers because I was also never good with socializing with my peers. I have always wondered if there is a relationship with ASMR to this.
It's extremely unlikely that the overall result you got was actually 175, you probably just scored 175 in a couple specific areas but the overall number would be lower, unless you're just an incredibly rare super genius. I'm not a psychotherapist or anything but it definitely seems like you have some form of autism from what you say in your comment, sensory differences and issues and unusual difficulty socializing while excelling at computer science math and geometry are pretty strong symptoms of autism, so you should probably seek a proper diagnosis on that because it's definitely not a good idea to self diagnose.
The probability of Z > 5 is extremely rare. It’s so rare that IQ tests don’t have any validity above a certain value since it doesn’t exist enough in the reference population.
I actually had to take something similar to an IQ test for my autism assessment and I was WAY better at the vocabulary section than any other section to the point where on my assessment there was a note saying that they actually weren't going to give me a general score because the vocabulary section would've skewed my otherwise average score a bit too high for an accurate assessment, so I was just given my individual scores. I also ended up being diagnosed with autism. I don't know if those two things are related but its an interesting story
Same here! My english skills were scored at 120 while my other tests showed pretty average intellegance. Funnily enough though, I'm very well spoken in person and yet I'm an atrosious texter. They decided to just diagnose me with ADD however I struggled a lot socially, and I often wonder if I actually have autism.
Hey, good report and good question In fact the height of the verbal ability and autism are correlated. For this reason, autistic people are often overestimated in their basic functions and receive less support
I had the (mis)fortune of scoring high on an IQ test in college as part of a learning disability assessment. After that I often would measure my real achievements against my score to see if I was actually reaching the top X% like I was supposed to be. But the fact is that success depends on many other factors ranging from hard work to just dumb luck. Certainly IQ and other physchological tests are useful tools - that program helped me get my crap together and not fail out of college. But it can also fuel dangerous dysphorias ranging from inadequacy to superiority. In any case, congrats on the score Derek :). My advice is not to let the score get to your head either way. Big fan of your videos and wish you the best.
Holding all else constant, parental wealth and "social"/communication skills are way more relevant than IQ as explanatory variables for income/wealth. All the more reason not to let these scores get to our heads.
A lot (most?) of "sucessful businessmen" aren't bright, left school early and just tenaciously work at making money with little thought about other factors (like social responsibility or ethics) to distract them from that goal
If you ignore all the stuff you have zero control over (familial wealth, upbringing, natural ability, luck), A lot of wealth that you have any control over has likely more to do with the career path you take. If you're ale to get yourself into being a stock broker, you can make millions of dollars. But if you decide to be a musician instead, well... good luck with that. Neither of these jobs really are THAT much about having high intellectual ability, but both leverage other abilities or interests.
@@miscbits6399 some people who got to a very high paying job did go to college and stuff, but instead of settling for the well paying, but still middle class job worked for 11+ hours a day to reach the top of whatever company they were in
I grew up as a ward of the state of NC. At the age of 16, due to a decent IQ test, I was emancipated from both my parents and the state. And deemed a legal adult. It got me out of a bad situation, and allowed me to make my own decisions. The hard part was finding a job and an apartment. I wasn't allowed to go back to high school as a legal adult, nor would it have been practicle as I needed money. So I got my GED and started to figure out how dumb I really was.
That's the thing. Gestation period is long for us. Biological and educational. The real test is living and making it in the cruel world. Or living and making it in the biological and educational world - and then in the real world. Hope you are doing well.
@@pauldow1648 Appreciate your concern, that was in 98. I do okay for myself and those around me. Ended up traveling the country setting up horse shows and rodeos, then building cell towers, running boats to the gulf stream, and finally found home as a nuclear electrician for pharma. I owned a construction company that donated 10 percent of its profits to charities for women and children and food banks for a while. Then took care of my mom for a few years into and through hospice, now I work, play with my dogs and am trying to grow an orchard. How are you doing?
It would be fantastic to have a follow-up video on the distinction between intelligence and rationality, for example by tapping into the work of Keith Stanovich. And Derek, that could be an opportunity to go back to some of the early Veritasium videos: Stanovich developed a rationality test measuring the RQ (rationality quotient), with questions that remind of questions you used to ask people in the street, like "would you take that bet?" (what you were testing/"measuring" with that question was not people's intelligence, you knew they would understand the correct reasoning once you would explain it to them, but their rationality) and generally measure people's ability to avoid logical fallacies or to display competent data literacy (which you discussed in videos like the one on the regression to the mean or the one on Kahneman's system 1 and system 2). The rationality test is also more interesting than the IQ test: it is possible to have a high intelligence and still perform poorly on rationality questions. And when you see how Dan Kahan showed how intelligence is often used to protect biases, measuring rationality is a better predictor of the type of citizen someone will be and of the behaviour they will have regarding important issues like politics or climate change.
It is so random, I just learned about RQ today reading an academic paper. Yeah I am curious about this concept of RQ and how it differs from IQ. It would be a really interesting video topic.
And the thing with both IQ and RQ is, _personality_ makes both of them it's bitch. High IQ people can wind up failing badly, for example going to prison, when they are narcissists, prone to emotional decision making and rage. While IQ (and presumably RQ) are both correlated with success, the best childhood predictor of later success in adulthood is not IQ but deferment of gratification. The famous _marshmellow test_ shows astonishing predictive capacity for success. Of course, low IQ people can have personality flaws; they may even be more likely to than high IQ people. But having a high IQ won't count for much if your life is in chaos, and you're probably better off having an average IQ and a dependable personality than having a high IQ and being a sociopath, for example. The perfect case study that exemplifies this is Ted Kaczynski.
I took an IQ test after dropping out in Grade 10. I got 98. I didn't understand probably a 1/4 of the questions. I then studied for 3 days on the style of questions and the basic mathematics behind them to understand them better and I got 144. (not the same questions) A few days didn't turn me from average to genius so my basic assumption is that simple and targeted tests only get you surface level data. Intelligence contains so many factors to measure and some as basic as willingness to learn or the time spent on one specific task as well as total generalized learning and exposure to targeted areas of testing parameters.. Thats just the beginning too.
That is very interesting. I believe that IQ tests are a failure. Superior intelligence exists, but it's hard to be measured. Maybe a successful professional path, such as Ivy league diploma or being a scientist, a surgeon , an engineer should be a good indicator of above average intelligence whilst following less intellectual professions should mean average or below average intelligence.
@@cristianoo2 I mean if you've watched the video there's a lot of evidence to suggest that it still has predictive capacity regardless of if it can be fibbed
Did a neuropsychologist test you or did you take tests online? True iq tests can only be delivered by a highly trained professional, and they don’t typically contain any math at all.
I am a member of Mensa and I have scored perfectly on more than one multiple choice intelligence test. I dropped out of university at 16 after my junior year because I was a poor student. From my perspective, I have always felt like I was "a good test taker" because the answers honestly seem intuitive. When I take a test, I can feel the mindset of the test maker or test makers as the case may be. To me, it is odd that everyone doesn't view tests the same way I do. 🧿
8:00 - this was always my biggest issue with IQ tests. A lot of the sections will test logical reasoning. These can be spacial transformations, numerical sequences, etc., and they all involve logical deduction which i would classify as intelligence; whereas the vocabulary section i would classify more as knowledge than intelligence. I do accept that even the vocabulary section does have an element of deduction, but it feels like there is way too much of a pre-requisite of knowledge. In other sections (like sequences for example), prior training in these sections is an advantage, but even without prior training, you could still work through it logically; however, with vocabulary, if you have never heard of the words, you don't have many options other than to guess, which is why i hate this section being used as part of a test of one's intelligence.
Logical deduction, transformations, and sequences are also knowledge. Or skills. Until I took a math class my skill in those were average. Now I can knock out most of it in my head. You get better at seeing patterns the more you engage that skill.
@@Kloppin4H0rses as i was mentioning, i do accept that there is a level of knowledge to them, but my point was that unlike the language section, even if you haven't seen anything like the other sections before, you could deduce the answer logically. Obviously practice will make you better at any task, but even without prior exposure, the other sections are still possible.
An intelligent person will have the curiosity to learn through their life and know many words, but that correlates with age. When I was a kid there weren't vocabulary questions in those tests 🤔
Part of the reason there are several types of tests is to allow for that fact that the person TAKING the test doesn't get to tell the test what we think "intelligence" is. The instant I start picking apart what I think is intelligence vs knowledge, I am only about 90 years behind the folks who design the things. For instance, is the Rain Man's ability to recall in perfect detail the contents of every phone book he's ever paged through "intelligence", "knowledge", or 'just a really good memory'? The answer isn't so simple. Probably the best you can say is, the things are probably not NAMED very well. After all, they aren't measuring your intelligence, they're comparing the results of a mathematical operation performed on the sum total of elements in the tests to a known range of generally accepted statistical norms comprised of similar results gathered from a sub-set of all humans, namely, the other humans who've also taken the same test!!! The test's final integer results aren't the accurate measurements of raw "intelligence values" somehow taken from all your neurons added together, like your pulse or respiration rates, they're a comparison of your overall assessed values with everyone else's. Sorry if you already knew that and I read it wrong, you just got me kind of complaining along with you that there seems to be something 'off' about the things and what they do, and I'm full of coffee so I blathered along, but decided to keep it because I wrote it, so you must have hit a nerve that had me maybe thinking "Yeah, I agree and am full of caffeine..."
bruv If you're taking an iQ test and don't know THE WORDS?!? on it That's a problem And as the previous⏫commenter stated, it's really a measure of how you perform vs. how other people performed Everyone else knew the words but not you?!? You can't use root words, context clues ANYTHING!!? that's pretty low iQ, respectfully
Iq is actually a complicated or at-least controversial in-terms of method, subject to accurately quantify because IQ is more of a 3D measure than a 2D or 1D. A more accurate measurement of iq id assume would look like a volume of a polygon with numerous endpoints.
The Scottish guy you were chatting to was definitely referring to the "11+" test we had to take to decide which secondary school we would attend. Only the highest performers were accepted into grammar schools, which were much better funded and attracted the best teachers. It really resulted in a kind of two-tier system, and the fact that grammar schools were mostly located in affluent areas (often the areas became affluent because of the presence of the grammar schools), meant that if you didnt live within the catchment area of one (or could afford to move closer), it didn't matter what you scored in the 11+, you'd still end up at the local comprehensive. My sister was traumatised when she barely failed, because of a low score on the maths portion. She appealed and was accepted to a grammar school, then a Russell Group uni, and today she is working on her second master's degree. It makes me wonder if other children who fail due to one weak paper or test anxiety are being deprived of opportunities which helped my sister to fulfill her potential. I know that I scored full marks and I think it was out of 143 or 144, but I don't know if that number was designed to translate directly to IQ score. If the man you were speaking with told you about the correlation, I'd be interested to know.
Once he mentioned how IQ tests were predictive of future success in school I immediately thought about how the results affected schooling opportunities, teacher bias, and also the child's confidence in continuing to apply themselves. I'm now desperately curious if those have been measured to be more, less, or equally determinative in deciding the future of a student.
Well..the alternative is nepotism and whatnot, so it's not perfect but better than the other likely alternatives. As was pointed out, using standardized testing even vs teacher selection resulted in more economic and ethnic diversity, and that's beating out the better of the bunch as far as how selection would be determined. The same has been found in US with standardized testing for university. When schools stray away from these tests and towards more 'holistic' assessments, the rich kids win out much more. Not many poor kids are going to be doing volunteer work for a summer in Africa, or learning how to play the piano, or even becoming an eagle scout. So these sort of resume style boards end up being plagued with an innumerable amount of biases. So although they aren't perfect, standardized tests have shown time and again to be the best we got
IQ tests should be taken with a psychologist. In France, where I did the a Wechsler IV test, it's usually done in 3 meetings : 1. Explain the motivation and answer some questions to have some background, 2. Pass the test in a safe environment with the psychologist (only 2 people in the room), 3. Results and explanation. A psychologist is actually important to interprete the results.
That´s interesting. The Wechsler scale goes from 40 to 160, So I would think if you get them all right, your score would be 160. Period. But as you stated, the results need to be interpreted by the psychologist. At my first attempt, the psychologist said my IQ was immeasurable. Does that mean it was outside the scale, hence invalid?
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I think the biggest determining factor for how people do in school is how much the actually enjoy what they’re learning, and how much they feel education is valuable to them. Almost all of the people I knew who did poorly in school was from not turning in assignments. This can also result in not getting the practice needed to understand the subject matter, so test scores are poor as well. A lot of people did poor because they were bored, didn’t care, etc. and wanted to do anything else but school work
When I did my ASD and ADHD profiling, I did an IQ test. It was actually super helpful for understanding how my brain works as a neurodivergent person. My verbal IQ is 132 and my abstract reasoning is in the 99th percentile. But my working memory score was 83, and my digit span score was in the 3rd percentile lol It helped me understand why I'm so smart and so dumb at the same time ? Like I can understand complex topics quickly and with very little context, but when I worked at subway while I was at uni, I had to ask what they wanted on their sub 5 times bc I couldn't remember 😅
I just got done with my ASD and ADHD testing, at age 37, and yeah out of the 16 hours of testing in total, there was a lot of IQ type testing mixed in there :D I actually loved the pattern ones, i kept wanting to do more :D also the spatial testing was really neat! edit: oh the "copy this crazy nutty drawing!", then 10mins later, "remember that drawing? yeah draw it again...." then the next day!, again.... And on the 2nd day lots of random questions about the drawing, like "which one of these "patterns" was in the abstract drawing that you did yesterday", or a "was this in the drawing from yesterday?" I really want to know my score on that one. I felt good on my drawings, even on the 2nd day, but the "was this really in there?" really got to me, like i was getting false memories
This comment was particularly awesome to read. I’m 29 currently, and hat age 27 I was diagnosed with high functioning autism. I had no idea that an IQ test was part of the assessment. Knowing that at IQ test alone costs hundreds of dollars is a notable reason for why do the assessment is so expensive. The psychologist explained to me that for most neurodivergent people, you expect the results to resemble the structure of the human hand… Four fingers are all similarly long, then the thumb is comparatively far shorter. In other words, most people with autism have one area of comparative cognitive weakness. My results were approximately: Memory: 130 Verbal comprehension: 134 Numeracy: 132 Visual/spatial: 120 Processing speed: 92 I was profoundly sleep deprived before the assessment, but the results are still a very good approximation of how I would have scored if I had actually slept for a single second night before (Concisely, food poisoning, couldn’t sleep) My processing speed being the lowest is a classic example of someone with autism having one area lower than the others, which seems quite similar to your experience 👌🏻
One variable that I think should be taken into consideration is the time of day or sleep/wake cycle that the test is taken. I know this would vary greatly for me.
There are hundreds if not thousands of variable that should be taken into consideration for measuring intelligence, that just aren't. It's just a bad test, you're better off just guessing how intelligent you are in the mirror, if you're honest and truly think about it you'll get an answer and it will be accurate in the context of your life and enable you to progress, more than any IQ test could ever do.
I bet whether you exercise (and how) has a big factor too. I know when I did cardio for the first time in a long while it made me feel like ten years younger and way mentally sharper.
@@mhchx3 That view would seem to be unsupported by various lines of research. In the video, one expert said that poor students would be more likely to get into, say, gifted programs, if it was based on "objective-ish" IQ tests, than if they were based on teachers' subjective evaluations of the students. Now imagine how much LESS reliable those subjective evaluations are when we perform them on OURSELVES, rather than some other person. And that is indeed what has been found, when people are asked to rate themselves on IQ as well as other measures of ability. Call it the "Lake Wobegon Effect", where "all the children are above average". What was a joke turns out to be correct; 90% of us rate ourselves above average, in IQ, work aptitude, etc. So sure, there are hundreds if not thousands of factors that can effect IQ scores. But most of those have very little effect, and to the extent they do they can either raise or lower it, so tend to cancel each other out. And others have been studied and can be accounted for. Does that make the test perfect? Not by a long shot! But does it mean that we're better off evaluating ourselves? NO! That is perhaps the very WORST way of estimating IQ or almost any other measure. And if that's true, does that mean that subjective self-evaluations are worthless? No. Self-reflection is incredibly valuable, not just in the moment, but as you said, in "enabling you to progress". I suspect that engaging in such practices might both reflect those with higher IQ's, as well as be a means for increasing IQ scores. It's just not valuable as a substitute for estimating objective measurements.
My guess is poorly, or rather, I suspect there would be a correlation, but that the online tests on average would result in a higher score... Nobody wants to get a "bad score" and the people making most of those tests want people taking them. So I'd wager they are more likely to inflate the results so more people are happy with the results and maybe talk about that test they took to a friend or whatever which drives more people to the test.
Usually sites make you pay and give them at least your name and email to get your results. They're good for training, but I'd recommend never just handing out money and personal information like that for something like this online. At least unless you know for sure it's a reputable source.
@@Kriss_941 That is the first thing that comes to mind obviously but they are actually rather predictive. They are basically just shorter versions of the official tests. The legitimate online tests are done by respected organizations in psychology, and the brand of accuracy and reliability is worth much more to them than the initial hypothetical traffic from better scores. Ofc there are inaccurate tests with the purpose that you stated, but you should be doing the legit ones. There are multiple free online tests that are also longer from different organizations that are more accurate than Mensa's online test.
Predictive Ability = Ability to Abstract into Concepts to glean out any "Patterns" (ideally, into Mathematical Expression/s) to determine its "Ongoing" Presence. . . . Life (Abstracted) = Expressions of Math, Cycling over Time. {Abstract: Abstract ↔️ Mathematical Expression}, and the "Power" of Abstraction = [(Abstraction)Nested] ^Power}. And, the "Power" of Intelligence = the Power of Nesting Abstraction = Regenerating more Powerful Intelligence. Interestingly, thus the "Ultimate Power of A.I." = the Power of "Regenerating A.I.," ever more & more Powerful A.I. at any time - over time.
Mathematically Proven: that being Nice, Forgiving, Retaliatory (only to swiftly swat down, clearly, bad acts - most of the time) and Clarity (of Intention) is the Only way to "Guarantee" the ----- evolutionary ----- Survival of the Species. {Where, the most: Rational = Selfish = Profitable = Nicest Strategy/Behavior in time, over time.) 👍 :-) (Any observable dissolution or disharmony in culture (or, relationships suggests an irrational breakdown [due to excessive noise (error) among the actors] to the inevitable detriment of All { 👎 :-( . . . ::-( }, if not corrected soon enough. Check out lessons learned from the science of "Game Theory."
Interesting! Every IQ test I have taken (more than 10) came back as 141. BUT! I had a brain injury at age 15 in which my memory was severely impacted. I learn/understand things easily but do not retain the information. So between the ages of 15 and 50 my average job lasted 3 to 6 months. These jobs were anything from truck driving to sales to computer building, programming and repair. It is absolutely amazing how much memory determines your success.
Yeah I know someone who's probably just a bit smarter than average but has an extraordinary memory which allows them to perform at the top level at work (IT field).
I can relate to this very much. Having an IQ 146 and basically "trained" my quick solving as work-around for my lack of memory. Strong points, making connections in everything, weak points, no memory at all in details..... and just don't ever expect me to remember your name 🤣 Although I noticed, with a keto/carnivore diet rich on animal based omega-3 fats, great improvement for my memory. P.s.: @laurae, you need memory to learn something new. IQ is more about solving, make/see connections.
Having had a multitude of different careers and degrees, it doesn't always correlate to better paying positions or higher accumulation of wealth and retirement benefits to that of someone who remained on their job for 5 decades. Consider a Postal Worker or Union Worker with 5 decades of service. Experience will certainly vary but such may sacrifice retirement or financial potentials. @@nativeafroeurasian
Normally those online IQ tests tell you that you have an IQ of 180 and then offer to sell you a printed certificate with that number on it. I don't know if IQ really measures anything, but if it does then it's probably negatively correlated with having one of those certificates at home.
Haven't you heard the quote by Stephen Hawking at the start of this video? "People who boast about their IQ are losers". And this man was a literal genius.
I always liked this quote, which is attributed (perhaps inaccurately so) to Albert Einstein - "Everyone is a genius. But if you judge a fish by its ability to climb a tree, it will live its whole life believing that it is stupid."
I actually really dislike that quote because it might prevent people from subscribing to a growth mindset. I prefer a quote by Joshua Waitzkin, an international chess master and author of The Art of Learning that says "The moment we believe that success is determined by an ingrained level of ability, as opposed to resilience and hard work, we will brittle in the face of adversity."
@@HeiiarchyGameplays we do, and I think his point is that we should make sure it doesn't prevent us from further exploring possibilities and excelling in other fields outside of the gifts we believe to have been born with.
@@HeiiarchyGameplays We do, but largely, we benefit from not thinking and behaving as though we do, because our thoughts are powerful tools to raise our heights or drag us down. Conditioning is effective, so imagining our own limits is a limiting experience to impose on oneself. A person who believes he can reach 200% and hits 100% is more effective than a person who believes he can reach 100% and hits 80%. The key is that we don't know our precise limits, and no matter how much we think we are experts on ourselves, we will always think our potential higher or lower than the truth. It's best to consider the sky as the limit. We don't know when life can turn around, and we had best be there for it when it does.
Obviously, some people are victims of increased levels of anxiety to the point of being crippling. The test cannot account for neurological issues - ADHD, sleep disorders, etc all affect millions of people.
I just took an IQ test and I am SO happy...
Thank God it came back negative!
Imagine being intelligent 🤓🧠
This made my day. 🤣 top tier 👌
I tried turning up the brightness on my microphone, but I still sound dim.
@@truejimah yes making a microphone brighter
Mine came back positive 2 🤓
When I was 8 years old my primary school teacher was convinced that I was gifted because I was always the first to finish a test and because I often seemed to get bored in class. One day I was taken out of class to take an IQ test for this reason. I have no memories of the test itself and no one ever told ma what the conclusion was. Around the age of 15 it also became clear that I had ADHD, despite this I was still holding up in school and I started taking medication. I am now 19 years old and a few months ago my parents told me that I had scored below average on this IQ test in primary school. The primary school psychologist (that had tested me) had told my parents that I would certainly not be able to go to university. My interest in science grew as I got older and when I asked my math teacher last year if I would be capable of studying engineering he said I definitely was. I have now completed my first year at the university.
I am convinced that such IQ tests do not tell the full story at all. I had concentration problems and when I was 8 in primary school I had no idea what kind of test I was even taking.
Don't let some number distract you from your goals!
Well, IQ tests are quite awful at judging the IQ for people with ADHD for numerous reasons. First of all, the motivation isnt there, at least not as much and especially not if you didnt know that you were even taking an IQ test. Secondly, an IQ test only works because of the time limit. Someone who has a hard time concentrating during that time ends up not using all of it and thus getting a worse result. Its like asking a someone to take a reading test who as dyslexia. On average, people with ADHD have a lower IQ score because of these two things. What Im trying to say is that no, it didnt work on you, but it honestly isnt meant *to* work on *you* . IQ is a never will be precise - it's always been a bit weird and have about a 20 point accuracy which means you can get a score that says you're retarded even though you're just slightly below average, but it's even less precise on people with ADHD. Anyway, I bet that if you took the test now, knowing that you were taking an IQ test and while being on medication would give you a *way* higher score...
You sound like me in elementary school. Yet you see you did score high and you are highly intelligent it’s just our ADHD hinders our attention.
i dont want to enter into a debate. Im just gonna stick from whats in the video.
in your case, yes maybe your G factor was low. But, your S factor was so big that you were able to do whatever you want. Thats way there is all of this explanation in the video. We know the G factor isnt the only factor.
Just have your IQ tested once more. Take a serious test. You may well score above average now.
Learning disabilities absolutely effect your score. Unmedicated ADHD could definitely have had a negative effect. And you were probably not very motivated either. A single IQ test by itself is not enough, a more thorough neuropsych test might have found the ADHD, come with additional observations beyond just a number etc. There are plenty if gifted kids with learning disabilities and it makes it way more complicated to interpret. Even with an average IQ, disabilities will affect score.
I was born in '81. I still remember in my kindergarten class there was a poster on the wall that read "It's not your IQ, it's your I WILL". That has stuck with me as demonstrably true my entire life.
Stuborn people are more successful regardless of IQ.
It takes something more than intelligence to act intelligently, says Dostoevsky
@@katttatt5898 I could, but only because my mother was an English teacher, and not a very nice one 🤭
@@seijirou302someone needs spanking
What a truly stupid poster ... and what a truly stupid person it takes to believe that
Quite sad he didn’t do 2 IQ tests: One without training, and one with training
It would also be fun if he listened to Mozart before one of them
@@Blubol-i5l huh
@@xoticgaming8556 there is a theory that listening to mozart temporarily increases the scores on a IQ test, this is called the mozart effect.
One test will be rehearsel for the next😂
Psychologists talk about the practice effect. I had a stroke (when I was 39, a long time ago) and did two sets of psychometric testing two years apart. Each was 3-4 hours and left me exhausted, it was one-on-one testing with a psychologist and part of it was determining IQ. Although there was a slight improvement in the second test, it was explained away as possibly the practice effect, you know what is coming so it is much easier.
The interesting thing is that they "reconstructed" what my IQ, etc. was before the stroke, it was a 5 IQ point range with a level of confidence of 95%. It has always seemed strange to me that they could be that precise.
Of course, all serious IQ tests will give a range and a level of confidence as it is based on statistics.
I took an IQ test once that had a time limit and there was a clock in the room. I don't like time pressure so I panicked and ended up with a not too bad but still very depressing score. They made me take another test and told me it wasn't timed, I did way better, was proud of myself. They actually lied to me, it was timed, but by not telling me I just got a way better score and still finished in time. So many factors as to why someone would get a bad or good result in a test.
ohhhh, that's really interesting!
When my school did an iq test in second grade, I fucked around during it because I didn't want to take the test. Weirdly I still did above average, though I don't know the actual score, that's just what my mom tells me. Shes said she was surprised it wasn't higher, but was still happy. Now I have completely changed my view as an adult on test taking and how seriously I take assessments. I haven't taken an IQ test since, nor do I really care to, but I would be curious if I would score higher
Being proud of yourself does not make you more successful at most a little bit happier for a short while before reality kicks in. I know that these are very heretic thoughts these days, but I don't care. Truth beats social acceptance. Not being very amiable does not prevent you from being successful. History is full with successful bastards. Newton who invested in slaves, Steve Jobs, Elon Musk and almost all American presidents present and past.
The time limit is ridiculous.
The time limitations indicates whether someone can think faster on their feet to solve problems vs those who need more time. So even if scored higher, in a real world scenario, time cannot be controlled in this fashion.
It's actually really interesting that the IQ test has a baseline relative to the average of all scores, which means it measures your intelligence relative to others & not some fixed constant.
Is it Hip to be Square??? Elementary WattSon. Them Quantum fellers going down...
@@peterparker9286this is the high caliber of thoughtful discussion I knew I could only find on a video about IQ
That's called a probability distribution, in the case of IQ a normal distribution. Parameters for the function are the mean and variance of the sample, and the output is the distribution, which is determined by the mean and variance which are not constants by definition of sampling.
100 is a completely arbitrary number used as the mean of the distribution. In other words, the data is normalized so that the distribution centers around 100. That makes it easier for interpretation I guess, otherwise it would be centered around 0
That's how it's defined. It's a quotient
@@tear728 The point is that it's not a metric of intelligence. 50cm is objectively half of a meter, but you can't say X IQ is half as intelligent as Y IQ. It's a ranked quotient of measurable performance, not a metric.
My father was a psychologist. Growing up, he regularly administered various IQ tests on me. I became quite competent at standardized testing. To this day, I discount the value of these tests as I know I effectively cheated on them throughout the rest of my life. I learned test taking strategies and practiced the common types of questions so I am able to identify patterns of questions/answers favored in each test, which positively impacted my results compared to many others who did not have this experience.
hmm.. sounds like every school system
learning how to cheat the system... yeah nothing new here... just school system shenanigans in a nutshell...
Do you remember how your IQ results from these tests increase over the years?
iq tests can be learned but you still need to know the subjects to do well for SAT/ACT. For example, no more than 5 people get a perfect score for the International Math Olympiads Annually.
@@blue-xb1cq that's true. However there are a multitude of benefits to constantly practicing long mental acuity tests, such as not having test anxiety, learning to pace yourself, and knowing how to prepare.
Motivation is such a huge factor. If someone's not interested in a certain topic and not motivated to improve they can have as high of an IQ as they like and still be bad at it
Given how most schools are run, I feel like using IQ tests to indicate school success is a lot like saying "If you're good at taking tests, we can determine that you are good at taking tests."
In high school I'd say about half of the kids in my AP classes were just good at taking tests but then the other half over performed in pretty much everything they did. Point being there were quite a few kids who weren't just good at tests but seemed to be good at everything.
@@Chris-hz8lj I mean idiots can have good grades. but IQ definitly hepls with understanding memorizing and efficiency.
and i thought u couldn’t expand upon your IQ. ur just pretty much born with it
dumb ppl are always dumb and complain about dumb things bc theyre dumb duh
@@Chris-hz8lj we know what group youre in
I (33) have a learning disability. My IQ is approx 80. I got tested twice in school. It is mainly due to the fact that my mother drunk alcohol during her pregnancy (FASD spectrum/Fetal Alcohol Syndrome)
Everything is harder in my life. No matter how hard I try, I always fail. I needed to visit special ed class till 18, I never had many friends, I never had the ability to visit college or achive high education, I only work at sign holder jobs...or fast food...I also never had a girlfriend. A low intelligenc is a severe punishment for your whole life, which affects every aspect of your life negatively.
My advice: Do things that you love to do. Even though your brain is at a disadvantage, that does not make you less.
@MasParaQue Thats the problem...I would like to have a family, travel the world, study science, have a girlfriend...but I cant due to my disability...I just want to be normal and
there are a few things. your personal life depends on many factors and your single example cant be used to derive general statements. yes, low intelligence limits your possibilities. one cant deny that.
regarding the girlfriend issue: im not saying it has no influence, but there are many other more decisive factors for it. i know a lot of people who have the same struggle and have pretty high IQ. (ofc thats not any helpful advice, just pointing it out)
I (52) have a learning disability and an IQ of 143. I had not finished high school and have no post secondary education. I taught myself how to use computers and now work in cybersecurity. One key point is I left my home country to get away from my non existent educational scores. I am not trying to make you feel bad. Since we have similar starts in life I would be interested in mentoring you.
@@ceooflonelinessinc.267there's nothing stopping you from doing this.
Back in high school, I took several iq tests and would always score somewhere around the 132 range, so naturally I was walking around like the big brain on campus. Then I grew up and realized I'm dumb as hell, but just a really good test-taker.
yeah...
you can say 130 is the average...
but...
*test papers are all the same, you see one you see them all.*
@@lolliii5477
130 was NOT average at the school I went to 😂😂😂
Thinking you're not as smart as you actually are is a good indicator of high intelligence (sorry!) However, there is a big difference between 'bright' Hi-IQ and 'Clever' Street smarts 🙂
@@johnyoung3511Which perfectly illustrates how bs the test is. Arguably so-called "street smarts" represent a more natural gauge of human intelligence than parsing sentence structure.
Oh, nonsense. I don’t think you’re dumb as hell. I think everyone is intelligent, it’s what you do with it that really matters.
The IQ test I took really screwed me over in life. Took one when I was smaller - mind you, I went to a "special" school since I have Cerebral Palsy - and some subjects we simply didn't get (like geography) because the board "assumed" we wouldn't be able to "handle" it.
I'm not even ashamed to say it now: according to that test, my IQ was 73. Because of that, I wasn't allowed to later on study what I wanted to do.
I later found out that (at least in my country) those tests were only ever done on people with disabilities. No "normal" friend I have was ever obligated to take it.
English isn't my first language, so excuse any grammatical errors.
Your IQ is way above that unless AI made this response for you.
That’s horrible I hope you’re compensated
Do you feel you have trouble understanding things?
The fact that you can speak and write in two different languages shows that the IQ test was BS. I am convinced that anyone is capable of doing whatever they want as long as they are willing to put in the work. Someone with a "high" IQ might find it easier but that doesn't mean they will be better. I don't know if you watch American football but it reminds of two players. Jerry Rice and Randy Moss. I know nothing of their IQ's just using them as an analogy. Jerry Rice would be your lower IQ guy who worked harder and is the greatest wide receiver in NFL history. Randy Moss would be the high IQ example who found everything easy but because of that didn't work as hard. Moss should hold all NFL records but he was lazy. If he knew the ball wasn't coming his way he would take plays off and not run his routes. He was dropped from a couple teams because of his work ethic. Rice played into his 40's and was still exceptional. While you might have to work harder to get there you have no limits on what you can do. Sorry if my example doesn't make sense.
I'm sorry to hear that. Try not to let it get you too down though. IQ doesn't mean much in all honesty. People with lower IQ's are still absolutely capable of living happy, healthy, productive lives. Never give up, my friend! (Also your English is fantastic. It's better than many native speakers lol. Which leads me to believe your score is likely not accurate, it's probably quite a bit higher)
Here's a (depressing) little fact about me.
Some decade ago, when I was 12-13, I volunteered to take an IQ test at my school, and was generally considered a 'gifted kid' with outstanding grades in a lot of subjects, as well as an appetite for knowledge that shocked my teachers at the time - Books would be devoured in a matter of hours, I never studied and aced everything anyways because, as it turns out, what I did on my free time (devouring random wikipedia articles, essentially) was effectively studying.
Then, my parents divorced, my grandparents and dogs died, and I went through a maaaajor depressive episode lasting, well, it's still going over a decade later, but the worst of it was age 14-19, where I was actively suicidal.
For 'fun', I took a new IQ test when I was turning 20.
My IQ when I was ~13? 144.
My IQ after a major depressive episode a few years later? 106.
My IQ today, another few years after that? 112.
I don't want to blame depression or anything like that, but I do think it played a very large factor in killing my motivation for study - and notably, it killed a lot of my memory. I couldn't tell you a thing I did age 14-19 with any level of real accuracy other than scream at my divorced mother twice and moving house five times.
You are not alone with this. The effects of depression on memory is no joke. I feel like my fluid intelligence and memory are at 0. I do the things i know and like extraordinarily well but everything new seems scary and an insurmountable challenge.
For me the saving grace is hiking, backpack travel and fishing etc. There's no preset constructs, no budgets to make and face, no other people who are locked in the same ditch. Just the vast nature and world with it's everchanging mysteries and challenges thrown at you that you have been created to overcome.
The modern society is killing us slowly and the world with us. We're living the last chapter of Plato's Republic.
I know a few Mensa members that I believe are absolutely some of the dumbest people I've ever met. Sorry about your troubles though! ❤️
This seems, if nothing else, like a good refutation of the notion that individual intelligence is inherent and static.
Depression is known for reducing your IQ results, especially during episodes...
Depression can cause permanent damage to the prefrontal cortex. I am certainly not making recommendations, but a Harvard study found that neurogenesis caused by cubensis mushrooms can repair the damage.
Dear Derek, I wanted to thank you for the content you create. Your videos "How Quantum Computers Break The Internet... Starting Now" and "Math's Fundamental Flaw" motivated me to complete my remaining subjects for my Computer Science degree in Argentina, which I had left untouched for a few years. Thank you very much.
Woah that's awesome! Congrats :>
Congratulations
Congrats! Getting over the last few subjects can be the toughest part of the degree. Kudos!
YAY!!!!!! 👏👏👏👏🙌🙌🙌🙌🙌🙌
🎉congratulations!
One of the worst things that happened to me in my childhood was scoring well on an IQ test as a small child. Severe ADHD and no executive function led to a lot of shame because people had something to point to to “prove” I was just being lazy. Even after I was diagnosed with ADD at the age of ten.
Edit: I turned 10 in 1981 (just for perspective). Neurodivergence in the 70s and 80s was just called being contrary.
I had a similar experience. I tested above the "gifted" level in elementary school and was put into GATE classes. This was a part-time thing. GATE was amazing. I got to use computers and do darkroom photography and all kinds of cool stuff. But this only made me more bored of "regular" school then I already was. My grades suffered, and they kicked me out of GATE as a result, which obviously only made things even worse. I was also eventually diagnosed with ADD and put on Ritalin. That didn't help either. I developed coping strategies and they either became second nature to me or I just grew out of it. Not sure. My grades never really recovered. If I hadn't gotten way more second chances than most do, I shudder to think what would have happened to me.
Exact same. Diagnosed with ADHD in 3rd grade, never medicated. Tested for gifted (my schools version of BETA) and got in easily. Being able to cut normal class likely saved my hide for the next few years. It all came to a head in 6th grade which led to me leaving public school and going to a private school with a much harder curriculum which held my interest. Went back to same public school for HS and breezed through it, now have a 4 year degree with a decent job.
If I hadn’t gone to that Private school there’s a solid chance I’d have flunked the 6th grade. Was definitely a rough time in life.
I was just simply bullied for always busting the bell curve, so in order to have friends, I learned to hide my smurts until well into adulthood. Now I embrace it and don't give a flying fark if anyone cares. It's a genuine part of who I am, so you should embrace your story too. ❤
I am suing the National Aeronautics and Space Administration for illegal discrimination because _they thought_ I have ADHD, bipolar, depression or some other mental disability. I don't believe that nonsense because I feel one with everyone. Google me, I am winning 🏆 and I really am _that guy._
Kids aren't supposed to sit still.
I remember taking an IQ test in elementary school (close to 30 years ago now) to be tested into the "gifted program." I was admitted in but one section of the test was simply naming pictures of objects, and the one I explicitly remember was being shown a picture of an outlet, but at ~8 years old I'd only ever heard of it referenced as a something to be "plugged" in to e.g. "Go plug this fan into the wall."
So I said "plug" and they tried coaxing the right answer of "outlet" out of me by saying things like 'well that's what you do to connect something to it....' but I simply never heard the word "outlet" at that point in my life so I got it wrong despite obviously knowing what it is.
That's always stuck out to me and honestly since that point I'd never put much stock in to mine, or anyone else's, IQ.
As a university psychologist, I've been teaching about IQ for more than 35 years. I'm afraid you missed one of the most important correlations; social class. You came close with mentioning IQ (and especially SAT) training classes; who can afford those? Even going back to Binet, the test was easier for rich kids (and urban kids).
Hypothesis: The reason those rich kids are rich is _usually_ because their parents are smart. Take blue-collar workers who won the lotto. Meaning, average or below-average IQ people who suddenly can afford to send their kids to the best schools and academic programs. See how well their kids do on IQ tests compared to kids who've had money in the family for generations. Pretty sure the latter group will do better. Earning and holding on to money for decades takes intelligence, which is passed down from generation to generation. Blue-collar lotto winners typically blow through their money and are back to being broke within one generation, due to not have high IQ like the rich kid families.
@@thebellcurve3437isn’t it easier to hoard wealth that’s been there for generations compared to when one suddenly acquires it? they’d have had more experience with it as a result of their past etc. many more factors that’d be easier to maintain owing to them already being there for years. wouldn’t this be the opposite for the other case, where people would have to invest way more to actually maintain the wealth gained?
@@thebellcurve3437 The video this comment section is for shows there is basically no correlation between IQ and the ability to hold onto money and only a very weak correlation between IQ and the ability to make money, so your hypothesis doesn't seem to be supported by the evidence
@@thebellcurve3437 I'm not living in a country where the wealth of parents decide which (level) school you can follow.
There is no financial blockade for a blue collar son to go to university and gets his PHD.
I agree that this was different before ww2. Reason my dad could NOT go to the university as a blue collar workers child.
The study and working employment from me, my brother and our child contradict youre assumption that children from blue colar workers (schooled to do theit job) are at disadvantage.
I suppose only choldren from those workers who do work for which you do not need schooling and are not schooled will really be at a disadvantage.
@@kuqho First, you are showing your bias by saying "hoard wealth". Rich people with any semblance of intelligence do not "hoard wealth", they do not have thick packs of $100 bills or millions of dollars in gold and jewelry lying around their house. Perhaps rich celebrities do this for social media photo ops, but MOST rich people have their money invested; meaning they do not just have it amassed in material form for the sheer joy of marveling at their wealth. People with generational wealth use their money to make more money. Investments are not hoards; they are financial instruments.
Second, yes it is easier to hold on to money if you grew up in a wealthy family, because your wealthy parents taught you how to be smart with money, they taught you financial management skills. Poor folks who win the lotto typically have no such skills which is why they blow through their winnings in a few years and are back to being average or below-average income people.
I’m actually pretty grateful for IQ tests.
I struggled as a kid in school, mostly because I found everything terribly boring, I was simply unable to focus on anything and I just didn’t care enough to even try to pass. My teachers wanted me to repeat a year in primary school, the school psychologist *strongly* recommended that I dropped from school as soon as possible and learned a trade.
That made no sense to my parents, but being from poor families in Spain, my parents had very little in terms of education, they weren’t sure. They took me to see a therapist.
My IQ tests were the convincing evidence for them that the school was wrong, so I changed schools.
I went from bottom of my class to great student in 3-4 months, I went to college, got a Bsc and a Msc in electrical engineering, and now I work designing medical devices.
When I look back at my schools “advice”, I’m pretty certain that I’d be so miserable that It’s not even funny to think about it.
Yep IQ tests are mainly used to test the potential for certain cognitive challenges in children (including demonstrating their absence). This is where they're truly useful.
Similar thing happened to me, I have severe ADHD and pretty much failed every class as a really young kid and my school honestly considered putting me in special ed. I got an assessment which included an IQ test and my result disqualified me from being put in special ED. Now I'm about to finish an undergrad degree in Physics and Computer Science.
neurodivergence can also affect your IQ scores negatively, what would have happened if you had no interest in doing the IQ test and just half assed it ? they would think you really were mentally challenged, when in reality you just couldn't focus on things that didn't motivate you maybe because of undiagnosed ADHD. they would never have know to change you to a school that peaked your interest or that you could succeed in a field that you felt a lot more motivated to pursue.
Not necessarily, tradesmen can earn good money, at least where i live. The brother of my best friend, who is about the same age as me got his master tradesman certificate and started a business, and he got a year long waiting list for contracts, that's how swamped tradesmen are in germany. He barely even gets to do actual work himself, there is just so much administrative/clerical work going hand in hand with fulfilling contracts here.
ADHD is a separate issues.
Fun fact - did you know that there are only a handful of countries (can be counted by the fingers of your hands) that actually accept ADHD as an actual disease that requires treatment? In a shithole like Russia, for example, it does not exist essentially.
As a young adult I was told was an IQ test only measures your ability to take an IQ test. The fact that there are methods to raise your score also show it isn't a raw stat like in an RPG game but I can see it being able to show the general capability of someone.
It's only accurate if you don't train for it, and there are many things that can still skew it even then. IQ is only a reliable measure for populations, not individuals. (that's not to say it says nothing, just that it can be off by 10-20 points which is a lot). There are also several types of intelligence it doesn't properly measure, such as creative thinking and long-term problem solving. As for income, bravery and tenacity is very important, and it doesn't measure that either.
Yeah he really should have done a test, then done practice and do a similar but different test to show this effect.
What you actually sold here is doubt and ego
Not a mathematician. I'm not even particularly good at maths.
But the second question was also easy :/
You were told the truth.
Love how you treat that subject, it's easy to view the IQ test as the most important value determining factor of a person or as totally unreliable (for my part, I did that because I don't like the idea of worth [which I unconsciously linked to IQ] being objective and measurable on a certain scale). As you said, most of the discussion around it isn't really motivated by logic and much more by irrational assumptions and therefore, extreme views transcent.
One thing you failed to mention was how the free online test corresponded to the actual test. Were they accurate? How much did the scores differ? How similar were the questions? Did your score improve if you took the test multiple times? All these questions seem really interesting to me and I would appreciate it if you could answer some of them. Otherwise this was an awesome insight into the IQ world. Great job!
I'm smarter than you because my IQ is 300%.
I took one online IQ test at age 12 and one official one at age 17. Both gave exactly the same number and relatively similar questions (of course, both asked for my age).
Online tests tend to have a higher average score because people who already enjoy this kind of thing are more likely to take them. So the number may not necessarily be inaccurate but possibly inflated.
Online iq test is like trying to measure wind speed using a potato
@@ketchumuuThat is actually possible, but hardly accurately 😂
I had an IQ of 123 when I was a teenager. I call it the Henry Ford Intelligence Test, because it only measures you like a factory worker.
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The practice part really matters. When I did this as a kid I got 9 or 10 points higher after practicing some tests to get used to the question types. Which in itself illustrates that intelligence testing is hard.
Uh., All this proves is that the testing is based on knowledge and not intelligence (aka the capability to learn anything)
@brianmcdaniels8249 I was told *_absolutely not_* to try and practice, as it can skew results. I took one as an adult on only 4 hours of sleep and still scored proximally within the same standard deviation of my childhood score.
@@brianmcdaniels8249this is cope. A meta analysis would easily smooth that out. Practicing for IQ test doesn’t really work
@@brianmcdaniels8249 This all proves that most things in life are learnable if spend enough time on those problems. And it's impossible to really make methods to measure everyone fairly. Not only my solution for the early life science is to divide subjects and tests for them. However with change of life XVIII century system that we have in school isn't the greatest measure. I'm from Poland and our scholar system, as everywhere, is evolving but veeeeeery slowly. It needs to be revamped, because our society is starting to collapse in my opinion. We couldn't handle it pretty much very soon. So I guess IQ tests shows the factor that a person can be good at, but it's important to be as well-rounded as possible and care about many things at the same time. You never know in what type of scam you will fall. If people keep being well-round and train their imperfections it will help our society not to collapse.
@@brianmcdaniels8249 intelligence is taking in and applying information, a skill that you can practice
Duckworth studied children and adults in challenging environments, including West Point military cadets, national spelling bee contestants, and rookie teachers in difficult schools. In each study, she and her research team asked the same question: “Who is successful here and why?”
Across numerous contexts, one characteristic emerged as a significant predictor of success: grit. Grit is the quality that allows an individual to work hard and maintain focus-not just for weeks or months, but for years.
Amen. I'm a former special education teacher and a school psych intern. I recall working with an individual during COVID. This child was the only individual that regularly showed up to her resource meetings. One day she was feeling down about her math efforts and I had to squash that real fast because she was in fact making huge gains. I started to review with her how far she had progressed over the years and she began to cry. She explained to me that she hadn't realized how far she had come. Then I got emotional and explained that I was not worried about her because she had an extreme amount of grit and, already in elementary school, learning to overcome barriers and personal challenges. Her effort and grit still inspire me when I'm feeling down on myself.
I've only just found out about Duckworths involvement in all that. I previously only knew his name through Cricket.
I took an IQ test a while ago and I debated a lot about whether to take it, because, if we're being honest, I think most of our motivation to take such a test is to get a result that validates our belief that there's something special about us. A high score can give you a lot of self-esteem and confidence. But the opposite can also happen with a low score, given how many insults we throw around based on IQ and intelligence. It's not likely that knowing this number is gonna be relevant to you other than in this way, so I'm still not sure if most people should test their IQ.
You get that same measurement every day in school. Kids know if they are finishing tests earlier and scoring higher then the rest of the kids. Same is true for the kids on the other end of the spectrum that struggle.
As Gonzo said the IQ test puts a finer point on it but you most likely knew roughly what to expect before hand didn't you ?
@@GonzoDonzoHigher than average IQ and performance in school are two completely separate measures.
@@mikafoxx2717 not in my case
@@GonzoDonzo That's a good point but at least you're mixing intelligence with effort. In fact, it seems like reacting to a child's intellectual successes and failures by focusing on effort rather than intelligence leads to better outcomes, especially more tenacity, less quitting, and more focus on solving problems rather then impressing authority figures (growth mindset Vs fixed mindset, according to Carol Dweck). With IQ tests, you're trying to isolate the concept of G as much as possible, and I'm not sold that that's something most people should do.
I'm 71 now. Took a Stanford-Binet test at age 10, so I got into a gifted program at school. I am convinced that higher IQ just makes it easier to learn. It does not mean you WILL learn, WILL succeed. WILL make a good income, etc. People with lower IQs can do all of those, they just have to work harder. I have always been exceptionally lazy, so I excel at things that interest me and I enjoy. You could see this as just being more efficient: Not bothering with things you don't like. I didn't graduate from high school with a very high GPA, but aced the ACT. I graduated from college with honors because I concentrated in a field of study I enjoyed. I worked in medical research for 11 years, and my boss asked if I would like to attend the medical school he taught at. I declined because I knew from the doctors I worked with that that path was very strenuous, with limited rewards. About that time the first personal computers became available, which had always interested me. I ended up shifting to computer programming, and did very well in that field for the rest of my working life.
My experience almost exactly, up to the college grad thing. I took my first college class at 17, and still lack one semester for a 4-year degree almost 50 years later.
i'd say that's correct but then when you add in certain variables things get... confusing.
like for example, i'm autistic and last time i took an iq test it was pretty high, i can't remeber the exact value but i'm fairly sure between my lowest and highests tests i took in between 112 and 154 in terms of score, so i'm gonna guess my latest was around 130-140... but the thing about autism as many know is that unless you're hyperfixated on something, learning can be excruciatingly hard for an autistic person, and in my case i also have fairly poor memory, stuff i may have learned with passion years ago i completely forgot about, naturally part of that is just not having put to practice that knowledge enough, but just to give an idea, i even forgot how to ride a bike... twice.
the best way to view iq is in terms of untrained potential, what you could possibly do -assuming equal motivation and ambition as of at the time of the test- at the time of taking the test and how well before any training and preparation.
like if i started, i dunno, playing the flute right now? i might do better than most other beginners... but the path forward after the beginning is completely an incognita due to far too many variables with in my case the biggest one being my mental condition.
and the worst part is that stiuff like this will make people expect more of you when you in truth you can achieve less in the long run, just because you can achieve more in the short run(and even then it depends on the context)
absolutely, same problem, I can pick up skills and once I get it it becomes so ingrained that it just becomes a part of my everyday interaction with the world, however I can't study to save my life.
Must be nice to be able to do anything
This is known as the discipline problem. Smart people don't have to struggle to learn as kids, so we don't learn a good work ethic. Thing come so easily to us, that we usually don't learn how to work hard. Meanwhile people not as smart struggle, and so they learn discipline, work ethic, etc. This is why then tend to do super well in school, up until they hit college where suddenly most "smart" people need to do things like study. But they never learned *_how_* to study because... well... they never needed to previously, where other kids have mastered the skill.
This is why you *_really need_* to separate kids by abiltiy from a *_very young age_* and that way you can challenge them. Because everyone *_needs_* to be challenged, so they can *_learn_* to deal with the adversity of difficult subjects. This is the *_real_* reason so many people of above average intellect, don't have successful lives. Because they don't learn how to deal with the stresses of hard work and so when they're older everyone expects them to already know how... and they fail.
Parents need to know what their kids are capable of, and ensure they are *_challenged._* I'm one of those lucky few who can even get through college without studying... but that kind of level is *_very rare_* and I do not have the discipline to force myself to study things I'm not interested in as a result.
Thought anyone else might find this interesting but as a child I scored a 129 (scaled to adult test scores) on a formal IQ test given by a psychology and later in life, while suffering from severe depression and recovering from a concussion a year prior, I scored a 102. 2 years later it was up to 117 and I feel like it's slowly getting back to the original 129. It's weird to be able to see the impact of things like clinical depression and concussions on cognitive functions like that.
Dude why are you getting so many iq tests lol
dude made it his personal quest
@@popcornyummbecause some schools like to measure that if they are interested I mean I’m 14 and have had my iq measured 5 times now I think my most recent score was 135 and my first one was 129
Yeah. I scored 115 and in prolonged times of chronic stress (over years) I really felt myself getting dumber and dumber / slower and slower. Chronic stress can ("temporarily") lower your IQ by -14 points.
Also had/have a Lyme disease infection that can cause psychomotor retardation.
It's definitely not static but I think the plasticity is more downward than upward.
I do think each one of us has a different upper limit which is genetically determined.
well the video clearly show that there are other factors other than residual factors and I think that's why there are people that think IQ test are completely useless,I mean think about it those other factors can add up like more than dozens of points, and a difference of 10 point can put you on above average tier or in genius tier but on the other hand the corelate on different meta analysis are too big to say that it is just a coincidence
so I think that there need to be a better way in scoring so we can get a better more accurate result
such as increasing the points so that the other factors other than g factors wont put you on genius tier while you actually should have on above average tier
and it is interesting to see that taking multiple test will make you lingering on your original test so I think to get more accurate result the test should be done multiple times and not just one time
As a teacher. . . . Some kids just don't care, can't be bothered to listen, or are distractible. The key is to make them like you and your subject, so they'll try. Base intelligence matters and training it matters but effort also matters. The "really smart" ones do/have all three
And learning is a skilll. You need to learn how to learn effectively. Sort of like learning how to study, how to learn names, how to memorize lists. Many people don't know this. And, of course, some people have natural talent for these things, but natural talent is paltry compared to what it can become if trained
30:12 I feel like you should've mentioned Lewis Terman's "genetic studies of genius" here. This was a longitudinal study where kids in the Bay Area (since Terman worked at Stanford) were given IQ tests, and Terman would keep tabs on the highest scorers and compare their eventual life outcomes to the general population. Contrary to his expectation, the vast majority of his "Termites" had mundane adulthoods and fared no better than a random sample of people with similar socioeconomic backgrounds. And the real kicker: two eventual Nobel Prize winners, physicists William Shockley and Luis Walter Alvarez, grew up in the Bay Area and were tested, but did not score high enough to be included in the study.
Some funny stuff happens in a lot of those Stanford studies. When they went back to the marshmallow test kids 40 years later, that study that supposedly showed that patience as a kid helps you later in life, the results showed no statistical difference between the patient kids and the impatient ones in any meaningful category.
Probably because we have population wide studies showing high IQ predicts exactly what you would think it predicts like salary.
@@imightbebiased9311 It's possible that over half of soft-science studies are unreproducible. This is doubly true if they involved children.
He didn't really mention individual studies, because he looked at meta-analysis studies. Lewis Terman's results might have shown no correlation, but 20 other very similar studies (as you can see in the video) gave significantly different correlations. You really need a sample size of 8 billion to get any accuracy, even then there will be flaws in the testing strategy.
Children develop at different rates, and just a few months equivalent development can make a huge difference in their scores. Even if kids are the exact same age, to the day, the differences in how fast they develop makes the results extremely unreliable. Wait until they're at least 25 if you want meaningful IQ test results.
Cecil: you're smarter than 98.8% of the population
Derek: wow😒
Cecil: hopefully you're not disappointed
Derek: *visibility disappointed*😕
@@jayk3551 Also. Remember that, since there is an average intelligence for Americans, that means half of them are below that average...
ngl i was kinda sad for him when i heard 118 fluid int
Not even in the top 1%, weak.
@@jayk3551 because IQ test are renormalised, the only thing you can deduce from that information is the number of americans in total...
I never thought about motivation being a factor but its so obvious once you said it. Being genuinely motivated and interested in something can make a world of difference in your performance across-the-board, it's like your working memory and attention span increase dramatically when you're actually interested and motivated lol.
Id say a positive mood also somewhat correlates to a better score
yes if you don't care you may not finish which reduces your score
As that part of the video played, and an image of a card with text "what number comes next" was shown, my first thought was 'i dont care [what number comes next]' it made me chuckle. Motivation is definitely a huge factor, and certainly motivation arising from possible negative consequences. I wonder how many people were motivated to pass because a fail would mean forced sterilization.
If you aren't motivated to succeed, or are unable to succeed, it really doesn't matter, you are going to fail either way, so the test still works.
You're black
I must say, that this report about IQ is the very best I've watched until now. Thank you for that. And anyway, I love your approach to your many different themes.
Took an IQ test as a young high school student. The results were that I was a lot more “intelligent” than I had self assessed up to that point. As a result I started taking education and responsibility a lot more seriously. Which helped me succeed in places that others didn’t.
The downside is that I suppose the opposite could result for somebody with a lesser result.
Lesson is that the education and responsibility part will probably do more than the actual IQ part, so do the right thing, and study, make responsible decisions, and you’ll be fine!
Rick Rosner who is one of the highest modern IQ people had basically the negative experience you are talking about. He thought he was super genius, then his result was maybe 130-140 so very good but nothing crazy. This led him to not care much about things since he was not going to be smart enough to change the world. Only later he learned that the test he had taken had a maximum score which is what he had received. His IQ wasn't 130, it was some unknown amount above 130. He went on to lead a super weird life including going back to high school to do it over as the cool kid and suing who wants to be a millionaire. recommended rabbit hole if you have time.
The fact that you took education and responsibility a lot more seriously is a measure of your IQ and not the result of the IQ test. The test result may have given you a boost in motivation and confidence for a while but with or without it your IQ would have probably taken you on a very similar path.
In any case, you can't tell someone with a low IQ to be responsible and try to learn more things because it's not something they would do even if they know it would help them in life.
Teenagers. Youth. May have growing up anxieties , troubles that cause a lag in focused early learning and education.
You sound like the perfect worker drone
@@desertPerson traumatize really lol. Toughen up my child
I took a paid “official” iq test at 18 and got 132. Always had great grades in school with minimal effort. Yet I always had trouble keeping jobs later in life because I was so miserable working and having to make some efforts. I always thought that being so good in school and being “intelligent” actually trained me to take life easy and to dislike making any effort for stuff that aren’t fun to me. So in a way my higher than average IQ became something that hurt me in my life. I had episodes of acute depression from just working 6 months in 40h/week jobs. I just quit everything at 28 and went back to do the only thing I ever liked doing which was being in school lol! Went to university in psychology, did 2 years in economics etc. After having used all my grants I just stopped school again and barely did anything for a few years. Meeting my gf was a blessing as she was ok with me being a stay-at-home dad. So in the end I never actually worked a real job for more than a few combined years in my 39 years.
Nobody likes work my man, they do it so they can afford a wife
I know that feeling dude. I got 135. My grades in high schools were great with little to no effort. But when in Uni, I enjoy the first half, but then kinda meh for the rest. I am "good" in many topics, but never "great" in a specific topic. That what makes me struggle to find a job, unemployed for like 2 years
My tips is that people like me needs to realize, this condition is a blessing and also a curse. Then, just do your best
@@moviesynopsis001fuck it, no wife.
Id not trust an IQ test which costs..
You sound more lucky than intelligent.
Here’s a way it can be useful. When I was a kid teachers wanted to place me in special education due to failing grades. My mother had me take an IQ test and it came back well above average, proving it was not due to any intellectual challenges. This led to a bunch of tests until we finally found that my poor performance in class was actually due to moderate hearing loss! I couldn’t hear what the dang teacher was saying and so had a harder time learning.
I tell you teachers are not smart at all. I feel for you ❤
How does moderate hearing loss work and how was it not noticed earlier?
I mean if you couldn't hear the teacher, then there must have been others that you couldn't hear as well.
This is like how it was for me, except it was poor, maybe moderate, eyesight. I remember, I think, about once every year me and a few other students would meet with the school district’s nurse and they would test the eyesight. I did not do too good then and I knew that, and every time after the last few meetings they would ask something along the lines of “do you had trouble seeing”, to which I always denied, mainly because I did not want glasses. My grades suffered because of that, as well as some othre difficulties.
Something similar happened to my dyslexic brother (at a time and country this was not even well known), and my mom just put the test in front of them and said ‘well see, it’s not him who is lacking, is you who are unprepared to teach great minds’ (he cringes hard at this till today 🤣) then sent him to a Montessori school where he thrived
you cant be that smart if you didnt realize that you couldnt understand the teacher tbh 😂
My IQ was tested to be around 150. I always did well in classes but I was (and still am) extremely depressed. I buried myself in work to get over it but it just made it harder to take a break. Higher IQ or perceived intelligence in general can lead to more pressure. It’s not surprising that the higher of intelligence one has, the more likely they will have depression or anxiety.
For everyone searching for a comment that isn't someone gloating about their high IQ and wants to feel normal, I was tested by a psychiatrist for ADHD and took an IQ test as part of it at age 16. I am completely average. IQ of 101. I remember feeling pressured by the time limits, but that's about it.
Oh and also, turns out I have ADHD. It should be obvious by how I forgot to mention it in the original comment, lmao.
You probably would have scored slightly higher had you not had time pressure. Neurodivergence often causes underperformance in standard IQ tests.
@@astro_penguin_now you defeated the porpuse of his comment.
Thanks. It seems that everybody is gifted, which makes no sense. Most people are average.
@@nemiw4429 I'm just saying, it's a well-documented phenomenon. I think they do make IQ tests specifically for neurodiverse people though.
I think one of the other important factors to consider about IQ testing is that when people see those results as fixed, and choose to integrate that into their sense of identity, it causes issues for people all throughout the spectrum. People at both ends of the spectrum may experience a reduction in effort and growth as a result of their scores, either because it's low and they think they're not smart enough to try, or because they score highly, think they're smart and don't need to work as hard. Much like all metrics, it's a useful indicator of performance, but like you suggested, it is moveable and doesn't define someone's character. Someone who gets a high score still needs to work to maintain their advantage, and those who get lower scores can work to improve their scores and better their outcomes.
THIS i was told throughout my childhood that i was a VERY gifted kid i remember getting tested in all sorts of ways, and because i had that mentality i stopped trying as hard, i still tried tho just not as hard i eventually fell behind. im an adult now and i do genuinely believe im an idiot at 25 i struggle to do a fair amount of basic math. its difficult to explain but i sort of got retaught math several times different ways and it made me confused when i was young, and even now i get like very anxious when i have to do math even with a calculator.
I personally believe i was a very intelligent kid but thought my environment and a couple of other factors, mainly environmental and mental health have made me less intelligent. i used to read at a college level in 5th grade understand complex ideas and have conversations about things that would baffle others. and now i work in a factory because i couldn't go to college. and i see the kids that were considered my peers on an intellectual level doing amazing things, working for and with schools in their 20s
@@joewaun894 Maybe you have had educated parents that pushed you to study and so on. Or alternatively you had one or few subjects you were good at and not the rest? Your parents are a HUGE factor in childhood, intelligence is about 0,2 heritable in childhood (much higher in adulthood), meaning parents and environment have a big effect.
@@joewaun894 I think it varies. My parents told my brother and I had scores that now seeing the spectrum, was impossible (or extremely unlikely). But, I just looked at how I did in general vs the people around me and adjusted accordingly. So, your personality is probably another big factor on how the score impacts you.
I'm also surprised they didn't discuss ADHD. It would cause someone to do worse on standardized tests but still have a high intelligence. Other things like generated anxiety disorder would also prob have the same effect.
Research routinely shows that standardized tests are poor indicators of working knowledge and intelligence. It favors a certain subset of person.
so in other words ignorance is bliss? personally i feel the spirit of these tests is to see how smart someone is and studying for it like the video creator did should have no affect. if you can affect the score by education and studying then i feel the spirit of the reason for the test is not met and the mechanism to be flawed, but thats just my opinion and we all walk around with bias.
My friend's uncle was a card carrying member of Mensa and very proud of how "intelligent" he was. He used the fingers on his right hand to test if a hedge trimmer was working. Luckily the doctors were able to succesfully re-attach all 4 fingers.
Yeah… theoretically oriented people sometimes are completely inept when it comes to normal things in life
So, He is getting more sensory inputs to classify that the trimmer is working. his method gives you three main sensory inputs (Visual, audio, pain) while other methods are giving you mostly 2 inputs. That's how intelligence works
I am a member of Mensa since 1978
Some are very successful and others fail
There are members that are unemployed while others own companies.
There are bus drivers and a 747 pilot
One thing they have in common is that they are easy to get on with. They are interested in just about everything.
For me, it is more about the social aspect. For others, it is a support group for patients...
this is funnier when you know mensa means dumb/idiot in spanish
The situation sounds relatable. The answer to "how much is 2+2?" might be "5", but it is certainly not "don't put your hand there".
I always defined "IQ" as "Interest Quotient" meaning interest in the things that IQ tests use for measurements. When interested in intellectual things, then the intellectual things of "Intelligence Quotient" tests are much easier. But that is all the tests measure - intellectual curiosity in various high-minding thinking and scholarly things. Common sense, drive, ability to take advantage of opportunities (or make them, actually) - success is spelled by far more things than "brains". Indeed, "How do you define success." is a common employment interview question. Which helps judge how rounded a candidate is in day-to-day necessities. "A good family life" is an entirely valid and very telling response.
I took an IQ test in the 80s before elementary school (it was mandatory for acceptance in the school I was going to go).
I got a very high score and the only thing that brought me was totally unrealistic expectations about my performance and education.
The pressure from the school and my parents racked up and made me learn to HATE school. It took away my enjoyment of learning and being creative because I felt I was being forced to do and say things I didn't want to just because I was "smarter" than the other kids. Teachers felt intimidated or offended if I said something they didn't expect; they were much more demanding about my performance and the other kids were hostile because the adults around me told me I had the "duty" to show and "use" my intelligence, so I did and that obviously didn't sit well with them. People tend to react negatively to people that they think or are told are smarter than them.
High IQ has been completely worthless for me because it has always been a barrier between myself, my perception of myself, the perception others have of me and my ability to have meaningful relationships.
Same thing for me during first school. Didn’t do anything for me except show how I’m good at getting high scores on iq tests. Taken by social services at birth, mentally disabled mother who took substances during pregnancy, never met my birth father as he fell off a building in 2016, was misdiagnosed with autism and it was FASD etc etc. I’m going with one of my oldest passions to study and become an electrical / electronic engineer.
imo it's unethical to give iq tests to children because of this. either they get absurd expectations on them, or they get labeled as stupid and thrown onto the margins.
Very relatable for me, I was given an IQ test early on as a child and scored quite high myself. So all the adults decided to bump me 2 grades in school. This was disastrous because while I had a very strong grasp of mathematics, my ability to read and comprehend was not so good, and no one ever bothered to check that! So I then got send back to where I started the next year, putting me a grade behind instead of 2 ahead.
In so many ways this ruined my early life.
Same happend to me. IMO, the measured IQ does not tell you anything about success in later life. IT can even be detrimental to a child to tell them "you're really smart" over and over again. They stop trying, because they know they are "better". In the end, they lose track of what's taught in school.
IQ test before elementary? Is that before the age of 4?
That's kinda weird since you haven't learned basic math and reading.
This may be the most elaborate way anyone has ever bragged about their IQ. I think even Mr. Hawking would be impressed by this one! (/s good video!)
people always brag about themselves. i always put myself down. i realized theres two type of people. one whos over confident and brag about themselve and those whose has low self esteem and put themselves down. kind of like one who is fearless and the other is terrified of risk. need to be in the middle to best the best of both world?
@@BlueRice There's a wide range in between. People often mistake low self esteem with humility, and any positive description of yourself, or showing confidence, as bragging.
There's no problem with "bragging" as long as you know your worth and describe it fairly to others.
That "fair" part is actual humility. Don't exagerate it, don't devaluate yourself either, be fair to your worth : be humble. That's the difference between humility and low self esteem. A humble person can brag, as long as it's true, fair, without exageration. A low self esteem person won't brag, because that person doesn't believe it has anything worth bragging about. When describing themselves, the humble person will fairly moderate its positive sides to avoid wrongly exagerating them, just like it does with its negative sides, while the low self esteem person will overly moderate, or rather, wrongly devaluate its positive sides, and exagerate its negative sides. Humility is fair moderation, low self esteem is exagerated devaluation. Also, a humble person moderates towards truth, not towards pleasing whoever's listening. That would be hypocrisy, deforming the truth and your beliefs to try to control how others perceive you. Often out of _fear of their negative reactions_ (learned from past traumas that generally don't apply anymore, but stay ingrained). I see that as a mistake that people often make, I believe that catering to others is very different from humility.
But most people don't really know their worth, or estimate it differently. There's worth based on your own judgement, or based on others'. Good confidence lets you believe in your own judgement and base your worth on it. But it doesn't mean you'd disregard others' judgement. It means you do what you believe to be true, and will disregard others if you believe them to be wrong.
Confidence is not bragging. Confidence is believing in your own judgement, it's different from high self esteem, but tends to go together because, as there's worth to find in most people, one leads to another. A confident person will describe itself positively, just like a bragger. But one has fair and moderated judgement while the other has not and exagerates it to get others' attention or advertise himself higher than he actually is to feel better.
There's a range of confidences, between those who only listen to their own judgement and ignore others' and those who ignore their judgement and only listen to others'. There's a range of humilities, between those who assume they're the best without any second thought, and those who make sure to check or be moderate if there's any doubt and try to be as fair as possible.
A bragger would be a confident person with low humility, but a person can be both confident and humble, describe itself positively, without it being bragging.
Yes, risks should be accounted for, otherwise you'd be an idiot. But do not fear them, it will only hinder your decisions. Evaluate the risks, fairly, make a good, fair decision, and act upon it. If your fear makes every risk seem like a fatality, remember that most people gueninely don't care too much about what each other does or says just like you don't care too much about them. People are generally just looking for entertainment, and sometimes for some meaning : a cool story, a cool moment, a cool activity, a cool compagny, cool relationships... You might create an impression, but it really doesn't matter, they don't really care about it, that's not what they're looking for
@@brocolive1950 you word it nicely. I'm not that articulate when it comes to English.
I was thinking the same thing!
@@brocolive1950
Nice comment. But one deginition I see a little different.
I define bragging as telling things about yourself you cannot prove or cannot fullfill. (And may be even claiming the results of the work from other people as your own work)
Confidence is telling people exactly what you can and if asked you'll prove it. And NOT claiming the results from other people as youre own.
138 tested twice with the Stanford-Binet however I struggled in public school and dropped out of high school. Lots of issues with teachers. I eventually got a GED and then a college degree but still struggled socially and was later diagnosed with PTSD. So even if a person is intelligent other issues can effect their ability to be successful in life. I am happy to have had the opportunity to help other people and I think that is a better measure of life success than intelligence or money.
Wow
hey, we match (on the number)
One can have a personality disorder AND have a high IQ...
Similar position. Except that I believe I had a stroke. Digital hugs to you.
Yea 135, hated school and got piss grades. Schools are designed for the median IQ, don't let it stop you from learning on your own and dreaming big.
Along the way, standardized tests have allowed me to compete with people from much better origins and means. The SAT/ACT showed I could compete in the same colleges. The MCAT showed I could compete in medical schools, and the STEP 1 showed that I could hang in the most prestigious residencies. Without any one of these tests, I would have been limited by the recommendations that I could get from current instructors-- and if my instructors weren't as prestigious as someone else's, then I would have been at a disadvantage for something not within my control and that would have little bearing on my eventual performance. This was the major reason many of us wrote letters in protest of the STEP-1 becoming a non-scored pass/fail exam... how would someone from less prestigious medical school compete for desirable residency spots against someone who went to Harvard or Yale? You'd have to shell out 3-4-5x the in medical school that I did to match with those same residency programs where I interviewed. It's stupid.
props to whoever is editing the vids, the animations are so good and bring up the videos to an whole better quality
High IQ video editor
The editing of this video was actually really bad. Which is a little bit ironic. Also, graphics have nothing to do with editing. The graphics were good yes
@@Stierenkloot I thought it was fine, no flaws that could've distracted me from the content at hand. What do you think was bad about it?
@@Ben21756 i really noticed how bad it was in this particular video. Just one example look at how obviously fake his video chat with British glasses dude is. At some point they even have a jump cut edit on his screen WHILE Derek is supposedly looking at the guy live. And there are a bunch of other edits and comments that Derek made that are completely out of place and do not add anything of value. In terms of editing and production this video stands out as one of his worst to me. But yeah the graphics are slick.
@@Stierenkloottimestamp?
Curious to see how an IQ test designer would do on an IQ test
That is an absolutely valid question and one of the biggest arguments against IQ tests.
They are biased toward the demographic that they are testing. You don't think the SAT and ACT are for white, middle class kids?
That IQ relates to success is not about intelligence, it's about social bias.
He knows the tricks and logic of his tasks, so he would earn extra points
this is interesting. wouldn't this mean that the creator of the test should really have a higher IQ than anyone taking it?
@x.elliek.x yes and no. IQ tests are designed by highly intelligent people, and the answers have to be made with information, and that information must be known, by the test designer.
This is why truly, many people have immeasurable intelligence, meaning, they could create their own problems other people can not solve.
They wouldn't, because it would be extremely biased. People have done this and are able to score EXTREMELY high.
Here’s the thing: I used to be a middle school music teacher and went through all the special education and teaching strategy classes. What they don’t tell you is that a student’s IQ generally predicts their success in a traditional classroom setting, and is honestly a pretty poor judgment of individual intelligence outside of that very specific environment.
When I was still an observing teacher prior to student teaching, I was in a music classroom doing recorders and a non-verbal autistic student was participating. As soon as they started their ear training exercises, he was the only kid that got every note right in less than a second and would patiently wait for the class to catch up to him. He had perfect pitch and knew exactly what he was doing, but due to his communication skills he struggled in classrooms that were simply a whiteboard and a lecture. When you gave him a recorder in an open classroom though? He became an extremely gifted young musician who was having a ton of fun and learning a lot!
We need to understand why autism is. It’s the inability to abstract boiled down to an overly simplistic answer
So it’s really interesting to me that music tends to be a strength for nonverbal autistic individuals. That’s fascinating that sometimes they’re so keen to musical abstraction
Due to the nasty side effects of a head injury, I quickly dropped to the bottom of the class, failed a grade, and soon dropped out of school altogether. Over the years I was regarded as being a hopeless case, basically the dumbest and lowest IQ student of every class. When In my 40's I was still interested in Einstein's theory of Special Relativity(SR), and thus had also heard that the speed of light was the fastest speed possible. But the rest that I had heard on TV about it, made no sense to me. So I decided to figure it all out by myself by starting from scratch and thus analyze motion to determine exactly what it is. Holy smokes ! It turned out to be no more difficult than learning how to ride a bicycle to discover the SR phenomena by oneself, and at the same time derive the SR mathematical equations, including the Lorentz Transformation equations. So it is very annoying when you can do something like this, yet meanwhile people think that you are nothing but an absolute idiot.
Strange. Women tend to have higher GPAs but lower IQ so there’s def third confounding factors. I think it has to do with how (relatively) easy school is and how you can brute force it with memory. (Which would explain some women struggle in college compared to HS despite the “grades being transferable”)
@@maxwellscott-bz8bf lower standard deviation in iQ
Not lower
If you want to investigate this, you might want to see what population is school selecting for,
Maybe age and maturation rate has to do something with it regarding gpa
Don't let IQ control your life.
I was homeschooled, dropped out of multiple classes due to a lack of motivation, and worked in fast food for a good chunk of my life.
Since then, I have taught myself to code in over 10 different languages, built close to 200 game projects and applications, and started my own programming business.
Anyone can learn anything with enough time and effort, and I believe that a person's motivation to learn is the main factor that contributes to success.
My SAT scores rose 300 points on the 1600 point scale just because I could afford to take the test a second time. I ended up surpassing a classmate of mine who initially scored higher than me, but could not afford to take the test twice. That doesn't strike me as particularly fair. IQ seems like a fine tool for research but it needs to be used carefully and always taken somewhat skeptically, especially when comparing people across demographics.
I got a 21 act took a class then I took it again, I got a 21. You were nervous the first time. Do you have Anxiety?
This! I took the PSAT (optional) as practice. I can be a bit of a slow test taker due to excessive anxiety. I felt I did poorly on that test so I bought a used SAT prep book, spent the summer going through the book myself, and on the actual SAT my math/language combined score went up about 150 points (almost the maximum possible, to an 800 language and 760 math). Obviously I did not get that much smarter in one year, I simply familiarized myself with the test.
As has been said in the video IQ tests seem trainable like the sat. I think it all boils down to how much motivation or anxiety you had compared to the first time around.
Or if you did sleep well, your blood sugar is a little low, you are I'll etc...
SAT is predictive of IQ but it's not an IQ test. It's a measure of high school english and math.
This video summarizes about 8-10 hours of lecture in a college General Psychology course I teach. Thanks for the help Dr. Muller!
He has a PhD?
@@pranavps851r/whoosh
When I was a freshman in college, I took the IQ test and scored 122. Last month I took the test as a 2nd year grad student and scored 149. My bachelors degree was in Electrical Engineering and my graduate degree is in Microelectronics Engineering, both highly numerical and might have played a role in my presumed improved ability to recognise patterns , but a 27 point difference between my 19 and the 30 year old IQ scores ( a bump from highly intelligent to near genius) is too large for me to take the test as a serious measure of intellectual prowess.
Or, just maybe, you've intellectually developed?
One of the biggest issues for the IQ field is the high test-retest variance
@@Lolwutdesu9000psychologists say iq can never increase though, so that’s a total contradiction.
Not that it matters, but EE also. I agree a score jumping that much across the distribution is pretty suspect, assuming equal levels of mental readiness and motivation each test.
About how much of your tests were rote pattern recognition? This is something that is purposefully improved upon immensely after a years long curriculum for a field like this.
"too large for me to take the test as a serious measure of intellectual prowess." So what's the point of talking about it?
it's not like you are, by yourself, a sample of data worth studying
So is your comment just for the sake of showing off big numbers and achievements?
This video got recommended to me the second I got home and opened RUclips, it heard that my ELA class is studying this topic
As a high school teacher, one semester I was given an English special educcation class to teach. I soon discovered that it was emotional intelligence that was lacking. I brought in the book "Bambi" realizing that it was possible that a parent may not have read to them. They were transfixed Also I spent a great deal of time telling them that interpersonal skills, ie,. being kind and nice to people, being co-operative, etc. and learning a skill would be much more important than knave intelligence. I hope that helped in their future lives.
amazing!
You might not know, but maybe you'll be the teacher these children will remember forever.
Errr... educcation? Knave intelligence?
meant "mere inrelligence"
Why do you expect us to believe that you teach high school? Oh! In the US, of course. Your English is disastrous
I scored an extremely high IQ and performed terribly at school. Many years after I graduated school, I now tutor students from middle school to university level and am known to be one of the best tutors in my area. I learned more after my schooling than I ever did at school. I don't put that to having bad teachers, because they couldn't all be bad, but I hated the method of education when I was a child. I now teach children, they way I like to learn. I not only teach them how to do something, I also spend as much time teaching them why they're learning that particular something. I find that this point is very important for about 80% of the kids I teach/taught.
I thought I was the only one who experienced something like this, good to know I’m not alone.
The "why" is very important. It teaches broader knowledge, including compression and reasoning.
Hard agree here, I strongly believe that if you aren't willing to tell someone WHY they are learning something, that thing probably isn't worth learning. Even for random stuff that individually isn't useful, you can say something like, "Learning how to deal with a wide assortment of random tasks will improve your ability to quickly solve basic problems in day to day life." That's all it takes, just knowing the teacher's personal opinion on what they are teaching makes such a huge difference. When I was in school my worst subjects were always the ones with teachers who shrugged off every question and ordered me back to some standardised crap.
@@tropicsalt.The "why" usually does not have a logical answer. A doctor does not need to learn history to do their job, they just need the grades.
@@pigeonlove Actually, Medical History is one of the first subjects taught at medical school.
I've seen studies about the effect of self-fulfilling prophecy. They gave kids an aptitude test, and the higher-scoring kids did better. But they shuffled the results. Some kids who got a low score were told they scored high, and they did better than some who actually scored higher. Tell a kid they are smart, and they believe you. Tell a kid they are dumb, and they believe you. Both then get busy proving it.
I think we should still be skeptical, I have also seen the opposite
Not this easy, beeing told to be smart can even lead to carelessness
Depends on their temperament. Disagreeable+industrious people would want to prove you wrong if you called them dumb, agreeable people would be more likely to accept it
My brother, a year younger than me, was having difficulty in school so we both got tested. We were told that his IQ was higher than mine. I didn't know this until decades later when my mother told me that the therapist recommended they switch our IQs to motivate him to do better. Both were still above average, but he loved thinking he was smarter than his older sister. Although he got his master's degree, etc., his life was turbulent, he had addiction issues, and ended up dying a year ago from smoking meth laced with fentanyl. Unfortunately back when this advice was given, the psychological world of medicine did not understand learning disabilities, ADHD, etc. I think he may have been on the autism spectrum, possibly. Also, many of his issues were spiritual as well. I also recently learned that the woman who lived across the street was practicing witchcraft, which explains a LOT about things that happened back when we were kids. We're more than just iQs...
The scenario you described isn’t a self-fulfilling prophecy. If the kids were randomly split into two groups, and one was told they were smart, and the other was told they were dumb before taking the test, and the results showed a significant difference, then that would indicate that. Switching test scores after the fact is just confusing and may lead to underestimating or overestimating themselves. I do think we should tell all kids that they have intelligence that could appear differently than their peers, and we are trying to help them raise the other types of intelligence to round out their skills
I love this guy. People who make already complex things more complex are amazing.
when i was entering university i was tested for my dyslexia and my results were all over the place, some showing direct evidence and some completely opposing. the examiner made me take an iq test and it turned out that i was correcting my own disability. it made me think how many other kids suffer in school like i did myself where teachers fail to recognise learning disabilities early on because of this.
I've experienced a similar thing with dyslexia and ADHD in my own life, while on the subject Dyslexia is all too often called a disability without second thought. if anyone ever took the time to understand why our brains do some of the things that make things like reading so much harder, they would realize in some way are brains are so good at one thing it actually effectively causes what looks like a disability from outside observers. I would like to clarify that each case is unique and no one is the same.
Same, got my adhd diagnosis at 18, never suspected I had it till online school started and I really really started being unable to focus at all. Never had an issue till 10th grade but after 12th decided to get tested
I am suing NASA for discriminating on the basis of perceived mental disability. I am winning 🏆 and any of you can Google me if you need proof. But if anyone puts their faith in the Imaginary Bum™️ who took an Impossible Longshot™️ *this guy* is _going to land 🛸 the big 🤯 one._
@@kylepetersen6520 This is a completely overlooked area. Highly intelligent people with disabling syndromes often "mask" their disabilities extremely well. For a time that is. As a result they very often do not get the support they need. And once they are worn out from the strain of compensation, and the underlying disabilities start to show, they still don't get the support they need, as many psychology professionals are unable (or unwilling) to understand that neurodivergency shows differently with highly intelligent people. It's a case of double discrimination.
Same goes with autism and ADHD. They get left behind when they just need help to hone in on how to operate correctly.
I've taken a variety of these styles of tests at various points in my life and the only thing they've ever told me is what I already knew: I'm incredibly good at taking these kinds of tests. I genuinely enjoyed receiving/discussing my results each time, but in none of those instances was it actually helpful to me. The gifted and talented program at my schools didn't teach me how to work through the adversity of finally encountering material I wasn't inherently good at learning. None of the tests (until just this past April) were able to identify my Autism Spectrum Disorder, and my exceptionally bonkers Wonderlic score still didn't score me the job that had me take it. I'm not saying these tests are useless; I actually think they have plenty of uses. But I also think people really lean on them far too much for their own good.
realatable 😭😭
Wow. Maybe you need to study a bit more on what autism is and how people with autism process things. My nephew has it. If you give him one objective he is incredible at it. One would think even genius level. But try and throw multiple objectives at him with maybe some time pressure or obstacles he is not familiar with. And he shuts down. Either or autism does not affect the majority of the population so an IQ test would not be a standard reliable test for someone with this issue. Unless the Dr was simply wanting to compare growth of that individual. Not a comparison of general population
@@gtmddn Cognitive function is part of the psych eval that is used to determine whether someone has ASD, to what extent, and how it manifests. If you had done any research you would know that autism doesn't manifest the same in all people, nor do the symptoms impact everyone to the same degree.
@@just_gut oh I'm not saying it is a specific problem effecting all equally. Most issues like this infact don't effect all that have them in the exact same ways. But there are enough commons that one can say most all people with it are affected to some degree in that specific manner. My example was the problem with multi tasking. And trying something new. If my nephew has no reference. Good luck getting him to do the whatever. But as soon as he has reference. Then he will try it. Ie watch his dad do it. But am did not nor do I claim to know anything about it other than my experience with my nephew
It seems strange to me that people trying to identify a "g factor" that was static from birth would include vocabulary in the test, since that is... pretty obviously not something you're born with, and that changes drastically over a lifetime.
Including a vocabulary part was meant to eliminate the impact of the specific vocabulary-related affinity to capture the underlying g.
You forgot that IQ is mental age / actual age which takes into account that people know more as they get older.
The point of "g" is that is captures a diversity of different intelligences. The "g factor" comes from the general factor in a factor analysis.
It does change some and in some cases. It does not change drastically. Did you not watch the video?
@@leslierhorer1412
I don't know about you, but my vocabulary has definitely changed drastically since I was born
Ginny Yurich from 1000 Hours Outside talks about the correlation between time spent outdoors and how intelligent a child grows up to be. I’d love to see a conversation between you two. I love her.
I know someone with a 163 IQ and they fail at school due to finding it boring and then fell off being because they didn’t learn more advanced topics in subjects such as math. This person will actually pick up on new concepts extremely fast and excel in most things even outside of traditional school subjects. They have so much potential but due to the non-stimulating factor of most subjects to them, they rarely continue studying it. Having a high IQ is great but also can be something that negatively effects someone if they don’t have the best teachers and environment to help them stay interested in developmental years.
New phone... who dis? ;) (you're describing me to a T. Well... 155, but that's within a standard testing deviation)
Sounds like the school should have done an IQ test and done more to challenge that student
@@tjwhite6429 same
I know someone with a 142 IQ that had a 2.3 GPA in high school, and still ended up going to college a few years later and got a 4.0 and they're making a good 6-figure salary these days. Why did they do so bad in high school? They were bored out of their mind, it wasn't interesting or stimulating to them. Their parents paid zero attention to them, and better parents may have pushed them a bit and put them in more advanced classes or found other ways to challenge them.
Fail at school meaning fail the exam? If so, then they r not high IQ.
High IQ, lack of interest, not studying yet excel at the test no matter what.... not failing.
I took 3 official tests from childhood to adulthood, and I had a significant drop in the second one I took after a traumatic experience, being in a bad mental state overall. I think what you can truely measure in most cases is how well the adults around you took care of you as a child. If your parents are resourceful, you are also more likely to have a good career anyway. But the most important aspect seems to be how well you can focus, which is easier to do if you had a routine as a kid. People who are into science and reading studies in their free time aren't in survival mode, either.
I remember two questions during one of the tests that stood out to me as something that could not possibly measure intelligence. One was to name something Goethe has written, the other was what wood and alcohol have in common (although, there were other questions like this one, too). Those are questions that are specifically targeted to experience, and the first one would also lower the score of someone from a different culture.
I have seen experiments done with a group of students why did quite some practice tests before, as well as a control group who just went in as is. The group that did a lot of practice scored significantly better.
Mood, health, a different way of thinking and even anxieties heavily bias those tests as well.
Like you said, all this also heavily depends on you were being raised.
One of the reason why IQ tests work very bad for people who are gifted for example.
It also says very little in what way someone is intelligent in.
There are people who have super high IQ score, but are unable to solve very simple and basic practical problems.
The real problem with IQ and IQ tests are the anthropic biases associated with it. Dolphins are smart, but making an 'IQ' test for dolphins is not the same as making one for humans, and without a general way to measure intelligence, we're just tooting our own horns.
I remember when I took an IQ test the first question was "Donkey?" Not a Shrek joke, just basic definitions. Needless to say, I said a donkey is an &$$. I scored below average-
@@p_mouse8676my guy he mentioned the effects of practice before the test. It was a 8 point increase not THAT significant
Its called the crystallized intelligence which is strongly associated with knowledge
@@assarlannerborn9342 Depending on the score you get, that is somewhere between 6-10%. I call that pretty significant.
Also keep in mind that those numbers are averages. We don't know the standard deviation from those numbers.
IQ measurement is very important in clinical settings, specially when we're dealing with degenerative brain diseases or Cranioencephalic Trauma. Being able to access one's general cognitive ability is crucial to deliver the best care possible to that patient.
Wow, I never knew this. Pretty interested to learn more about this! Thanks for your comment.
In this case, it's more like the pain scale, no? Where the point isn't to measure something objectively, but to have some relative scale that can show changes.
Dang. I guess that's why the Doctors were concerned when I failed my IQ test.
Surely in this case you're looking for CHANGES in cognition rather than an absolute scale?
so what happens when the patient gets depressed because they're isolated and lonely, and do poor on the test?
Exposure to certain factors play a major role as well. Example is 8:03 . I have no idea what "sanguine" means. That does not make me stupid...I've just never heard anyone use that word nor have I needed that word to function in life. I just looked it up and this is the definition....optimistic or positive, especially in an apparently bad or difficult situation. There are many ways and words I would use to describe this definition. So it's not like people don't know or comprehend the meaning...many may just not have heard that specific word before. ------- Side Note: Last time I had my IQ Test done was when I was 16 and my score was 163. I got that score and I the only award I ever got in school was Perfect Attendance For A Week...LOL. I skipped out a LOT. Last grade I passed was 4th grade. I wasn't failing cause I was dumb...I was failing cause I was screwing up being a wild child. Basically my point is that I saw IQ Test as a puzzle...and I like puzzles. But for someone to have a chance at solving a puzzle is some hint of the answer. Many people may noy know the word sanguine, but if they had used it in a sentence or paragraph I think most would have figured out what it meant.
I believe focus and interest play a huge role in this. I went to high school with guys that got terrible grades and couldn't take a test to save their life. But they could take apart an engine and put it back together practically blindfolded. I rarely ever did my homework but listened in class and tested well, I usually got higher grades, but i get distracted so easily completing an engine would be very difficult for me.
Adhd
It's like there are different forms of intelligences and ADHD doesn't mean you're stupid but your brain just works differently.
I've got ADHD and have a really weird smattering of results on IQ test I took for my diagnosis (I was diagnosed as a result). I did very well in maths, and relatively poorer in English, purely because I could only ever do well in a subject that I actually cared about. Those worksheets we got in maths where it was basically the same question 30 times, I think I never finished one of those ever. I think I did well in the subject because in class I got distracted and worked on my own maths problems that were way harder than what we were looking at in class because the problems were actually interesting. I wish that maths was taught in a way that encouraged problem solving in a way that suited me better. I'm deeply grateful for my teachers for just letting me not do my work and find stuff out my own way but a setting that encouraged working on relatively few, difficult problems could have helped a lot!
I had an issue where I was almost always right the first time. Then I would second guess myself. I could convince myself I was wrong. It depended on the subject. My computer classes I could talk to my teach after a test and explain why I thought my answer was right and usually catch a break by them. I love math because there's almost always a right answer that can be checked.
Motivation plays a huge role in everything you do, iq tests differ from school tests in the way that people are forced to take school tests but choose to take an iq test
The best way i heard IQ described is its like a combination of the acceleration of a car and its top speed.
You can go a very distance from your starting point with a fast car that either accelerates quickly or has a high top speed but what really matters is the direction the car is going
It doesnt matter how fast you are going if you are pointing the wrong direction.
you see crystallised intelligence come into place here, fluid iq gradually decreases after the 30 age mark unlike the other. It stays put and has a slow increase too!! so in my experience of people around me fluid iq does help in contribution for a persons success but it isnt all.
Crystallised iq matters too in a persons achievements. Humans are adaptable to environments and it is beautiful if you think about it.
@@chandrasai1990true, the flouride in water and toothpaste sure doesnt help in this matter.
@@vilhelmkron7455🤦😂
@@TheHunt-t8o One of the smartest and most successful people in the world have outlawed fluoride from their water. Do with that information what you will.
Mic drop
It would be interesting to know what your average IQ was for the tests you took online to compare it to the actual test results and see how accurate these online tests were at determining a persons IQ
Ya, I'm a looser who scored 132 on an online Ravens Matrices that I paid $15 for to make me feel better about being a looser living in my van.
@@amind1317 I was told 121 at age 9, and have had to go thru some stuff with therapists, phycologists and they said it's most likely much higher than that and I have been sleeping in ditches homeless.
I agree that iq test is flawed but intelligence does have differences in different ppl. This is common sense and it does sound unpleasant but it’s true. It’s just iq test may not necessarily be the way to measure one’s intelligence. Einstein was determined to have a learning disability in middle school but turned out his super smart
@@amind1317 u can be smart but not able to access education or skill training programs. Or he directed to the wrong direction. If Einstein never was found by Max Plank, he would be a clock fixer forever
@@amind1317 if u know ur iq is high and u got a better learning ability, u can start to learn skills such as trading skills and etc or whatever skill because obviously u can learn faster than others but if u don’t learn no matter how high ur iq is, u still have no skills. If someone is tall but never got into nba, that doesn’t help much neither
There are 4 major parts of a person that determine how well that person does in society, and each major part has 4 aspects. Some of those aspects you are born with, others can be learned, but they are:
1. BRAIN POWERS:
A. Intelligence (learning, analyzing)
B. Knowledge (education, experience)
C. Wisdom (judgement, logic)
D. Creativity (originality, cleverness)
2. DISCIPLINE SKILLS:
A. Initiative/Passion
B. Persistence/Resilience
C. Efficiency/Adaptability
D. Precaution/Common sense
3. SOCIAL-EMOTIONAL STATE:
A. Merciful v. uncaring
B. Empathic v. shallow
C. Reliable v. dishonest
D. Open-minded v. biased
4. INFLUENCE/CHARISMA TRAITS:
A. Appearance/attractiveness
B. Confidence/ego
C. Communication/motivation
D. Mojo, Cool, Hip, Trendy, Noticeable
So yeah: An IQ test measures Intelligence... 1/16th of everything that determines a person's value to society. It's not particularly useful in determining outcomes, especially when all 16 of these aspects can be targeted for any life purpose whose outcomes and successes may not be measured by the traditional determinants of success, such as money, fame, and power.
Also, just to add, obviously things such as (1) wealth/lineage/social status, (2) nationality, ethnicity, religion, and gender, and (3) access to opportunities are even greater determinants than the items above. Finally, I intentionally omit complicating/distracting factors such as physical skills and strength, or sexuality and morals from the equation.
That bit on motivation, training, test strategy, and anxiety hit the nail right on the head. It can be a very significant impact if all of those are in your favor or if they're working against you. I've been a good SAT-style (multiple choice, timed, reading/math/logic) tests ever since my elementary school started doing state level testing for school districts once a year way back when I was a kid. For me it was just a fun challenge and by the time I ran into standardized tests that caused other people to stress (PSAT, SAT, ACT, LSAT, multi-state bar exam) and actually mattered for some purposes, the "test" part of it was a walk in the park for me, and my only weaknesses were any actual knowledge gaps or making mistakes. Meanwhile I know folks who got immobilized by anxiety or just weren't used to the format had problems with the form of the test even if they had the knowledge down as well or better than me.
I took an IQ test on several sites on Google. Every time something is different. 114 times 66 times 145 times 119 times. They are different. Also, I am an Arab. I am 14 years old. I have never taken a real test.
Predictive Ability = Ability
to Abstract into Concepts
to glean out any "Patterns"
(ideally, into Mathematical
Expression/s) to determine
its "Ongoing" Presence.
. . .
Life (Abstracted) =
Expressions of Math,
Cycling over Time.
{Abstract: Abstract
↔️ Mathematical
Expression}, and the
"Power" of Abstraction
= [(Abstraction)Nested]
^Power}. And, the "Power"
of Intelligence = the Power
of Nesting Abstraction =
Regenerating more Powerful
Intelligence.
Interestingly, thus the "Ultimate
Power of A.I." = the Power of
"Regenerating A.I.," ever more &
more Powerful A.I. at any time
- over time.
Mathematically Proven:
that being Nice, Forgiving,
Retaliatory (only to swiftly
swat down, clearly, bad
acts - most of the time) and
Clarity (of Intention) is the
Only way to "Guarantee" the
----- evolutionary -----
Survival of the Species.
{Where, the most: Rational =
Selfish = Profitable = Nicest
Strategy/Behavior in time,
over time.) 👍 :-)
(Any observable dissolution
or disharmony in culture (or,
relationships suggests an
irrational breakdown [due
to excessive noise (error)
among the actors] to the
inevitable detriment of All
{ 👎 :-( . . . ::-( }, if not
corrected soon enough.
Check out lessons learned
from the science of "Game
Theory."
@@abdogames5975 These test are not real as you say, hence your results are meaningless
I had super high anxiety on tests...I'd pace in circles all day before a test. I'd go potty like 3 times in the ten minutes before class... I'd go home and sleep after a test. I'm also diagnosed as mentally disabled. Yet I had many professors marvel that I was the only student who ever had received a perfect grade on one of their tests (and then of course I did that on all the rest of their tests). But I think the professor (berkeley phd for context) who said it best when he gleefully announced only one student had passed his first test (and with 100 percent), "for a smart guy you sure have said some of the stupidest things I've ever heard in my class." And we all laughed our heads off because heck yeah. I think anxiety is a superpower. I always performed my best, although in crazy vibrato, when soloing in front of thousands or when the bases were loaded with two out while everyone in the stands is trying to taunt me. Bring it on.
As a Rick and Morty viewer, I can confidently say that my IQ is higher than most people.
Watching Rick & Morty don't mean squat. 😂
You gotta truly *appreciate* the depth of the jokes too bud.
brudda
I know you're joking but dry humor is an indicator
@Vote_By_Mail hes obviously being sarcastic lmao
Only until season 3 though that's when it became an Average show
As someone with an aptitude for abstract learning; the older and more experienced I get the more I appreciate how many people there are that would likely score significantly worse than me in an IQ test but are far better equipped than I am at solving totally different categories of problems.
I’m kinda the opposite. Now I know my IQ and what that generally means for how my life is going. It just confirms a lot of my suspicions. Everyone I’ve ever worked with has been 25 IQ points lower than me. The office lady keeps screwing up my truck route because she’s an idiot. The warehouse guys that keep screwing up my truck load so I can’t unload it (which to me seems like an impossible mistake to make) really are 90 IQ morons! I should always expect incredible mistakes from these people! The guy that keeps screwing up my payroll? Must be 100-110 IQ, that explains it. My regional manager who somehow blames me for these problems and refuses to understand my explanation? He’s probably 115 IQ! Compared to me, he’s a total dumbass. The mechanics that keep failing to make repairs? Well, they’re 110 IQ, what do you expect? Why doesn’t HR pick my applications for high IQ jobs that I apply to that I’m qualified for? They’re kinda dumb, maybe that’s why.
It reminds me of the Mensa tests I did earlier on in my life, and how my mind have focused on different areas during life. Like math, physics, logic was a main part of my life until I was teenager, then other things took a larger role.
After completing the test in Belgium, I was invited to the HP Mensa Club and a short video about their evenings was shown to me. I did not join the Club, all the HP youth were so depressed with their schools and teachers, honestly, I cannot do anything for them.
Besides motivation, I believe that sleep hygiene, nutrition and how you feel in general when taking the test also can influence your score. It's a snapshot on how smart you are on that current time, and therefore it can be given a different score at a different time. It might be a good idea to make another video where you retake the test, but at a different company and with a couple of months in between to compare the results.
absolutely.
Honestly natural intelligence exemplified in an IQ test negligibly has any effect on your life. As a 144 IQ individual who's in a Computer Science class with a 160 IQ individual we both discussed the topic and agreed that if we left our test results and successes in the subject down to chance and natural ability compared to working hard and understanding each and every concept of the subject, as Computer Science is a mixture of many subjects all in one, we would be performing a lot worse in the class compared to our very capable class mates.
Natural 'intelligence', if that's how you'd like to identify IQ, is no substitute for hard work and devotion to a subject.
@@all-caps3927 hard work beats talent when talent doesn't work hard.
Yes. IQ test pits you against the population average. Most people don't train.
Good idea.
Rich people do that.
Poor people can not.
ps I had your same idea 20 years ago. Nothing has changed.
ps Trump ‘the supposed billionaire, wants YOUR MONY?
Why?
Because he wants to ‘use your ignorance against you’!
Sad but true.
@@robert-wr9xt As someone who grew up poor, made my own way and was fed this nonsense that I was owed the world all my life I'll tell you this. If you've spent time around poor people, you'll realize that they kneecap themselves due to their low IQ. They don't have a low IQ because they were kneecapped. In the majority of cases, they are just lazy.
When I was very young, my teachers considered me a dimwit. At some subsequent point early on, I took an IQ test or similar, and it was then clear that I was far from being an idiot, and my teachers had a new label for me, underachiever. Progress takes interesting forms.
It's about the most useless number there is.
if you put stock in online iq tests youre still a dim wit, sorry kid
Congratulations on your achievement
@@MadScientist267 Presumably you just watched a 30 minute video explaining why the number isn't useless. It sounds like there may be personal factors making you bitter about this topic
@@ianmccurdy1223 No I'm just aware of the limitations of such a concept.
An IQ test measures the extent of the "vision" at the time it was created.
It's got a *lot* of issues which is what makes it barely more than an "at a glance". It's nowhere near comprehensive enough 🤷♂️
Don't project your shortcomings on me lol
I heard the phrase "IQ is what an IQ-test measures" and I think that has some valid point. All in all, I think that many competencies you need to get a decent IQ-score are cometencies you need in school-tests or at work. Concentration, performing under time-pressure, knowing when to leave a subject for later und carry on, getting from one topic to another and so on...
iq tests don't need to "measure" anything other than the metric itself, though. the fact that an "abstract" number that isn't a direct measurement of any real-world quantity would have strong correlations with other traits such as job performance is enough to make it useful
people die if they are killed
Except IQ tests don’t score you on any real world skills. They score you on extremely niche, abstract pattern recognition
A person need never take any lessons or schooling to do an iq test. For an iq test it worked out with problems that a person can not be taught the answer to. Iq is the ability for a person to see and I derstand on their own no training. Things like spelling math, ring good at history or any other school lessons take no iq at all just memory somthing that even a compleat morón can have a plenty
@@FrankthegbThe tests score you on something and that something has incredibly much better correlation and predictive success at guessing ability to do other real-world skills than most other approaches, such as structured and unstructured job interviews, especially if you're hiring someone for a job that is non-repetitive and requires an ability to solve novel complex problems.
@16:00 Quietly throwing shade at real estate agents. I love it
I think that was more towards scammer and con artists, not legit real estate agents
I was tested at 24 for some careerforce services, and I scored in the 137.
Post Covid, at 38, my score was 103 as I was tested for ADHD. - I have disabling RA, was in pain, and had not slept the night prior due to pain. Still - I appreciate the results and what the meant.
Most scores were nearly the same, but processing speed went down. It was very low, and brought the score down to 103.
As Covid wrecked me badly - I got type-2 diabetes post covid, and felt a huge mental shift after having it - we did not really dive into what the cause was. I still do not know what would cause such a dramatic shift.
My take away: I was very laid back as a kid, and as an adult, I weight things more seriously and do work more slowly - almost by choice or habit. So my speed is slow, but I feel more sure and secure than I did as a kid. So with a lower IQ, comes happiness. And stability.
In case you still would like to change the processing speed: you can do so with neurofeedback.
I did the WAIS IV test a couple of years ago as part of an ADHD assessment. The clinician who was administering the test didn't properly explain some of the exercises. I can only imagine how much poor communication could affect the results for someone who's first language isnt English.
It's a huge problem in clinical practice... I'm a little sad at how shallow this video was for the time alotted.
The test is meant to be taken in your first language. If it isn't the test was done improperly.
Same happened to me
I took the WAIS IV test, too, but in Korea (I'm Korean). The WAIS IV test is translated and modified slightly to match the cultural background of the region. For instance, I was asked to name some kings and presidents of Korea and some local historical events. It was a modified version called the K-WAISIV test. I'm pretty sure everyone gets their own version of the test depending on their nationality and cultural background.
Another excellent and very informative episode.
Absolutely great
👍
👍
Nice
Nice
I was tested at a university while I was in highschool. I was the top student in my class in mathematics and computer science (went on to build embedded systems, electronics, ASIC's, FPGA's, etc.. and was top engineering student in my class in college), my parents wouldn't tell me my IQ test results until a decade or so later when I found the paperwork. I think it explains why I excelled in vector calculus, spherical / non-euclidean geometry. I was playing with transcendental mathematics, spherical triangles, fractals, chaos theory, julia / cantor sets as a hobby in middle school. Always loved computer science and algorithms. My visual / spatial geometry IQ tests were off the scale. My overall IQ test was 175. I also have weird stuff going on like I have suffered ASMR type stuff since I was a child, and I never told anyone, but ruffling of papers, whispers, or teachers writing on chalkboards, all sorts of stuff were triggers for me. I believe I have some sort of genetic difference, like borderline aspergers because I was also never good with socializing with my peers. I have always wondered if there is a relationship with ASMR to this.
It's extremely unlikely that the overall result you got was actually 175, you probably just scored 175 in a couple specific areas but the overall number would be lower, unless you're just an incredibly rare super genius. I'm not a psychotherapist or anything but it definitely seems like you have some form of autism from what you say in your comment, sensory differences and issues and unusual difficulty socializing while excelling at computer science math and geometry are pretty strong symptoms of autism, so you should probably seek a proper diagnosis on that because it's definitely not a good idea to self diagnose.
The probability of Z > 5 is extremely rare. It’s so rare that IQ tests don’t have any validity above a certain value since it doesn’t exist enough in the reference population.
I actually had to take something similar to an IQ test for my autism assessment and I was WAY better at the vocabulary section than any other section to the point where on my assessment there was a note saying that they actually weren't going to give me a general score because the vocabulary section would've skewed my otherwise average score a bit too high for an accurate assessment, so I was just given my individual scores. I also ended up being diagnosed with autism. I don't know if those two things are related but its an interesting story
how do you go about being tested for that?
Posting for notifications when answered
Same here! My english skills were scored at 120 while my other tests showed pretty average intellegance. Funnily enough though, I'm very well spoken in person and yet I'm an atrosious texter.
They decided to just diagnose me with ADD however I struggled a lot socially, and I often wonder if I actually have autism.
Hey, good report and good question In fact the height of the verbal ability and autism are correlated. For this reason, autistic people are often overestimated in their basic functions and receive less support
Apparently my vocabulary skills were also the highest score. I’ve not been diagnosed with autism, but exhibit some traits.
I had the (mis)fortune of scoring high on an IQ test in college as part of a learning disability assessment. After that I often would measure my real achievements against my score to see if I was actually reaching the top X% like I was supposed to be. But the fact is that success depends on many other factors ranging from hard work to just dumb luck.
Certainly IQ and other physchological tests are useful tools - that program helped me get my crap together and not fail out of college. But it can also fuel dangerous dysphorias ranging from inadequacy to superiority.
In any case, congrats on the score Derek :). My advice is not to let the score get to your head either way. Big fan of your videos and wish you the best.
Holding all else constant, parental wealth and "social"/communication skills are way more relevant than IQ as explanatory variables for income/wealth. All the more reason not to let these scores get to our heads.
A lot (most?) of "sucessful businessmen" aren't bright, left school early and just tenaciously work at making money with little thought about other factors (like social responsibility or ethics) to distract them from that goal
A hooker once told me it is better to have luck. I'm assuming she passed her STD test since mine came back negative........
If you ignore all the stuff you have zero control over (familial wealth, upbringing, natural ability, luck), A lot of wealth that you have any control over has likely more to do with the career path you take.
If you're ale to get yourself into being a stock broker, you can make millions of dollars. But if you decide to be a musician instead, well... good luck with that. Neither of these jobs really are THAT much about having high intellectual ability, but both leverage other abilities or interests.
@@miscbits6399 some people who got to a very high paying job did go to college and stuff, but instead of settling for the well paying, but still middle class job worked for 11+ hours a day to reach the top of whatever company they were in
I grew up as a ward of the state of NC. At the age of 16, due to a decent IQ test, I was emancipated from both my parents and the state. And deemed a legal adult.
It got me out of a bad situation, and allowed me to make my own decisions. The hard part was finding a job and an apartment.
I wasn't allowed to go back to high school as a legal adult, nor would it have been practicle as I needed money.
So I got my GED and started to figure out how dumb I really was.
That's the thing. Gestation period is long for us. Biological and educational. The real test is living and making it in the cruel world. Or living and making it in the biological and educational world - and then in the real world.
Hope you are doing well.
@@pauldow1648 Appreciate your concern, that was in 98. I do okay for myself and those around me. Ended up traveling the country setting up horse shows and rodeos, then building cell towers, running boats to the gulf stream, and finally found home as a nuclear electrician for pharma.
I owned a construction company that donated 10 percent of its profits to charities for women and children and food banks for a while.
Then took care of my mom for a few years into and through hospice, now I work, play with my dogs and am trying to grow an orchard.
How are you doing?
How are you now? Are you okay bud?
no matter how smart you are, teenagers are dumb. such is life
What?
Wow you knocked that out of the park my friend. BIG BRAIN!🧠 👊
It would be fantastic to have a follow-up video on the distinction between intelligence and rationality, for example by tapping into the work of Keith Stanovich. And Derek, that could be an opportunity to go back to some of the early Veritasium videos: Stanovich developed a rationality test measuring the RQ (rationality quotient), with questions that remind of questions you used to ask people in the street, like "would you take that bet?" (what you were testing/"measuring" with that question was not people's intelligence, you knew they would understand the correct reasoning once you would explain it to them, but their rationality) and generally measure people's ability to avoid logical fallacies or to display competent data literacy (which you discussed in videos like the one on the regression to the mean or the one on Kahneman's system 1 and system 2). The rationality test is also more interesting than the IQ test: it is possible to have a high intelligence and still perform poorly on rationality questions. And when you see how Dan Kahan showed how intelligence is often used to protect biases, measuring rationality is a better predictor of the type of citizen someone will be and of the behaviour they will have regarding important issues like politics or climate change.
Wow that sounds very interesting, I really hope Derek reads your comment.
It is so random, I just learned about RQ today reading an academic paper. Yeah I am curious about this concept of RQ and how it differs from IQ. It would be a really interesting video topic.
And the thing with both IQ and RQ is, _personality_ makes both of them it's bitch. High IQ people can wind up failing badly, for example going to prison, when they are narcissists, prone to emotional decision making and rage. While IQ (and presumably RQ) are both correlated with success, the best childhood predictor of later success in adulthood is not IQ but deferment of gratification. The famous _marshmellow test_ shows astonishing predictive capacity for success.
Of course, low IQ people can have personality flaws; they may even be more likely to than high IQ people. But having a high IQ won't count for much if your life is in chaos, and you're probably better off having an average IQ and a dependable personality than having a high IQ and being a sociopath, for example. The perfect case study that exemplifies this is Ted Kaczynski.
Found a smart comment, nice!
I'm going to predict R=0.8 on this one.
I took an IQ test after dropping out in Grade 10. I got 98. I didn't understand probably a 1/4 of the questions. I then studied for 3 days on the style of questions and the basic mathematics behind them to understand them better and I got 144. (not the same questions) A few days didn't turn me from average to genius so my basic assumption is that simple and targeted tests only get you surface level data. Intelligence contains so many factors to measure and some as basic as willingness to learn or the time spent on one specific task as well as total generalized learning and exposure to targeted areas of testing parameters.. Thats just the beginning too.
That is very interesting. I believe that IQ tests are a failure. Superior intelligence exists, but it's hard to be measured. Maybe a successful professional path, such as Ivy league diploma or being a scientist, a surgeon , an engineer should be a good indicator of above average intelligence whilst following less intellectual professions should mean average or below average intelligence.
Well said
@@cristianoo2 I mean if you've watched the video there's a lot of evidence to suggest that it still has predictive capacity regardless of if it can be fibbed
Did a neuropsychologist test you or did you take tests online? True iq tests can only be delivered by a highly trained professional, and they don’t typically contain any math at all.
I am a member of Mensa and I have scored perfectly on more than one multiple choice intelligence test. I dropped out of university at 16 after my junior year because I was a poor student. From my perspective, I have always felt like I was "a good test taker" because the answers honestly seem intuitive. When I take a test, I can feel the mindset of the test maker or test makers as the case may be. To me, it is odd that everyone doesn't view tests the same way I do. 🧿
8:00 - this was always my biggest issue with IQ tests. A lot of the sections will test logical reasoning. These can be spacial transformations, numerical sequences, etc., and they all involve logical deduction which i would classify as intelligence; whereas the vocabulary section i would classify more as knowledge than intelligence.
I do accept that even the vocabulary section does have an element of deduction, but it feels like there is way too much of a pre-requisite of knowledge. In other sections (like sequences for example), prior training in these sections is an advantage, but even without prior training, you could still work through it logically; however, with vocabulary, if you have never heard of the words, you don't have many options other than to guess, which is why i hate this section being used as part of a test of one's intelligence.
Logical deduction, transformations, and sequences are also knowledge. Or skills.
Until I took a math class my skill in those were average. Now I can knock out most of it in my head. You get better at seeing patterns the more you engage that skill.
@@Kloppin4H0rses as i was mentioning, i do accept that there is a level of knowledge to them, but my point was that unlike the language section, even if you haven't seen anything like the other sections before, you could deduce the answer logically. Obviously practice will make you better at any task, but even without prior exposure, the other sections are still possible.
An intelligent person will have the curiosity to learn through their life and know many words, but that correlates with age. When I was a kid there weren't vocabulary questions in those tests 🤔
Part of the reason there are several types of tests is to allow for that fact that the person TAKING the test doesn't get to tell the test what we think "intelligence" is. The instant I start picking apart what I think is intelligence vs knowledge, I am only about 90 years behind the folks who design the things. For instance, is the Rain Man's ability to recall in perfect detail the contents of every phone book he's ever paged through "intelligence", "knowledge", or 'just a really good memory'? The answer isn't so simple. Probably the best you can say is, the things are probably not NAMED very well. After all, they aren't measuring your intelligence, they're comparing the results of a mathematical operation performed on the sum total of elements in the tests to a known range of generally accepted statistical norms comprised of similar results gathered from a sub-set of all humans, namely, the other humans who've also taken the same test!!!
The test's final integer results aren't the accurate measurements of raw "intelligence values" somehow taken from all your neurons added together, like your pulse or respiration rates, they're a comparison of your overall assessed values with everyone else's.
Sorry if you already knew that and I read it wrong, you just got me kind of complaining along with you that there seems to be something 'off' about the things and what they do, and I'm full of coffee so I blathered along, but decided to keep it because I wrote it, so you must have hit a nerve that had me maybe thinking "Yeah, I agree and am full of caffeine..."
bruv
If you're taking an iQ test and don't know THE WORDS?!? on it
That's a problem
And as the previous⏫commenter stated, it's really a measure of how you perform vs. how other people performed
Everyone else knew the words but not you?!?
You can't use root words, context clues ANYTHING!!?
that's pretty low iQ, respectfully
Iq is actually a complicated or at-least controversial in-terms of method, subject to accurately quantify because IQ is more of a 3D measure than a 2D or 1D. A more accurate measurement of iq id assume would look like a volume of a polygon with numerous endpoints.
The Scottish guy you were chatting to was definitely referring to the "11+" test we had to take to decide which secondary school we would attend. Only the highest performers were accepted into grammar schools, which were much better funded and attracted the best teachers. It really resulted in a kind of two-tier system, and the fact that grammar schools were mostly located in affluent areas (often the areas became affluent because of the presence of the grammar schools), meant that if you didnt live within the catchment area of one (or could afford to move closer), it didn't matter what you scored in the 11+, you'd still end up at the local comprehensive.
My sister was traumatised when she barely failed, because of a low score on the maths portion. She appealed and was accepted to a grammar school, then a Russell Group uni, and today she is working on her second master's degree. It makes me wonder if other children who fail due to one weak paper or test anxiety are being deprived of opportunities which helped my sister to fulfill her potential.
I know that I scored full marks and I think it was out of 143 or 144, but I don't know if that number was designed to translate directly to IQ score. If the man you were speaking with told you about the correlation, I'd be interested to know.
wow your system is utterly disgusting
Once he mentioned how IQ tests were predictive of future success in school I immediately thought about how the results affected schooling opportunities, teacher bias, and also the child's confidence in continuing to apply themselves.
I'm now desperately curious if those have been measured to be more, less, or equally determinative in deciding the future of a student.
@@whorlingwisteria I think the teacher bias bit is called the Halo effect, if you want to look more into it!
Grammar schools get LESS funding, not more. Certainly nowadays at least.
Well..the alternative is nepotism and whatnot, so it's not perfect but better than the other likely alternatives. As was pointed out, using standardized testing even vs teacher selection resulted in more economic and ethnic diversity, and that's beating out the better of the bunch as far as how selection would be determined. The same has been found in US with standardized testing for university. When schools stray away from these tests and towards more 'holistic' assessments, the rich kids win out much more. Not many poor kids are going to be doing volunteer work for a summer in Africa, or learning how to play the piano, or even becoming an eagle scout. So these sort of resume style boards end up being plagued with an innumerable amount of biases. So although they aren't perfect, standardized tests have shown time and again to be the best we got
IQ tests should be taken with a psychologist. In France, where I did the a Wechsler IV test, it's usually done in 3 meetings : 1. Explain the motivation and answer some questions to have some background, 2. Pass the test in a safe environment with the psychologist (only 2 people in the room), 3. Results and explanation. A psychologist is actually important to interprete the results.
That´s interesting. The Wechsler scale goes from 40 to 160, So I would think if you get them all right, your score would be 160. Period.
But as you stated, the results need to be interpreted by the psychologist. At my first attempt, the psychologist said my IQ was immeasurable. Does that mean it was outside the scale, hence invalid?
This video contains sooo much more, interesting stats and scary history events.
Thanks Veritasium.
GUYS PRAY FOR SAM AND COLBY THEY BEEN DECEIVED BY DEMONS AND ARE IN DANGER THEY ARE RUclipsRS❤
God wouldnt allow souls to be trapped on earth, its umbilical and never happened all souls belong to God, so you cant sell your soul to the devil❤
And not everyone is a child of God jesus said it himself youre of your father the devil and your desires are to do his will true children of God are the ones who have been born again spiritually and repented from sin❤
So many people say they love God, but most of them never repented from sin and have a personal relationship with him, and love isnt just a feeling love is doing❤
Familiar spirits are demons
well if I'm wrong I wasted nothing because I got peace and joy from him, but if you're wrong you wasted your entire life!! ❤️🎉 And demons love when people believe that lie that God doesn't exist and they love it when people don't know they are there ❤I copy n paste this everywhere❤
And no one talks about repentance, God will never lower his standards to be okay with your sins, sins is very serious in the eyes of God hes holy and righteous and it seperates us from him❤
Demons exist, and the devil comes to steal kill and destroy and uses people to do so❤
Btw telling the demon to stay doesnt do anything unless you have the holy spirit you arent safe.
People: okay please stay this is your place❤
Demon: okay
People: **leaves**
Demon: **Goes with them anyway**
Demons arent gonna make it obvious they are there so yeah.
Demons are fallen angels that uses the form of our passed away loved ones to make us believe ghost exist and the souls of the person we knew still remains here❤❤
Astrology is demonic before my relationship with God I would always do zodiac signs literally just a bunch of sins put into each one I bet if everyone was sinless zodiac signs wouldn't make sense and literally a cover up for demons❤
Hearts are deceitful above all things, listen to God❤
Depression can be a demon you may need deliverance❤
God said unless you're born again spiritually u will not enter the kingdom of heaven also God doesn't judge us by our good works he's judging us by our sins Gods standards are so high he's that HOLY saying oh my God is using Gods name in vain it's called blasphemy ❤
To get to heaven you must believe with all your heart that Jesus died and rose again paid full price for your sins repent and receive his Holy spirit.
RUclipsrs I recommend
Impact videos ministries
David diga Hernandez
IsaiahSaldivar
Mapalo
DLM christian lifestyle
Billy garham
Danial adams
Living waters
Mike Signorelli
Okay now pray this to be saved and to get to heaven pray out loud
Jesus I confess that you are my lord and savior
I believe in my heart that God raised you from the dead I ask to receive your holy spirit and I repent of my sins with your help❤ by faith in your word I receive salvation now
Thank you for saving me! I am now reborn a christian a child of almighty God I am saved thank you Jesus! *Be genuine when praying this*
Watch videos on how to receive Gods holy spirit on YT
God creates Jesus redeems The holy spirit changes
Now our good deeds and works we think are good are like filthy rags in the eyes of God
Things to get rid of in your home
1sage
2dream catchers
3crystals
4crystal ball
5ouija board
6 tarot and angel cards
7religious statues
8demonic movies music or video games
9soul times items
10pornography
Now like a theif robbing a store, demons won't make it obvious they are there unless they have to.
Now know you can't save yourself Jesus said I am the way the truth and the life
You have insurance on your house if it ever caught on fire which rarely happens but when it comes to your soul, you play with it like you have forever to make your choice which you don't
150k+ people Die everyday and you never know when it may be you
God spent 9 months shaping and forming you before you were born but only 7 days on earth you're fearfully and wonderfully made beautiful in the eyes of God❤
Don't waste time Hearts are deceitful above all things ask God for wisdom and understanding we are just tiny humans with a 3 pound brain and our imaginations cannot go beyond what we already know❤
Your souls is so valuable both Satan and God want it but it's your choice who you will serve
You serve the devil when you
Lie
Hate
Blasphemy
Disobey
Lazy
Gossip
Gluttony
Wanting what others have cause what God has for you is for you he will never deliver your male to someone else's house
Hate
And unforgivness
And cussing murder and more
And once you die, you're locked with your choice of where you're spending eternity God doesn't care about you doing more good then bad cause he's not judging that God never said that's the way to heaven
So who's lying you or God? Be serious about this❤
God is holy and righteous God is love
So either you would play around because you don't believe hell exist or you don't believe you're going there but the bible makes it very clear
The path to destruction is wide and easy many are on it the path to eternal life is hard and nerrow very few find it and to get into heaven u can only enter through the nerrow gate❤
You dont have to wait until you die to know if youre going to heaven you can know right now 100% where youre going❤
Satan doesnt rule hell this is a myth when lucifer known as satan now became prideful and rebelled against God he took many angels with him Demons are fallen angels we live in a spirital and physical world so hell was made for punishment for satan and his angels and the reason why people go there is because they Align themsleves with the devil in SIN!
Sin separates us from God and the wages of sin is death if youre found guilty with one sin on judgment day you will not enter the kingdom of heaven so the thing is We us humans broken Gods law and jesus paid the fine! So the good news is you dont have to go to hell if you accept him as your lord and savior!
God offered us eternal life as a free gift and you receive it by faith! You dont have to work for it you dont have to pay all you have to do is receive it by faith❤
Don't expect Gods best when you always give him your least don't reject him anymore let him come in and change your life❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤
I think the biggest determining factor for how people do in school is how much the actually enjoy what they’re learning, and how much they feel education is valuable to them. Almost all of the people I knew who did poorly in school was from not turning in assignments. This can also result in not getting the practice needed to understand the subject matter, so test scores are poor as well. A lot of people did poor because they were bored, didn’t care, etc. and wanted to do anything else but school work
When I did my ASD and ADHD profiling, I did an IQ test. It was actually super helpful for understanding how my brain works as a neurodivergent person. My verbal IQ is 132 and my abstract reasoning is in the 99th percentile. But my working memory score was 83, and my digit span score was in the 3rd percentile lol
It helped me understand why I'm so smart and so dumb at the same time ? Like I can understand complex topics quickly and with very little context, but when I worked at subway while I was at uni, I had to ask what they wanted on their sub 5 times bc I couldn't remember 😅
I just got done with my ASD and ADHD testing, at age 37, and yeah out of the 16 hours of testing in total, there was a lot of IQ type testing mixed in there :D I actually loved the pattern ones, i kept wanting to do more :D also the spatial testing was really neat!
edit: oh the "copy this crazy nutty drawing!", then 10mins later, "remember that drawing? yeah draw it again...." then the next day!, again....
And on the 2nd day lots of random questions about the drawing, like "which one of these "patterns" was in the abstract drawing that you did yesterday", or a "was this in the drawing from yesterday?"
I really want to know my score on that one. I felt good on my drawings, even on the 2nd day, but the "was this really in there?" really got to me, like i was getting false memories
With an IQ of 132 you still use absolutely ironic language. Everyone is "neurodivergent" outside of a chronic coma status. Cringe.
@@TimberWulfIsHerewe don't need you to do a test to get an impression of your score
Similar for me. I scored massively on the abstract reasoning and terribly on the rest.
This comment was particularly awesome to read. I’m 29 currently, and hat age 27 I was diagnosed with high functioning autism. I had no idea that an IQ test was part of the assessment. Knowing that at IQ test alone costs hundreds of dollars is a notable reason for why do the assessment is so expensive. The psychologist explained to me that for most neurodivergent people, you expect the results to resemble the structure of the human hand… Four fingers are all similarly long, then the thumb is comparatively far shorter. In other words, most people with autism have one area of comparative cognitive weakness. My results were approximately:
Memory: 130
Verbal comprehension: 134
Numeracy: 132
Visual/spatial: 120
Processing speed: 92
I was profoundly sleep deprived before the assessment, but the results are still a very good approximation of how I would have scored if I had actually slept for a single second night before (Concisely, food poisoning, couldn’t sleep)
My processing speed being the lowest is a classic example of someone with autism having one area lower than the others, which seems quite similar to your experience 👌🏻
One variable that I think should be taken into consideration is the time of day or sleep/wake cycle that the test is taken. I know this would vary greatly for me.
There are hundreds if not thousands of variable that should be taken into consideration for measuring intelligence, that just aren't. It's just a bad test, you're better off just guessing how intelligent you are in the mirror, if you're honest and truly think about it you'll get an answer and it will be accurate in the context of your life and enable you to progress, more than any IQ test could ever do.
Day of the week would too. As well as what stressful events happened that day or the previous day.
I bet whether you exercise (and how) has a big factor too. I know when I did cardio for the first time in a long while it made me feel like ten years younger and way mentally sharper.
@@mhchx3 That view would seem to be unsupported by various lines of research.
In the video, one expert said that poor students would be more likely to get into, say, gifted programs, if it was based on "objective-ish" IQ tests, than if they were based on teachers' subjective evaluations of the students. Now imagine how much LESS reliable those subjective evaluations are when we perform them on OURSELVES, rather than some other person.
And that is indeed what has been found, when people are asked to rate themselves on IQ as well as other measures of ability. Call it the "Lake Wobegon Effect", where "all the children are above average". What was a joke turns out to be correct; 90% of us rate ourselves above average, in IQ, work aptitude, etc.
So sure, there are hundreds if not thousands of factors that can effect IQ scores. But most of those have very little effect, and to the extent they do they can either raise or lower it, so tend to cancel each other out. And others have been studied and can be accounted for. Does that make the test perfect? Not by a long shot!
But does it mean that we're better off evaluating ourselves? NO! That is perhaps the very WORST way of estimating IQ or almost any other measure.
And if that's true, does that mean that subjective self-evaluations are worthless? No. Self-reflection is incredibly valuable, not just in the moment, but as you said, in "enabling you to progress". I suspect that engaging in such practices might both reflect those with higher IQ's, as well as be a means for increasing IQ scores. It's just not valuable as a substitute for estimating objective measurements.
only that jesus was saint on every second a day .. but had a very low iq
It would be interesting to see how the results from the online tests you took correlated with the official test.
My guess is poorly, or rather, I suspect there would be a correlation, but that the online tests on average would result in a higher score... Nobody wants to get a "bad score" and the people making most of those tests want people taking them. So I'd wager they are more likely to inflate the results so more people are happy with the results and maybe talk about that test they took to a friend or whatever which drives more people to the test.
@@Kriss_941 Well i got an 85 online, so i dont want to know my real IQ :-)
Usually sites make you pay and give them at least your name and email to get your results. They're good for training, but I'd recommend never just handing out money and personal information like that for something like this online. At least unless you know for sure it's a reputable source.
@@Kriss_941 That is the first thing that comes to mind obviously but they are actually rather predictive. They are basically just shorter versions of the official tests. The legitimate online tests are done by respected organizations in psychology, and the brand of accuracy and reliability is worth much more to them than the initial hypothetical traffic from better scores. Ofc there are inaccurate tests with the purpose that you stated, but you should be doing the legit ones. There are multiple free online tests that are also longer from different organizations that are more accurate than Mensa's online test.
there are studies on that and if remember correctly such online test tend to inflate iq by ~10-15 points
Predictive Ability = Ability
to Abstract into Concepts
to glean out any "Patterns"
(ideally, into Mathematical
Expression/s) to determine
its "Ongoing" Presence.
. . .
Life (Abstracted) =
Expressions of Math,
Cycling over Time.
{Abstract: Abstract
↔️ Mathematical
Expression}, and the
"Power" of Abstraction
= [(Abstraction)Nested]
^Power}. And, the "Power"
of Intelligence = the Power
of Nesting Abstraction =
Regenerating more Powerful
Intelligence.
Interestingly, thus the "Ultimate
Power of A.I." = the Power of
"Regenerating A.I.," ever more &
more Powerful A.I. at any time
- over time.
Mathematically Proven:
that being Nice, Forgiving,
Retaliatory (only to swiftly
swat down, clearly, bad
acts - most of the time) and
Clarity (of Intention) is the
Only way to "Guarantee" the
----- evolutionary -----
Survival of the Species.
{Where, the most: Rational =
Selfish = Profitable = Nicest
Strategy/Behavior in time,
over time.) 👍 :-)
(Any observable dissolution
or disharmony in culture (or,
relationships suggests an
irrational breakdown [due
to excessive noise (error)
among the actors] to the
inevitable detriment of All
{ 👎 :-( . . . ::-( }, if not
corrected soon enough.
Check out lessons learned
from the science of "Game
Theory."
Interesting! Every IQ test I have taken (more than 10) came back as 141. BUT! I had a brain injury at age 15 in which my memory was severely impacted. I learn/understand things easily but do not retain the information. So between the ages of 15 and 50 my average job lasted 3 to 6 months. These jobs were anything from truck driving to sales to computer building, programming and repair. It is absolutely amazing how much memory determines your success.
Yeah I know someone who's probably just a bit smarter than average but has an extraordinary memory which allows them to perform at the top level at work (IT field).
I honestly think that memory is more important than the ability to learn something new.
I can relate to this very much. Having an IQ 146 and basically "trained" my quick solving as work-around for my lack of memory. Strong points, making connections in everything, weak points, no memory at all in details..... and just don't ever expect me to remember your name 🤣
Although I noticed, with a keto/carnivore diet rich on animal based omega-3 fats, great improvement for my memory.
P.s.: @laurae, you need memory to learn something new. IQ is more about solving, make/see connections.
Isn't that actually a great life experiencing all kinds of jobs? I'd rather do all jobs there are than do one even well payed for 60years
Having had a multitude of different careers and degrees, it doesn't always correlate to better paying positions or higher accumulation of wealth and retirement benefits to that of someone who remained on their job for 5 decades. Consider a Postal Worker or Union Worker with 5 decades of service. Experience will certainly vary but such may sacrifice retirement or financial potentials. @@nativeafroeurasian
Normally those online IQ tests tell you that you have an IQ of 180 and then offer to sell you a printed certificate with that number on it. I don't know if IQ really measures anything, but if it does then it's probably negatively correlated with having one of those certificates at home.
Don't be so hard on yourself ;)
IQ tests should be run by a trained professional.
Haven't you heard the quote by Stephen Hawking at the start of this video?
"People who boast about their IQ are losers".
And this man was a literal genius.
i firmly believe mine was 95-100 no matter what those online test said, i hope im right since my brain kinda shut down when i see those number type
@@shoelacedonkeyHow do you know he was a genius?
I always liked this quote, which is attributed (perhaps inaccurately so) to Albert Einstein - "Everyone is a genius. But if you judge a fish by its ability to climb a tree, it will live its whole life believing that it is stupid."
I actually really dislike that quote because it might prevent people from subscribing to a growth mindset. I prefer a quote by Joshua Waitzkin, an international chess master and author of The Art of Learning that says "The moment we believe that success is determined by an ingrained level of ability, as opposed to resilience and hard work, we will brittle in the face of adversity."
@@TaylorWeston I believe as humans we do have an “ingrained level of ability” when it comes to a lot of tasks, do we not?
@@HeiiarchyGameplays we do, and I think his point is that we should make sure it doesn't prevent us from further exploring possibilities and excelling in other fields outside of the gifts we believe to have been born with.
@@TaylorWeston If you put this quote in the right context, then there's nothing wrong with it
@@HeiiarchyGameplays We do, but largely, we benefit from not thinking and behaving as though we do, because our thoughts are powerful tools to raise our heights or drag us down. Conditioning is effective, so imagining our own limits is a limiting experience to impose on oneself. A person who believes he can reach 200% and hits 100% is more effective than a person who believes he can reach 100% and hits 80%. The key is that we don't know our precise limits, and no matter how much we think we are experts on ourselves, we will always think our potential higher or lower than the truth. It's best to consider the sky as the limit. We don't know when life can turn around, and we had best be there for it when it does.
Obviously, some people are victims of increased levels of anxiety to the point of being crippling. The test cannot account for neurological issues - ADHD, sleep disorders, etc all affect millions of people.