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| 113113 |
You scored 113 on Emode's IQ test. This means that
based on your answers, your IQ score is between
Most people's IQs are between 70 and 130.
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In fact, 95% of all people have IQs within
that range. 68% of people score between 80 and 120. The
following chart to your right, shows these percentages and
where your IQ score is on that scale.
Print your
Certificate of
Intellectual Achievement.
There's more to
intelligence than a single number, a single score or a single
label. Emode uses four distinguishable Intelligence Scales in
the Ultimate IQ Test. By analyzing your individual scores on
those four scales, we are able to look beyond the raw IQ score
into how your process information and thereby determine your
Intellectual Type. |
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Because of the way you
process information, these are just some of the many
careers in which you wcould excel:
- Writer
- Translator
- Publisher
- Attorney
- Poet
- Politician
- Journalist
- Lecturer
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You've got tons of
strengths. It wouldn't surprise us if you:
- Can clarify complex issues
- Can articulate commonly
understood truths
- Can foster understanding
- Can creatively solve problems
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Now let's look at
the factors that contribute to you being a Word Warrior with a 113
IQ score.
Based on the results of your test, Emode divided
your scores into four distinguishable dimensions — mathematical
intelligence, visual-spatial intelligence, linguistic intelligence
and logic intelligence.
Here's how each of your intelligence
scores break down:
Your mathematical intelligence score represents your
combined ability to reason and calculate. You scored relatively low,
which means you probably leave the bill splitting and tip
calculating to your friends when you go out to lunch. You're not a
math failure by any means, it just happens to be a skill you might
have to work at a little more than other people do.
This is
the kind of question that helped to determine your mathematical
intelligence score:
A boy is 4 years old and his sister is
three times as old as he is. When the boy is 12 years old, how old
will his sister be? 16, 20, 24, 28, 32.
answer:
20. The sister is (3 )three times older than her (4)
four-year-old brother. Three times 4 is 12, in other words, when he
is four, she is 12. Twelve years old is 8 years older than 4 years
old, which makes her 8 years older than him. This never changes.
Therefore, when he is 12, she is still 8 years older, or
12+8=20.
Like anything, keeping or
improving your math talents requires practice. Here are some
everyday mental exercises that could particularly helpful to
you:
- Balancing your checkbook
- Figuring out your monthly budget
- Predicting what the change will be the
next time you buy something
- Calculating your waitperson's tip in
your head
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The visual-spatial component of intelligence measures your
ability to extract a visual pattern and from that envision what
should come next in a sequence. Your score was relatively high, which could mean that you're the one
navigating the map when you're on an outing with friends. You have,
in some capacity, an ability to think in pictures. Maybe this
strength comes out in subtle ways, like how you play chess or form
metaphors.
Here's the type of question that contributed to
your visual-spatial intelligence score:
The answer lies in
recognizing not only the visual sequence of a square and then a
line, but in the recognizing the solidity of the line in the first
example and the broken quality of the line in the second
example.
Like anything, keeping or
improving visual-spatial talents requires some practice. Here
are some everyday mental exercises that will be particularly
helpful to you:
- Playing chess, or video games like
Tetris
- Studying maps and become the navigator
on your next trip
- Sculpting or photography
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Linguistic abilities include reading, writing and
communicating with words. Emode's test measures knowledge of
vocabulary, ease in completing word analogies and the ability to
think critically about a statement based on its semantic structure.
Your score was
Here's the type of question that contributed
to your linguistic intelligence scale score:
Inept is the
opposite of:
Answer: Skillful.
The answer is
derived by prior knowledge that "inept" means "unskillful" (Oxford
Concise Dictionary).
Like anything, keeping or
improving linguistic talents requires some practice. Here are
some everyday mental exercises that will be particularly
helpful to you:
- Doing crossword puzzles
- Start reading just for fun
- Befriending your dictionary
- The next time something breaks, try
reading the instruction book first
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Emode's logical intelligence questions assess your ability
to think things through. The questions determine the extent to which
you use reasoning and logic to determine the best solution to a
problem. Your logic score was relatively high, which could mean that
when the car breaks down, your friends look to you to help figure
out not only what's wrong, but how to fix it and how you're going to
get to the next gas station.
Here's the kind of question
that contributed to your logical intelligence score:
If some
Wicks are Slicks and some Slicks are Snicks, then some Wicks are
definitely Snicks.
Answer: False The statement is
false because while some Wicks might be Slicks, there is no
conclusive proof that any of them might be Snicks.
Like anything, keeping or
improving logical talents requires some practice. Here are
some everyday mental exercises that will be particularly
helpful to you:
- Trying some brain teasers
- Throwing away the instructions and
relying on instinct to fix something
- Playing chess
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For each scale, Emode
determined how many people received scores above and below
yours. Your "percentile" represents what percentage of people
scored lower than you. In other words, 90th percentile means
you scored higher than 80 to 90% of people did.
How
are the percentiles determined? These percentiles were
determined based on the one million users who have already
taken our test. We then adjusted these percentiles based on a
nationally representative IQ distribution to make sure that no
level of intelligence was over- or underrepresented in the
analysis. Thus, the percentiles we present reflect your score
compared with people in the United States in general.
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If your score isn't as high as you thought it would be,
remember that there are plenty of external factors that can affect
your performance on the test. If you were tired, hungry or
distracted, you might have scored lower than you expected because
you were less able to concentrate.
Your level of formal
education and your familiarity with taking these kinds of tests also
influence how well you do. That's part of the reason IQ tests aren't
a perfect measure of your intelligence. Your score would probably be
quite different if the IQ test was designed to take into account
your musical, artistic, emotional and social skills.
On
their own, IQ scores can't predict someone's ultimate success or
definitive potential for success. Many of the qualities that lead to
great achievements are learned through culture, experience and
schooling - not solely from doing well on an IQ test.
What
your IQ test can help explain, however, is how your brain works
best. By looking at the kinds of questions you answered correctly
and the kinds of questions you answered incorrectly, we can tell you
more about your intelligence type — the type that explains the kind
of information that makes sense to your brain. |
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Now that you know your
IQ score, your Intelligence Type and your rank along the four
intelligence scales (Mathematical, Visual-Spatial, Linguistic and
Logical), we thought you might want to go back and see how you
answered various questions. People often waver on at least a couple
of questions, so we've provided the full set of questions along with
the answer key.
= your answer
= correct answer
| 1. |
Which one of the five choices makes
the best comparison? LIVED is to DEVIL as 6323 is to: |
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2336 |
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6232 |
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3236  |
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3326 |
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6332 |
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| 2. |
Which one of these five is least like
the other four? |
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Mule |
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Kangaroo  |
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Cow |
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Deer |
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Donkey |
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| 3. |
Which number should come next? 144
121 100 81 64 ? |
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17 |
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19 |
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36 |
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49  |
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50 |
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| 4. |
Even the most ___________ rose has
thorns. |
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Ugly |
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Weathered |
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Lonely |
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Noxious |
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Tempting  |
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| 5. |
HAND is to Glove as HEAD is to |
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Hair |
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Hat  |
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Neck |
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Earring |
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Hairpin |
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| 7. |
John likes 400 but not 300; he likes
100 but not 99; he likes 2500 but not 2400. Which does he
like: |
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900  |
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1000 |
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1100 |
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1200 |
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| 8. |
A fallacious argument is: |
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Disturbing |
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Valid |
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False  |
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Necessary |
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| 9. |
If you rearrange the letters
"ANLDEGN," you would have the name of a(n): |
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Ocean |
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Country  |
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State |
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City |
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Animal |
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| 10. |
NASA received three messages in a
strange language from a distant planet. The scientists studied
the messages and found that "Necor Buldon Slock" means "Danger
Rocket Explosion" and "Edwan Mynor Necor" means "Danger
Spaceship Fire" and "Buldon Gimilzor Gondor" means "Bad Gas
Explosion". What does "Slock" mean? |
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Danger |
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Explosion |
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Nothing |
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Rocket  |
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Gas |
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| 11. |
If some Wicks are Slicks, and some
Slicks are Snicks, then some Wicks are definitely Snicks. The
statement is: |
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True |
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False  |
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Neither |
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| 12. |
Ann is taller than Jill, and Kelly is
shorter than Ann. Which of the following statements would be
most accurate? |
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Kelly is taller than Jill |
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Kelly is shorter than Jill |
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Kelly is as tall as Jill |
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It's impossible to tell  |
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| 13. |
A boy is 4 years old and his sister
is three times as old as he is. When the boy is 12 years old,
how old will his sister be? |
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16 |
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20  |
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24 |
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28 |
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32 |
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| 14. |
Assume that these two statements are
true: All brown-haired men have bad tempers. Larry is a
brown-haired man. The statement Larry has a bad temper
is: |
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True  |
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False |
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Unable to determine |
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| 15. |
Two girls caught 25 frogs. Lisa
caught four times as many as Jen did. How many frogs did Jen
catch? |
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4 |
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5  |
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8 |
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10 |
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15 |
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| 16. |
Inept is the opposite of: |
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Fit |
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Deep |
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Skillful  |
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Sad |
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Happy |
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| 17. |
A car traveled 28 miles in 30
minutes. How many miles per hour was it traveling? |
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28 |
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36 |
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56  |
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58 |
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62 |
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| 18. |
If all Zips are Zoodles, and all
Zoodles are Zonkers, then all Zips are definitely
Zonkers. The above sentence is logically: |
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True  |
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False |
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Neither |
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| 19. |
Sue is both the 50th best and the
50th worst student at her school. How many students attend her
school? |
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50 |
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75 |
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99  |
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100 |
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101 |
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| 20. |
In a race from point X to point Y and
back, Jack averages 30 miles per hour to point Y and 10 miles
per hour back to point X. Sandy averages 20 miles per hour in
both directions. Between Jack and Sandy, who finished
first? |
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Jack |
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Sandy  |
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They tie |
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Neither |
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Impossible to tell |
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| 21. |
Ten people can paint 60 houses in 120
days, so five people can paint 30 houses in: |
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15 days |
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30 days |
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60 days |
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120 days  |
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| 22. |
The pure and simple truth is rarely
pure and never ________. |
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Complete |
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Accurate |
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Complex |
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Simple  |
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Wise |
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| 23. |
Which number should come next? 64,
16, 4, 1, 1/4? |
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1/16  |
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1/12 |
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1/8 |
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1/2 |
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1 |
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| 24. |
What number is one half of one
quarter of one tenth of 800? |
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2 |
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5 |
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8 |
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10  |
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40 |
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| 25. |
A cynic is one who knows the price of
everything and the ________ of nothing. |
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Emotion |
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Value  |
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Meaning |
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Color |
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Quality |
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| 26. |
Two cars start off at the same point
on a straight highway facing opposite directions. Each car
drives for 6 miles, takes a left turn, and drives for 8 miles.
How far apart are the two cars? |
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2 miles |
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11 miles |
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14 miles |
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20 miles  |
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26 miles |
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| 27. |
Which one of these five things is
least like the other four? |
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Coconut |
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Grape  |
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Banana |
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Apple |
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Pear |
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| 28. |
Wisdom is knowing what to do next;
__________ is doing it. |
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Virtue  |
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Luck |
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Happiness |
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Sanity |
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Nostalgia |
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| 29. |
It is easier to _______________ than
to offer a helping hand. |
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Raise a flag |
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Shout an insult |
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Lay down |
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Point the finger  |
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Sing praises |
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| 30. |
True knowledge exists in knowing that
you know ___________. |
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Everything |
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Nothing  |
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The truth |
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The weather |
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The meaning of life |
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| 31. |
Which word best completes the
analogy: Water is to glass as letter is to... |
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mail |
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stamp |
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pen |
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envelope  |
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book |
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| 33. |
Which one of the designs is least
like the other four?
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| 34. |

For the picture sequence above, find the
picture that follows logically from one of the six
below.
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| 35. |

For the picture sequence above, find the
picture that follows logically from one of the five
below.
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| 36. |

Fill in the empty box above with the correct
picture from below |
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| 37. |

Fill in the white box above with the correct
picture from below |
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| 40. |
Which design does not belong in this
group? |
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= your answer
= correct answer |
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The intelligence quotient (IQ)
measures the ratio of a person's intellectual age to his/her
chronological age. Most adult intelligence tests are designed for
people who are at least 16 years old. For this reason, if you are
younger than 16, your Emode IQ score might be slightly lower than
your "true" IQ.
One of the first scientific investigations into
the concept of intelligence, came from nineteenth-century British
scientist, Sir Francis Galton. Galton believed that mental traits,
like physical traits, could be inherited. He published his ideas on
hereditary intelligence in his book, Hereditary Genius.
Meanwhile in France, psychologist Alfred Binet was exploring
ways of measuring children's' intelligence. Like Galton, Binet was
passionate about testing and measuring human capabilities. Binet
worked with two groups of children - those who were average
students, and those who were less mentally capable. He discovered
that average students could complete certain tasks that less
mentally capable students could not. Based on those findings, Binet
calculated the "normal" abilities for students within different age
groups. From there he could estimate how many years above or below
the norm a student's mental age was.
Just before WWI, German
psychologist Wilhelm Stern came up with an alternative to mental age
for measuring people's intelligence. He suggested that a more
accurate method for assessing someone's intelligence was to measure
their capabilities given their chronological age. He proposed that
for a true estimate of someone's intelligence, researchers needed to
calculate a ratio between the subject's mental age and their
chronological age. Since the resulting numbers were represented by
decimals, scientists decided to multiply this "quotient" by 100 to
get rid of the decimal places. Thus, the formula for an IQ is: IQ =
Mental Age/Chronological Age x 100.
Based on the ratio that
Stern created, Lewis Terman, an American psychologist at Stanford
University, coined the term Intelligence Quotient for Stern's Binet
test scoring system.
IQ tests serve as a
useful tool for institutions such as public schools and the
military, where great numbers of people must be processed quickly
and efficiently, and placed in appropriated classes or positions.
In the United States, kindergarten-aged children are often
given IQ tests to evaluate whether they need special attention or
services. For example, children scoring 130 or over are often
considered "gifted" and placed in programs accordingly. However, in
most institutional uses of the test nowadays, the importance placed
on the actual IQ score has changed.
A
widely-cited example of possible cultural bias appeared in the
Scholastic Aptitude Test in the early 90s:
Runner: marathon A) Envoy: embassy B) Martyr:
massacre C) Oarsman: regatta D) Referee: tournament
E) Horse: stable.
(Herrnstein and Murray, 1994)
According to many, the answer, C), is more likely to be
answered correctly by upper class children (predominantly
white) because they are more inclined to know the definition
of regatta. | The military tends to use
IQ test results to assess which field a recruit might be best suited
to. Instead of relying solely on the intelligence rating, the IQ
score, the military will now look at the kinds of questions a
recruit answered correctly. Once they know that, they have a better
idea of what innate skills the recruit can bring to specific
assignments and duties.
And as far as the business world
goes, uses of such tests for employment purposes was declared
illegal — except in rare circumstances — by the Supreme Court in
1971.
In social life, the IQ test is only really applicable
if you're specifically joining an organization based on IQ scores
like Mensa, a society founded in 1964 for people who score in the
top 2% of the IQ test. But, in general, there are still some
misconceptions about the importance of test results. Chances are,
people you know are more likely to be judgmental about a high or low
score than most institutions are. Luckily, this is usually just a
case of misinformation and is easily remedied.
| Robert Jordan, an
applicant to the New Haven, CT police force sued the
department in 1997 after he was refused entry on grounds that
his IQ test score was "too high." A spokesperson for the
police department was quoted as saying people with too high of
an IQ "tire of police work and leave not long after undergoing
costly academy training." |
Much
debate circulates around the different IQ tests that are
administered throughout the country. Many researchers claim that the
tests measure cultural knowledge and understanding, not innate
intelligence. Critics suggest that both IQ and standardized tests
are racially and culturally biased.
According to a 1996
report by the American Psychological Association, "Intelligence
scores partially predict individual differences in school
achievement, such as grade point average and number of years of
education that individuals complete.
Nevertheless,
population levels of school achievement are not determined solely or
even primarily by intelligence or any other individual-difference
variable. Many differences can be attributed primarily to
differences in culture and schooling rather than in abilities
measured by intelligence tests."
Outside factors, such as
where you grow up, what kind of school you attend, and how much
school you attend contribute substantially to the development of
intelligences. However, it is not yet clearly understood what those
factors are, or how they work. It is widely agreed that standardized
tests, like an IQ test, do not accurately reflect all forms of
intelligence.
Obviously, cultural knowledge, creativity,
wisdom, common sense and social sensitivity are not measured in IQ
tests, but they certainly contribute to a person's intelligence.
Still, there are some people who feel strongly that IQ tests
are the best way to predict future performance at work and in
school. They feel that IQ tests are better predictors of future
success than even trained personnel experts.
Experts have
numerous theories when it comes to explaining, defining and
predicting intelligence. Some claim that intelligence is innate and
fixed and can be measured with clearly defined statistical methods.
Others claim that experience and environment affect intelligence -
that intelligence is the composite of many different talents and
abilities which continue to improve over time.
Three
researchers have made significant advances in this field in recent
years:
1. Robert Sternberg - Has proposed three
sub-theories of intelligence: context, experience, and the cognitive
components of information processing. In short, intelligence
involves either adapting to your environment, moving to another more
appropriate environment or changing your environment. Your level of
experience with the activities or knowledge being tested gets
reduced to intelligence, but intelligence is best measured out of
context — when you perform unfamiliar tasks.
2. Howard
Gardner - Has proposed his "Theory of Multiple Intelligences"
where there are seven independent but related intelligences:
logical-mathematical, linguistic, musical, spatial,
bodily-kinesthetic, interpersonal and intrapersonal. Gardner is one
of the biggest proponents for developing new methods for testing
intelligence. He speculates that intelligence is culturally and
experientially based. One's experience will influence how much each
of these can be expressed.
3. John Horn - Horn had
proposed that there are two factors to intelligence: fluid
intelligence and crystallized intelligence. Fluid intelligence is
one's ability to reason and solve problems in novel or unfamiliar
situations. Crystallized intelligence is the extent to which an
individual has attained knowledge of her culture.
In
general, recent research has focused on intelligence as something
that can be changed — not as something that is fixed in childhood
and as something culturally and experientially based. Most current
researchers agree that there are multiple forms of intelligence,
although there is no consensus on how many. |
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Over the last two
years, Emode's psychologists developed this IQ test using proven,
high-quality IQ test questions such as those in the Mensa Workout
tests and the Shipley Institute of Living Scale — an intelligence
test that focuses on both vocabulary and verbal abstract reasoning.
Those are the skills that are associated with problem-solving
ability and social comprehension/judgement.
Once we
built the Emode IQ test, Emode performed a large-scale study to
compare the results of people who had taken both the Emode IQ test
and the established Shipley Institute of Living Scale (by Walter C.
Shipley). The Shipley test has been used for more than 50 years to
assess facets of intelligence. We did this to ensure that the way we
constructed our test would yield reliable and valid IQ results.
We used scores calculated by the Shipley test as a basis for
calibrating Emode's IQ test. That ensured a high association between
the two tests and, because of that, the validity of our IQ scores.
In fact, the Emode IQ test is highly reliable—the Chronbach's alpha
is .81. In other words, the questions on Emode's IQ test are
internally consistent and they all measure intelligence accurately.
In the past, researchers who have
constructed IQ tests have discovered additional patterns that relate
to the categories of questions a particular test-taker answered
correctly — categories such as mathematical, visual, verbal and
logical. When these researchers analyzed peoples' results, they
found that, for instance, a test-taker might have answered the
math-oriented and verbal questions correctly, yet tended to answer
the logical questions incorrectly. From such patterns, experts were
able to define some internal scales of intelligence to the overall
IQ test. Thus, using those internal scales, they could offer an
actual IQ score, such as 105, as well as a measurement of how well
the test-taker did within each question category.
After 1
million people took the Emode IQ test, we ran what is called a
"factor analysis" on the answers those people gave. This statistical
analysis identified the similarity between groups of questions in
our test. The analysis demonstrated that this particular IQ test
accurately measured four underlying dimensions of intelligence:
mathematical, visual-spatial, linguistic and logical.
Each
of the questions in the Emode IQ test relates to one dimension of
intelligence. How reliable are these dimensions? Well, for the
scientists and statisticians out there, their reliability
coefficients were .85, .84, .81 and .50, respectively. The gist of
all of that is that Emode's scales of intelligence are highly valid
and we can accurately tell you how high you scored on each of those
scales relative to the other test-takers—thus yielding an accurate
intellectual type. |
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|
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Armstrong, T. (1993). 7 Kinds of
Smart: Identifying and Developing Your Many Intelligences. NY: Plume
(The Penguin Group).
Bonthous, J. (1995). "Understanding
intelligence across cultures." Competitive Intelligence Review,
Summer/Fall: 12-19.
Gardner, H. (1993). Frames of Mind: The
Theory of Multiple Intelligences (10th Anniversary Edition). NY:
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