Wednesday, July 20, 2005

My IQ Test Results from Tickle

Bookman, your Super IQ score is 94

Your overall intelligence quotient is the result of a scientifically-tested formula based on how many questions you answered correctly. But it's only part of what we learned about you from your answers on the test. We also determined the way you process information.

The way you think about things makes you an Information Organizer. This means you have an eye for detail. You can scan a page and find the one mistake on it. You're also able to organize things in a way that makes sense and arrange information so that it is easier to understand. This makes you a very valuable resource for others who aren't organized or who have trouble catching their own mistakes. It's often difficult for traditional intelligence tests to pick up your particular set of abilities because the talent of organizing information and spotting inconsistencies is much harder to measure than other abilities.

How did we determine that your thinking style is that of an Information Organizer? When we examined your test results further, we analyzed how you scored on 8 dimensions of intelligence: spatial, organizational, abstract reasoning, logical, mechanical, verbal, visual and numerical. The 3 dimensions you scored highest on combine to make you an Information Organizer. Only 6 out of 1,000 people have this rare combination of abilities.

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Your IQ score is 94. This means that you are smarter than 34.0% of all other Super IQ test takers.


Generally, people with your eye for spotting inconsistencies or disorganized information, are more inclined to want to edit or rework rather than create. Rather than write for the sake of expressing new ideas or read for the sake of obtaining knowledge, you're more interested in the structure of the information and what that might imply. Be aware that sometimes it's hard for traditional intelligence tests — unlike this one — to pick up your particular set of abilities because the talent of spotting inconsistencies and organizing information is much harder to measure than other abilities are.



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