![]() As a result, on the whole the human benchmark tests seem inferior to the game THINKFAST which a bunch of us played circa 2000. Unfortunately, the human benchmark test only uses simple reaction time (which is much less g loaded than complex RT), only one type of simple reaction time (an aggregate of several types is more g loaded) and only measures speed (variability is much more g loaded) and does not provide a composite score weighted to maximize g loading. He found that when you aggregated many different kinds of reaction time (simple, complex, etc) measured both by speed and consistency (faster and less variable RTs imply higher intelligence) over many different trials, and compared with measures of IQ (not grades) and corrected for range-restriction, the results correlated a potent 0.7 with intelligence. ![]() Nearly a century later Arthur Jensen would revisit Galton’s work, correcting for these problems. As a result, he detected virtually no relationship between reaction time and intellect. ![]() Unfortunately Galton’s research was derailed by a lack of reliability (he only used a one trial measure of reaction time) range restriction (his samples tended to be elite) and improper measures of intelligence with which to relate reaction time (he compared it with school grades since IQ tests had not yet been invented). Tests of reaction time date back to the 19th century work of Francis Galton who believed that basic neurological speed predicted intelligence. I just want some background info on these tests, if there is any.Īs discussed in previous articles in this series, some of the tests (sequence memory, number memory) have their roots in conventional psychometric tests. …, that website where you test your reaction speed, has a wide selection of other psychometric tests, I’d guess a composite score of all the tests would probably have a decently high g-loading. A reader stated provided a screenshot of his performance on.
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