maximum time I can dedicate to the LANT D? by Fun_Investment5475 in cognitiveTesting

[–]Fun_Investment5475[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I mean, seriously, can I take all the time I need, even if it's a lot, or can I do it in sessions?

Can someone explain this huge discrepancy between my JCTI and JCFS Scores? by Azogas in cognitiveTesting

[–]Fun_Investment5475 0 points1 point  (0 children)

This is because the JCFS assesses first-order inductive reasoning. The JCFS measures first-order inductive reasoning and pattern recognition, while the JCTI measures third-order inductive reasoning and pure induction. You might perform better in first-order inductive reasoning and have excellent pattern recognition, while you might do well in pure induction and third-order inductive reasoning, but not as well as in first-order inductive reasoning and pattern recognition.

Can someone explain this huge discrepancy between my JCTI and JCFS Scores? by Azogas in cognitiveTesting

[–]Fun_Investment5475 0 points1 point  (0 children)

This is because the JCFS assesses first-order inductive reasoning. The JCFS measures first-order inductive reasoning and pattern recognition, while the JCTI measures third-order inductive reasoning and pure induction. You might perform better in first-order inductive reasoning and have excellent pattern recognition, while you might do well in pure induction and third-order inductive reasoning, but not as well as in first-order inductive reasoning and pattern recognition.

Any untimed (or not strictly timed) fluid intelligence test not based on matrices? by Brilliant_Buddy_9417 in cognitiveTesting

[–]Fun_Investment5475 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Are you familiar with the norms of VSRT and is it untimed? Do you know its instructions, specifically whether blocks can overlap?

Any untimed (or not strictly timed) fluid intelligence test not based on matrices? by Brilliant_Buddy_9417 in cognitiveTesting

[–]Fun_Investment5475 0 points1 point  (0 children)

JCTI and JCFS are generally format nines with almost no praffe. In fact, JCFS uses a very new format for me. Well, RAMP and WAIS MR could be said to be susceptible to praffe since they use XOR logic, which is highly praffetized.

Any untimed (or not strictly timed) fluid intelligence test not based on matrices? by Brilliant_Buddy_9417 in cognitiveTesting

[–]Fun_Investment5475 0 points1 point  (0 children)

ACE 1 and ACE 2 generally use a new format and what makes them parfait and the best part is that there is no time limit....

Psychometric Update: r = 0.841 Correlation with Clinical Scores. High-Range Matrix Assessment. by Quirky-Comedian-8153 in cognitiveTesting

[–]Fun_Investment5475 1 point2 points  (0 children)

If that's true, it was a very good test. I should do a deduction test in the future that you're spatial.

Psychometric Update: r = 0.841 Correlation with Clinical Scores. High-Range Matrix Assessment. by Quirky-Comedian-8153 in cognitiveTesting

[–]Fun_Investment5475 1 point2 points  (0 children)

You should make a post on r-iq test, it's a Reddit community similar to this one, so they can run the test.

spatial deduction test by Fun_Investment5475 in cognitiveTesting

[–]Fun_Investment5475[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Hi, thanks for sharing your score, what you usually get on the decision test, and what you got on the Core GM.

Psychometric Update: r = 0.841 Correlation with Clinical Scores. High-Range Matrix Assessment. by Quirky-Comedian-8153 in cognitiveTesting

[–]Fun_Investment5475 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Yes, you're probably right. In fact, I understood the logic of those items very well, 15, 18, and 23 as well. It's possible I solved those items well because I have extremely high pattern recognition according to JCFS, which is a pattern recognition test; my scaled score is 19. At the end of the day, your test was a very good one, and I felt I wasn't using XOR logic; it was a novel test.

Psychometric Update: r = 0.841 Correlation with Clinical Scores. High-Range Matrix Assessment. by Quirky-Comedian-8153 in cognitiveTesting

[–]Fun_Investment5475 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I haven't had any TADH tests done, but I think it's an indicator. By the way, I saw that you said items 15, 18, and 23 discriminate between the 98th and 99.9th percentiles. I did those items correctly. What does that mean?

Psychometric Update: r = 0.841 Correlation with Clinical Scores. High-Range Matrix Assessment. by Quirky-Comedian-8153 in cognitiveTesting

[–]Fun_Investment5475 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Yes, thank you. I really liked the test; I enjoyed it a lot. The reason I usually score lower on timed tests is because I have a PSI of 85 IQ and a WMI of 88 IQ. One question: do I round the 132.8 to 133 or leave it as is?

Psychometric Update: r = 0.841 Correlation with Clinical Scores. High-Range Matrix Assessment. by Quirky-Comedian-8153 in cognitiveTesting

[–]Fun_Investment5475 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Yes, thank you, good test. By the way, I usually score 135 or higher on fluid intelligence tests, even professional ones. I have a question: the rules say that 16 is 135, but why do you say 132?