Every IQ test has a ceiling of max 150. the further away you get from 100 the less accurate the test is. That’s just how IQ tests work. They don’t measure your intelligence. They compare it to the average person. Above 131 IQ you are top 2%.
If you get 117 on mensa.no then thats probably what your iq is. Well, first I wouldn't put too much faith into that score since the test is not composed by a professional psychometrician and secondly while this particular test/type of test might give a somewhat accurate score for some, it only reflects their non verbal abilities or matrix reasoning which is only a tiny fraction of what WAIS
an accurate test is a test that is culture fair , doesn't involve high arithmetic problems or random shit that doesn't make any sense , for example tests such as mensa norway , mensa denmark , tri52 etc titan and mega test look nothing like those tests and that just proves my point
I took the Mensa Norway practice test ~1.5 years ago and scored a few points lower than I did when I was officially tested 10 years ago in my early 20s; I didn’t have scratch paper and a pencil, and where I as at the time wasn’t a quiet environment, so I think that’s why my score was slightly lower than my formal one.
Ideally you want as many questions as possible, and your "pass/don't pass" line to be right around the middle. That would give a significantly more accurate exam. In other words, Mensa qualification at 15 of 100 correct difficult questions is much less ideal than a test that requires 150 of 300 correct easy questions.
Fluid intelligence tends to influence a person's openness or intellect. That implies learning, and a persistent exposure to a variety of information, important in actualizing your potential; it catalyzes the ability to create an applicable network of patterns (what IQ measures in verbal).
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is the mensa norway test accurate