If you click on the link you'll get to a quiz which is pretty darned easy (although I still managed to get two questions wrong). What I find interesting is the breakdown by gender/race.
Strangely, that didn't bother me - I've clearly spent enough time either watching US TV/films or roleplaying in US settings that I have a reasonable grasp of their geography/history :->
There are some traditionally black colleges in the area and the woman who ran the school at which I used to work had a Masters from one of them. Her biggest issue was the misuse of words. It's a fairly common issue with grads from traditionally black schools. It's a different use of language, but it would totally skew this sort of test.
The gender differences.... I couldn't tell you how long a mile is if you paid me. I suck at spacial-relations and I think a lot of women do. Not necessarily because we lack the capability for it (though a certain amount of it can't be learned) but because it's one of those things that is just never expected of us to know. To be really, really simplistic about it -- men are traditionally better with numbers and spatial relations and women are traditionally better with language. It sucks, but no matter what the cause, it still funtions that way.
but the long answer to your question is that there are fairly stable ethnic and gender differences in average IQ, but I don't think this quiz can either elicit or demonstrate them.
I bombed badly. This is because we use metric in physics as the only countries to still use British Imperial Measurements is the U.S.A. and Australia. That and I can barely think where anywhere in the U.S. is, never been and no real intention of going except for Las Vegas (to marry the beloved) and San Francisco (on a pilgrimage to the grave of Joshua Norton) and perhaps Paris, Texas. Other than that maybe I should retry when I have actually got more than a couple of hours of sleep. I mean getting five wrong is a scandal.
94.11%, I missed one -- and really, I know a kilo weighs more than a pound, I just wasn't thinking. I think part of the problem is that so many of the questions are worded like they're trick questions, and I found myself overthinking them.
As for differences in results? Hell, I don't know. The Rat Pack question, though, was weird -- all the fans of the Rat Pack I've known in my life have been male, and that question involves knowing what the Rat Pack even vaguely is before you can pick out the missing item (I have no idea when Frank Sinatra died, so I took a guess and got it right, go me). The estimation questions are also 'male', and I'd like to see how it'd change if they were substituted with 'which is more, a tablespoon or a teaspoon?' Agreed that the questions are US-centric, for what that's worth.
According to a poster in the_ferrett's LJ the percentage changes if you change gender/ethnicity. I'm almost tempted to test that, but have enough mindless time wasting activities to do already.
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Date: 2007-02-04 11:46 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2007-02-04 11:48 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2007-02-04 11:55 am (UTC)I guess the world got sightly smarter in the last 15 minutes...
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Date: 2007-02-04 12:45 pm (UTC)The gender differences.... I couldn't tell you how long a mile is if you paid me. I suck at spacial-relations and I think a lot of women do. Not necessarily because we lack the capability for it (though a certain amount of it can't be learned) but because it's one of those things that is just never expected of us to know. To be really, really simplistic about it -- men are traditionally better with numbers and spatial relations and women are traditionally better with language. It sucks, but no matter what the cause, it still funtions that way.
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Date: 2007-02-04 12:48 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2007-02-04 12:56 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2007-02-04 01:21 pm (UTC)As for differences in results? Hell, I don't know. The Rat Pack question, though, was weird -- all the fans of the Rat Pack I've known in my life have been male, and that question involves knowing what the Rat Pack even vaguely is before you can pick out the missing item (I have no idea when Frank Sinatra died, so I took a guess and got it right, go me). The estimation questions are also 'male', and I'd like to see how it'd change if they were substituted with 'which is more, a tablespoon or a teaspoon?' Agreed that the questions are US-centric, for what that's worth.
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Date: 2007-02-04 01:22 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2007-02-04 01:33 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2007-02-04 03:34 pm (UTC)I'm pretty sure I'm not that smart.
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Date: 2007-02-04 07:44 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2007-02-04 09:36 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2007-02-05 03:08 pm (UTC)I imagine those statistics are skewed given the sort of people who generally respond to meme-quizzies, to boot.