measuring the IQ of different countries with a single test in impossible. no single test has been invented that can transcend cultural values and language barriers. If someone can score higher on an IQ test with practice, its not really a measure of IQ
Lemme guessOP would have had a 1600 on his SAT if the time limit wasn't so short.
>>537206226B
>>537206427nobody cares nigger
>>537206226while we're on the subject, the new Captcha preferring shape similarity over size similarity is incorrect and deceptive.
>>537206226That's why real IQ tests aren't just one test, dumbass.
Jackie Chan
>>537206427>>537206692I always hated this shit, it's too subjective unless you're a midwit. B preserves symmetry, but A or F preserves the property of no two vectors of the same color sharing an orientation. So do you stare at it longer trying to differentiate A from F? Or do you just assume that they probably wanted B. Hell, I'd argue the correct answer isn't even here, it should be the same as the center square, such that the sum of all vectors of the same color is -1,-1.
>>537206427>>537206692niggers
>>537206226I usually Score in the 140s in the US Tests posted Here and I Sure af am not culturally American
>>537206226you say that... but that is because you are not listening to the answer to that test...It doesn’t just “look like” B. It SCREAMS B.Three striped. Three black. Two white... and one missing. So the missing one is white. Already. Before you even touch the rotation. Before you even start pretending this is hard.Every row has one of each colour.Every column has one of each colour.White, striped, black.Then black, white, striped.Then striped, black, and what’s missing?White.The colour pattern shifts one space to the right every row. It shifts one space down every column. That alone gives you white.But it’s not just the colour. That’s the part you people keep missing.Left to right, the shape rotates ninety degrees clockwise.Right to left, counter-clockwise.Top to bottom, clockwise.Bottom to top, counter-clockwise.So the missing piece has to rotate from the black one beside it, and from the striped one above it, and both of those roads lead to the same place. Same angle. Same direction. Same stupid obvious answer.Then the diagonals do it too.Top-left to bottom-right? It flips each time.Top-right to bottom-left? It stays the same. Same orientation. Same rule. The colours cycle underneath it like they’re being dragged through a machine.So you’ve got the rows saying B.You’ve got the columns saying B.You’ve got the colours saying B.You’ve got the rotations saying B.You’ve got both diagonals standing there with their hands on your shoulders, screaming B directly into your skull.There are, (hyperbole), an infinite number of ways for this thing to tell you the answer is B, and it picked all of them.So no, this is not a language barrier. It is not cultural. It is not ambiguous.You are staring at a pattern simple enough for a corpse to follow, and somehow you’re still asking where the sound is coming from.It’s coming from B.
its f dumb niggers
>>537207558>It doesn’t just “look like” B. It SCREAMS B.>its not x its yhello chatgpt you are stupid
>>537207226Low iq exposed
>>537207226these test are for failure, having high IQ is not really definitive as you can prepare for these teststhe issue is when someone has the opportunity to prepare and still falls below 100
>>537207673Yeah, but ChatGPT, or Claude, for that matter is just a modern Grammarly, so you don’t spell stuff badly on the internet. It doesn’t change the underlying form of my argument. I would just rather fingerprinting of my talking style be traced back to ChatGPT instead of me,. but thank you for the training data.
>>537206226F and you're all idiots.You can, indeed, learn to take the test. But even then it only gives you some certain leg up. If it's not real and you end up in a Physics program, you won't be able to keep up.
>>537206226It's D.We need more diversity in the exercise.
>>537206226what is the problem to be solved here?
>>537206226it's called Pantone
>>537207226A is not the answer because it violates the rule that vectors in the same column or in the same row must not have the same direction. F violates this rule: if you look at a row or at a column, the next vector has a direction perpendicular to his previous, but F would be parallel to his previous.
>>537193452B is the midwit trap. It's either A or F
B.Colour shift is obvious.The coloured semicircular nub can be imagined as the end of an arrow and this arrow rotates clockwise between the four corners of the box from left to right.So yea this one is less bullshitty but I've definitely encountered bullshit ones like >>537207226 says
>>537207558I think A makes a prettier pattern.
>>537206226It's FThe color of the semicircle is obviously white since the other ones are already present, so that leaves A, B, and F. How do you know which way the white one is supposed to point? Simple. Every row has two of these vectors pointing down and one pointing up, this pattern is unbroken. In the last row, the middle vector is already pointing up, therefore it follows that the other two must point downwards. Out of the three options I narrowed it down to, F is the only White vector that also points downwards thus making the general row pattern of 2 pointing down and one pointing up still work.
>>537208856Actually F is correct, you have to look a little broader. In every row, only one vector points up while the others point down. With the completed vectors we can infer a pattern across the board being that each color vector points up only once while pointing downwards twice, whether left or right. White has already pointed up and it has pointed down once to the left, therefore the only orientation that completes the general pattern is F, because it points down and to the right, which is the only part of the pattern missing in the row and also across all the white vectors on the board as a whole.
Your culture is just low IQalso there's not real reason it should be B.Why well if we encode each difference as a different thing (I presume we can agree that things can be different) then we can treat them as numbers, for simplicity I'll use quaternary encoding and because rescaling making the initial choice of scaling is meaningless so without loss of generality we'll organize it as follow using the cantor pairing function:11,22,23,33,31,32,42,43,?Obviously the next number is 4,345,777,777 via the fundamental law of algebra. But given the choices A or D is a fair guess but then again so is any other.>TL;DRGiven any finite sequence of numbers, predicting the next number without an explicit governing rule isn't actually a test of deductive logic; it’s a test of whether your unstated assumptions align with the test author's unstated assumptions.BUT that doesn't mean OP isn't a retarded dumbass, because instead of saying it's an ill-posed inverse problem he went onto some woke tranny shit about ethnicity and muh culture and muh heckin language (literally failed the IQ test in his own OP lmao).
>>537206825>25 years of tests
>>537210365>I think A makes a prettier pattern.>>537210639
>>537209652Your completely right and frankly if we're using something like measuring the Kolmogorov complexity of the rules to find the ultimate solution A is very reasonable.I like the way you think and I'd bang the fuck out of that A on an IQ test.
>>537207226Retarded nigger cattle, it's a simple fucking rotation 90 degrees + color swap. It's that fucking simple pattern recognition. How the fuck did you grasp at these invisible straws in your post
>>537207226>B preserves symmetry, but A or F preserves the property of no two vectors of the same color sharing an orientation. So do you stare at it longer trying to differentiate A from F? Or do you just assume that they probably wanted B.My thoughts exactly when I was looking at it
>>537213949>no two vectors of the same color sharing an orientationThis is an IQ test, not an OCD test though.Rotation is preserved both across columns and rows, order of colors too. Simple as.
>>537207189Glad to see another old fag.