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Everything we know about IQ, in one place

A curated guide to understanding IQ scores, the cognitive domains beneath them, and what the research actually says about intelligence.

IQ is one of the most-discussed and least-understood measurements in psychology. Most online writing falls into one of two camps: the score is destiny, or the score is junk. Both are wrong, in opposite directions.

The articles below are an attempt at the more honest middle. They cover what an IQ score is and isn’t, what each cognitive domain actually measures, and how the underlying research holds up under scrutiny. Each piece is research-backed and source-cited, written for a curious adult with no prior background in psychometrics.

The guide is organized into three themes. Start wherever your question lives.

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41 questions · five cognitive domains.

Understanding the score

Before any individual domain matters, the score itself needs unpacking. What does the number mean? What does it predict? Why does the population average keep rising? These three articles cover the foundations.

The six cognitive domains

An IQ score is a composite. Beneath the single number sit several distinct cognitive abilities, each measured by its own item types and each correlated with different real-world outcomes. These six articles cover what each domain is, what it predicts, and how it’s tested. Each links to a free 10-question mini-test for that domain.

IQ in context

A test score is only useful if you know what to do with it. These pieces cover the soft edges: how IQ compares to emotional intelligence, whether you can train it upward, and what the actual questions look like before you sit down.

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41 questions · five cognitive domains.

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