You scored better than 88.2% of the population
Your scores across 4 categories of cognitive abilities.
Your cognitive abilities are significantly above average. You are among the top 16% of the population by IQ. You excel in analytical thinking and solving complex problems.
Where you fall on the IQ scale.
Detailed analysis of the "High" type.
People with high IQ (115–129) make up approximately 14% of the population. They are capable of effectively solving complex problems and have an above-average ability to learn new skills. They usually achieve excellent results in education.
Strong analytical thinking, ability to learn quickly, good adaptability, effective problem-solving.
Sometimes overestimating own abilities, tendency to procrastinate (when a task is "too easy"), difficulty with motivation on routine tasks.
Breakdown of individual cognitive abilities.
Ability to recognize patterns in number sequences and predict the next elements.
You excel at recognizing mathematical patterns and number sequences. You have a natural ability to work with numbers and uncover hidden patterns in data.
Ability to understand relationships between concepts, analogies, and abstract language concepts.
Your verbal reasoning is at a good level. Reading and working with language will help you develop this ability further.
Ability to deduce, analyze arguments, and solve logical problems.
Logical reasoning is your strong suit. You can effectively analyze problems, deduce conclusions, and find solutions to complex tasks.
Ability to recognize visual patterns and spatial relationships — a key indicator of fluid intelligence.
Your ability to recognize visual patterns is at a good level. Practicing spatial reasoning will help you develop it further.
Your strongest area and tips for improvement.
Logical Reasoning (9/10)
Logical reasoning is your strong suit. You can effectively analyze problems, deduce conclusions, and find solutions to complex tasks.
Matrix Reasoning (5/10)
Fields that match your cognitive profile.
The IQ test measures only certain aspects of intelligence. For complete career recommendations, also consider the RIASEC test and the 16 Types test.
Two fundamental types of cognitive abilities.
Knowledge, vocabulary, learned skills. Grows with age and experience. Measured by the NUM, VER, and LOG categories.
Ability to solve new problems without prior knowledge. Peaks around age 25. Measured by the MAT category.
This test is for self-discovery purposes and does not replace professional psychological assessment.