The replies to my query suggest a bit of concern that I’m be placing too much value on IQ tests, which to be honest is not quite true. I’ve never actually taken a formal IQ test and don’t actually know my IQ score. It’s really not a big concern to me, though I do believe I’m smarter than average, but then again, most people think that too.
However, to answer your question,it’s just my personality—I like to optimize stuff. It doesn’t matter what it is, if I recognize that there’s a slightly more efficient way to do something, I want to learn it and do it better. It can be as simple as someone throwing a crumbled paper into a recycling bin from a few feet away, if I notice someone is able to do that slightly more efficiently than the way I’m doing it and with better results, then I get really curious and determined to figure out how to optimize my own shots.
So, along that same thread, I noticed inefficiencies in my IQ test taking skills (as I outlined in my original question), which prompted me to query you guys for any tips for improvement.
And in response to shminux and Ilya’s concerns, this personality trait of mine is actually quite healthy and a valued asset, it’s the reason why I did well academically and am doing well in my career, so nothing to worry about!
So, along that same thread, I noticed inefficiencies in my IQ test taking skills (as I outlined in my original question), which prompted me to query you guys for any tips for improvement.
… but a key point of my post is that context-free abstract pattern recognition ability is innate and can’t be learned :-). You can learn how to answer standard Raven’s matrices type questions, by learning patterns used to construct the items, but the skills built aren’t transferable – if given a different kind of test of context-free abstract pattern recognition ability, you would do no better than you would now. It is possible to improve a great deal as a mathematical thinker, but trying to build this sort of skill is not the way to do it.
“Context-free abstract pattern recognition” can be partially resolved into more legible subcomponents, some of which can be learned, and some of which can’t.
So working memory is one such component, and is often theorized as a big pathway for (intuitively defined) general human intelligence. It doesn’t look you can train working memory in a way that generalizes to increased performance on all tasks that involve working memory (although there’s some controversy about this). And as with other traits, increased performance on formal measurements of working memory might not translate to the real-world outcomes associated with higher untrained working memory.
At the same time, it seems that the universe must come packaged with a distribution over patterns, and so learning a few common patterns might transfer fairly well. The Raven pattern is XOR, a basic boolean function. The continued fraction is self-similarity, which is an interesting pattern (meta-pattern?), because while people already recognize trivial self-similarity (invariance, repetition), it look like people can be successfully taught to look for more complicated recurrences in math and CS classes.
I appreciate your response, but I think you’re forgetting my original question.
I got the answer in under 2 minutes (didn’t time it exactly). However, when I first identified my answer candidate (answer 2), it was probably about two thirds of the way in. I got the correct answer by going across at first, but then spent additional time double checking my work using columns, and then double checking my answer before “committing”.
I got the answer correctly and in under 2 minutes. I saw the pattern relatively effortlessly, but was only inquiring as to how to optimize the speed by fixing my “hesitation” to commit to the answer until I’ve double-checked it and ruled out any bait answers as well.
Not buying anything, just trying to satisfy my desire to optimize any skill I have (Raven’s matrices, crumbled paper basketball, driving, how to hold a pen, or any other skill).
See my previous answers to JonahSinick for more details.
What are your goals?
The replies to my query suggest a bit of concern that I’m be placing too much value on IQ tests, which to be honest is not quite true. I’ve never actually taken a formal IQ test and don’t actually know my IQ score. It’s really not a big concern to me, though I do believe I’m smarter than average, but then again, most people think that too.
However, to answer your question,it’s just my personality—I like to optimize stuff. It doesn’t matter what it is, if I recognize that there’s a slightly more efficient way to do something, I want to learn it and do it better. It can be as simple as someone throwing a crumbled paper into a recycling bin from a few feet away, if I notice someone is able to do that slightly more efficiently than the way I’m doing it and with better results, then I get really curious and determined to figure out how to optimize my own shots.
So, along that same thread, I noticed inefficiencies in my IQ test taking skills (as I outlined in my original question), which prompted me to query you guys for any tips for improvement.
And in response to shminux and Ilya’s concerns, this personality trait of mine is actually quite healthy and a valued asset, it’s the reason why I did well academically and am doing well in my career, so nothing to worry about!
… but a key point of my post is that context-free abstract pattern recognition ability is innate and can’t be learned :-). You can learn how to answer standard Raven’s matrices type questions, by learning patterns used to construct the items, but the skills built aren’t transferable – if given a different kind of test of context-free abstract pattern recognition ability, you would do no better than you would now. It is possible to improve a great deal as a mathematical thinker, but trying to build this sort of skill is not the way to do it.
“Context-free abstract pattern recognition” can be partially resolved into more legible subcomponents, some of which can be learned, and some of which can’t.
So working memory is one such component, and is often theorized as a big pathway for (intuitively defined) general human intelligence. It doesn’t look you can train working memory in a way that generalizes to increased performance on all tasks that involve working memory (although there’s some controversy about this). And as with other traits, increased performance on formal measurements of working memory might not translate to the real-world outcomes associated with higher untrained working memory.
At the same time, it seems that the universe must come packaged with a distribution over patterns, and so learning a few common patterns might transfer fairly well. The Raven pattern is XOR, a basic boolean function. The continued fraction is self-similarity, which is an interesting pattern (meta-pattern?), because while people already recognize trivial self-similarity (invariance, repetition), it look like people can be successfully taught to look for more complicated recurrences in math and CS classes.
I appreciate your response, but I think you’re forgetting my original question.
I got the answer correctly and in under 2 minutes. I saw the pattern relatively effortlessly, but was only inquiring as to how to optimize the speed by fixing my “hesitation” to commit to the answer until I’ve double-checked it and ruled out any bait answers as well.
What are you trying to buy yourself by getting better at Raven’s matrices?
Not buying anything, just trying to satisfy my desire to optimize any skill I have (Raven’s matrices, crumbled paper basketball, driving, how to hold a pen, or any other skill).
See my previous answers to JonahSinick for more details.