Monday, February 8, 2010

A Quiz like an IQ test

Hi, it is Dr. NISHIO Hirokazu. I enjoyed an IQ test by Mensa. And found such a non-verbal quiz is good for publishing to the world. I just made another quiz. Please try it!


It is published under Creative Commons BY 3.0 License.

For your information: my IQ was 138.






Making quiz is fun! Here is another one!






And another one!

8 comments:

Real Vision said...

what is the answer of first quiz

Real Vision said...

I think it is F

appreciate your earliest response

Unknown said...

For second quiz: C
For first quiz : C or F but i'm not sure. I think there are two series.

Unknown said...

....what are the solutions?

Unknown said...
This comment has been removed by the author.
Unknown said...

I had an iq of 145 in the same test that you took and I couldn't yet answer your puzzles even after one hourof trying.. it dosent seem that you did put an effort into making them that even jappannes people with 160 iq would naver solve this rubish.

Dario de Judicibus said...

The answer of the first quiz is B.

The technique is the following: you take a pattern and duplicate it. Half clone goes leftward, half clone goes rightward. Then you handle overlap of squares. If two squares overlap, you put one square up and remove the other. You continue until you have no overlaps.

So, first pattern is just a square.
You split the square and you get the second pattern. No overlaps.
You split the previous two squares and you get four squares, two overlapping in the middle. So you place a square on the upper row and remove the one on the lower row. You get the third pattern made of three squares.
Now, if you split each square of the previous pattern, you get six squares with no overlaps, two on the upper row, four on the lower row.

Now, you split each square to get 12 squares, but you have a lot of overlaps now. On the upper row you have four squares, two overlapping in the middle. In the lower row you have eight squares, three overlaps in the middle. Now, if you take each overlap and convert to a square up, no square below, you obtain three rows. At the top there is one square, in the middle four squares, with two overlaps on the extremes, at the bottom two squares. You convert the two overlaps again and you obtain pattern B.

Unknown said...

yea these patterns seem stream of conscious. I think it's a mind readers test, not IQ.