Yes, general population data bears it out. Look at WAIS relation to P stuff. https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4209412/ …pic.twitter.com/nl4FBycgBY
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Yes, general population data bears it out. Look at WAIS relation to P stuff. https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4209412/ …pic.twitter.com/nl4FBycgBY
Granted, this assumes linearity and may not handle the tails very well.
Loneliness effects are further out than mere 2 z. 3-4 z they get bad, depending on interests. Confirmed in SMPY.
This is consistent with the Terman results in the other article cited in your replies. I agree Mensa may be partly something else.
Decades ago, a friend of mine called Mensa the "Society for Overintelligent Underachievers".
Yes. I have said the same thing for years. Underachiever club that sits around solving pointless puzzles etc. instead of real-world problems
On the plus side, useful cite to send anyone trying to argue that something can be learned from a Mensa sample: no, utterly unrepresentative
It can be shown empirically too. If one asks Mensans for income etc, the implied r with IQ will be less than what good samples find.
Yes, another self-selected sample for underachievers. :)
I read it years ago.
When Mensa was founded in the 1940s, university attendance was still relatively rare. The organization probably made more sense back then.
Yes, but if one cannot find smart people after the introduction of the Internet and social media, then one probably has issues. :p
Assuming the sample is representative, is it another example of every benefit has a cost?
The surest way to identify a non-genius is when they tout their Mensa membership.
But doubtful Mensa representative I take it.
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