Test that tries to find innate intellectual power, and not learned ability.

It is now generally accepted that a minor’s ability in an intelligence test can be affected by it’s environment, background, as well as teaching. 

There is  scepticism about the reliability of i.q. tests, but they are still widely used as a diagnostic tool when children display learning  difficulties.

The French psychologist Alfred Binet (1857–1911) devised the first intelligence test in 1905.

The IQ (from  the German Intelligenz-Quotient), was coined by the German psychologist William Stern in 1912 as a proposed method of scoring early modern children’s  intelligence tests.

It is calculated according to the formula: IQ = MA/CA x 100 in which MA is ‘mental age’ (the age at which an average  child is able to perform given tasks) and CA is ‘chronological age’, hence an average person has an IQ of 100 ± 10.

Although the term “IQ” is still in common use,  the scoring of modern IQ tests such as the Wechsler Adult Intelligence Scale is now based on a projection of the subject’s measured rank on the Gaussian bell  curve with a center value (average IQ) of 100, and a standard deviation of 15, although different tests may have different standard deviations.

Intelligence tests were first used on a  large scale in the USA in 1917 during World War I for two million drafted men, and their subsequent widespread use for education and employment decisions has  provoked protests from minority groups who contend the tests are culturally biased and discriminatory.

IQ scores have been shown to be associated with such factors as morbidity and fatality rate, parental social status, and to a strong degree, parental  IQ. While its hereditary pattern has been inquired for nearly a century, controversy remains as to how much is inheritable, and the mechanisms of inheritance  are still a matter of some argument.

IQ scores are used in many settings: as predictors of educational accomplishment or special needs, by social scientists who study the distribution of IQ scores  in populations and the relationships between IQ score and other variables, and as predictors of job performance and income.

The average IQ scores for many populations have been rising at an average rate of three points per decade since the early 20th century with most of the  growth in the lower half of the IQ range: a phenomenon called the Flynn effect. It is disputed whether these changes in scores reflect real changes in  intellectual abilities, or merely problems with past or present testing methods.