— IQ reference guide
What separates a genius from a high-IQ person?
Why IQ is necessary but insufficient for genius-level achievement.
This guide covers the published research, methodological considerations, and practical implications of the topic. It is intended as a reference for anyone seeking a grounded, evidence-based understanding rather than the popular-media version.
What the research actually shows
→Pause. Find out YOUR IQ before you keep reading.The published literature on this question spans clinical psychometrics, behavioral genetics, education research, and increasingly molecular genetics. Strong findings include: (1) substantial heritability of IQ in adulthood (~0.7-0.8 in twin studies); (2) the Flynn effect of rising measured IQ over the 20th century; (3) IQ's status as the single best general-purpose predictor of academic and complex-job performance; (4) the limited evidence for trainable IQ improvements beyond schooling and early-life nutrition.
The mechanisms
→Curious how YOU score? 20-min calibrated test.The biological substrate of IQ involves brain volume (modest correlation ~0.3), white matter integrity (DTI metrics correlate ~0.2-0.4), neural efficiency (lower energy consumption on cognitive tasks in higher-IQ subjects), and gene expression patterns identified through GWAS. The behavioral substrate involves working memory capacity, processing speed, and the ability to inhibit irrelevant information.
What this means in practice
→The numbers above? Find out where YOU land.For an individual, the practical implications depend on context: educators care about predicting school achievement; clinicians care about diagnostic categorization; employers care about job-performance prediction; researchers care about construct validity. Each use case interacts with IQ data differently, and the same score can be appropriately weighted differently across these contexts.
Common misconceptions
→Knowing about IQ ≠ knowing yours. Take the test.- IQ is not destiny. Heritability estimates apply to populations, not individuals. A high-IQ child raised in deprivation can score below a low-IQ child raised with rich environmental support.
- IQ is not fixed at birth. Early-life nutrition, schooling, and stimulation all shift measured IQ within meaningful ranges.
- A single IQ score has substantial measurement error. Standard error is typically ±5 points on WAIS; a "true" IQ score is best understood as a range, not a point.
- IQ measures only specific cognitive abilities. Creativity, wisdom, social cognition, and practical street-smarts are partially distinct from IQ — though usually correlated.
Practical implications
→Stop reading. Start testing →For most people, the most useful single fact about IQ is that it sets a soft ceiling on rate of acquisition for cognitively-demanding skills — but it does not determine ultimate achievement. Conscientiousness, deliberate practice, sustained focus, mentorship, and circumstance dominate the variance in real-world outcomes once you're past the threshold of IQ ~115. The 130+ tier opens additional doors but does not close any.
Frequently asked
→Pause. Find out YOUR IQ before you keep reading.What separates a genius from a high-IQ person?
Why IQ is necessary but insufficient for genius-level achievement.
Is this based on real research?
Yes — the content draws on peer-reviewed cognitive psychology, psychometric, and behavioral genetics research. References include works by Carroll, Deary, Mackintosh, Plomin, and the broader CHC-theory tradition.
How can I use this information?
For self-understanding: read your own IQ score in light of the broader literature, not in isolation. For interpreting others: avoid using single IQ scores to make consequential decisions about people.
Related guides
→Curious how YOU score? 20-min calibrated test.- How to improve your IQ (and what actually works)
- IQ and career success: how much does it matter?
- IQ and income: the correlation, explained
- IQ and happiness: is being smarter actually better?
- IQ and creativity: the threshold effect
- IQ vs EQ: comparing intelligence and emotional intelligence
- IQ and genetics: what twin studies actually show
- IQ and nutrition: what affects cognitive development
Sources: Deary, I. J. (2001), Intelligence: A Very Short Introduction; Mackintosh, N. J. (2011), IQ and Human Intelligence; Plomin, R. (2018), Blueprint: How DNA Makes Us Who We Are.
Find your own IQ →