— IQ test methodology
Beta IV: Beta IV (formerly Revised Beta)
Group-administrable nonverbal IQ. Originally developed for WWI-era illiterate Army recruits; modernized for adult populations.
What Beta IV measures
Beta IV is a non-verbal cognitive assessment for ages 16-89, published by Pearson. Like all standardized IQ instruments, scores follow a normal distribution with mean 100 and standard deviation 15 (Wechsler scale), allowing direct percentile interpretation: a score of 115 is the 84th percentile, 130 is the 98th percentile, and so on.
How it works
The test administration depends on its category: minimizes language demands — uses figural, matrix, and spatial reasoning items so that culture and education don't bias results.
Scoring and interpretation
All standardized IQ tests use a normed distribution: the test publisher tested a representative sample of the target population, ranked everyone's raw scores, and assigned percentiles. Your IQ score reflects your percentile within that normed sample — not an absolute measurement.
- IQ 130+ = Highly Gifted / Mensa cutoff (top 2%)
- IQ 120-129 = Superior (top 9%)
- IQ 110-119 = High Average (top 25%)
- IQ 90-109 = Average (middle 50%)
- IQ 80-89 = Low Average (bottom 25%)
- IQ < 70 = Intellectual Disability range (with adaptive functioning assessment)
Strengths and limitations of Beta IV
Strengths: Reduces cultural and linguistic bias. Usable across populations a verbal test couldn't reach.
Limitations: Susceptible to test-taking strategy effects, anxiety, time-of-day, and motivation. Standard error typically ±5 points.
Frequently asked
Who administers Beta IV?
Trained administrators in the relevant setting (school, employer, military, etc.). Some forms can be self-administered for self-knowledge purposes.
Is Beta IV accepted by Mensa?
Mensa accepts a list of approved supervised tests. Check Mensa International's current accepted tests list; many Wechsler and Stanford-Binet results qualify.
How does Beta IV compare to online tests?
Online IQ tests like Core Brain use the same statistical framework (deviation IQ, mean 100 SD 15) and most are calibrated against normed distributions. They are not clinically diagnostic but approximate professionally administered tests reasonably well for healthy adults.
Other non-verbal tests
- Raven's Progressive Matrices
- Cattell Culture Fair III
- Universal Nonverbal Intelligence Test (UNIT-2)
- Naglieri Nonverbal Ability Test
- Comprehensive Test of Nonverbal Intelligence (CTONI-2)
Related reading
Sources: Kaufman, A. S. (2009), IQ Testing 101; Flanagan, D. P. & Harrison, P. L. (2018), Contemporary Intellectual Assessment.
Take a calibrated IQ test now →