ImaginalDisc
Penultimate Amazing
- Joined
- Dec 9, 2005
- Messages
- 10,219
I assume you mean 130 and 70, given that some frequently used tests have a sd of 15.
That was a typo. Thanks, I've fixed it.
In any case, there is no requrement that any cut off point for high IQs be tied to a failure to get any coherent answers from people with IQs below, say, 55. No requirement at all. People with IQs above 145 most certainly could be included.
I really am puzzled about where you picked up this strange notion.
Sorry if you missed it, my original point is pages ago. Namely, that people several standard deviations above the norm ought to be removed from the data pool before any statistical analysis is conducted in some cases, and IQ test data is almost certainly one such case because of the relatively small number of questions in most IQ test, and confounding with other abilities, such as education or practice at taking IQ tests, can skew the data and give you too many high values. I'm not sure whether or not this is the case with this evaluation, but it's not uncommon. IQ tests that give what might be called statistically robust data are exhaustive and lengthy. Something like five in a thousand data points in a normally distributed set are expected. If the distribution of the sample differs significantly from this, there's a problem.
There are good reasons to include outliers when systematic errors have been addressed, but claiming that some outliers are too stupid to have an opinion about religion is ridiculous. Religious beliefs don't require sophisticated thinking. Anyone so mentally handicapped as to unable to even understand or articulate any opinion on the subject would be unable to take the test. Their scores wouldn't be low, they'd be nonexistent. It's possible that someone with a specific mental condition might be able to take the test depending on its format, but be autistic or have some kind of aphasia, but those conditions are not severe mental retardation. If you have the mental faculties to take the test, you certainly have the requisite faculties to say something about religion.
Therefore, I can't think of nor have read here any basis for dismissing extremely low scores while retaining high ones.
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