> Obviously 100 is calibrated to western populations.
How could you calibrate a cultrually-specific test like most IQ tests are by comparing with another culture?
I'm also pretty sure that people don't use the same tests across "the West", so that seems dubious to begin with.
> I believe IQ has also risen steadily with time in the west. It might have risen an entire standard deviation. It's called Flynn's effect, 3 points per decade.
That is more easily studied, as you can use the same test across generations and notice trends.
How could you calibrate a cultrually-specific test like most IQ tests are by comparing with another culture?
I'm also pretty sure that people don't use the same tests across "the West", so that seems dubious to begin with.
> I believe IQ has also risen steadily with time in the west. It might have risen an entire standard deviation. It's called Flynn's effect, 3 points per decade.
That is more easily studied, as you can use the same test across generations and notice trends.