Solve IQ Test Problem: Percent Adults Qualifying for MENSA Membership

  • Thread starter Thread starter alandry06
  • Start date Start date
  • Tags Tags
    Statistics
alandry06
Messages
11
Reaction score
0
The problem goes as such;

The scale of scores on an IQ test is approximately Normal with mean 100 and standard deviation 15. The organization MENSA, which calls itself "the high-IQ society," requires an IQ score of 130 or higher for membership. What percent of adults would qualify for membership?


I know I can use the 68-95-99.7 rule, but I am confused at where to begin.
 
Physics news on Phys.org
Wrong section, sorry.
 
alandry06 said:
The problem goes as such;

The scale of scores on an IQ test is approximately Normal with mean 100 and standard deviation 15. The organization MENSA, which calls itself "the high-IQ society," requires an IQ score of 130 or higher for membership. What percent of adults would qualify for membership?


I know I can use the 68-95-99.7 rule, but I am confused at where to begin.
Can you state the the 68-95-99.7 rule?
 
You have to standardize first, using Z=X-\mu/\sigma
 
Lateral said:
You have to standardize first, using Z =
(X-\mu)/\sigma is what you must have meant.
 
Namaste & G'day Postulate: A strongly-knit team wins on average over a less knit one Fundamentals: - Two teams face off with 4 players each - A polo team consists of players that each have assigned to them a measure of their ability (called a "Handicap" - 10 is highest, -2 lowest) I attempted to measure close-knitness of a team in terms of standard deviation (SD) of handicaps of the players. Failure: It turns out that, more often than, a team with a higher SD wins. In my language, that...
Hi all, I've been a roulette player for more than 10 years (although I took time off here and there) and it's only now that I'm trying to understand the physics of the game. Basically my strategy in roulette is to divide the wheel roughly into two halves (let's call them A and B). My theory is that in roulette there will invariably be variance. In other words, if A comes up 5 times in a row, B will be due to come up soon. However I have been proven wrong many times, and I have seen some...

Similar threads

Replies
2
Views
1K
Replies
4
Views
2K
Replies
40
Views
25K
Replies
71
Views
26K
Replies
1
Views
3K
Back
Top