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r/IntelligenceTesting is a subreddit with 4k members. Its distinguishing qualities are that the community is is new, and medium in size.
This community serves as a hub for IQ/Intelligence discussion, IQ testing, and human intelligence research. While intelligence is the main focus, psychology, neuroscience, and the brain are all acceptable and related topics here. The subreddit is co-moderated by intelligence/IQ researchers, psychologists, & the Riot IQ team.
Popular Topics in r/IntelligenceTesting
#1
Intelligence/IQ
: "The World's Best Online Intelligence Test (2025) w/ Dr. Russell T. Warne."
59 posts
#2
Article/Paper/Study
: "Higher cognitive ability linked to weaker moral foundations in UK adults"
38 posts
#3
Article
: "Lessons about intelligence from a 45-year study of super-smart children"
34 posts
#4
Discussion
: "Human Intelligence Software Testing: Proof AI Can’t Replace Critical Thinkers"
17 posts
#5
Question
: "Why is vocabulary such a strong predictor of overall IQ when it seems to just measure learned knowledge?"
16 posts
#6
IQ Research
: "Why schooling does not enhance intelligence: Absence of transfer effect"
10 posts
#7
Neuroscience
: "Optimizing Brain Health + Cognitive Function: Better Memory, Focus, and Executive Control through the Lens of Neuroscience"
4 posts
#8
Psychology
: "Incredible A+ lecture on individual differences. Individual differences. In psychology, "individual differences" refer to the unique variations and similarities among people in psychological aspects like intelligence, personality, interests, and aptitudes."
3 posts
#9
IQ Testing
: "What is the RIOT IQ Test? - Dr. Russell T. Warne"
3 posts
#10
What's the answer?
: "Fun Figure Weight Item (took me 2 min)"
2 posts
Member Growth in r/IntelligenceTesting
Yearly
+744 members(22.1%)