Various measures have been thought to assess fluid intelligence.
Raven's Progressive Matrices The
Raven's Progressive Matrices (RPM) is one of the most commonly used measures of fluid ability. It is a non-verbal multiple-choice test. Participants have to complete a series of drawings by identifying relevant features based on the spatial organization of an array of objects and choosing one object that matches one or more of the identified features. This task assesses the ability to consider one or more relationships between mental representations or
relational reasoning. Propositional analogies and semantic decision tasks are also used to assess relational reasoning.
Woodcock–Johnson Tests of Cognitive Abilities, Third Edition In the
Woodcock–Johnson Tests of Cognitive Abilities, Third Edition (WJ-III),
gf is assessed by two tests: Concept Formation and Analysis Synthesis. Concept Formation tasks require the individual to use categorical thinking; Analysis Synthesis tasks require general sequential reasoning.
Concept Formation Individuals have to apply concepts by inferring the underlying "rules" for solving visual puzzles that are presented with increasing levels of difficulty. As the level of difficulty increases, individuals have to identify a key difference (or the "rule") for solving puzzles involving one-to-one comparisons. For more difficult items, individuals need to understand the concept of "and" (e.g., a solution must have some of this and some of that) and the concept of "or" (e.g., to be inside a box, the item must be either this or that). The most difficult items require fluid transformations and
cognitive shifting between the various types of concept puzzles that the examinee had worked with previously. is used to have an overall measure in cognitive ability with five primary indexing scores. In the WISC-IV, the Perceptual Reasoning Index contains two subtests that assess
gf: Matrix Reasoning, which involves induction and deduction, and Picture Concepts, which involves induction.
Picture Concepts In the Picture Concepts task, children are presented with a series of pictures on two or three rows and asked which pictures (one from each row) belong together based on some common characteristic. This task assesses the child's ability to discover the underlying characteristic (e.g., rule, concept, trend, class membership) that governs a set of materials. Fe et al. (2022) show that fluid intelligence measured in childhood predicts labor market earnings.
Factors related to measuring intelligence Some authors have suggested that unless an individual is truly interested in a problem presented on an IQ test, the cognitive work required to solve the problem may not be performed owing to a lack of interest. These authors have contended that a low score on tests that are intended to measure fluid intelligence may reflect more of a lack of interest in the tasks than an inability to complete the tasks successfully. == Development across life span ==