Posted on 12/02/2017 10:55:38 AM PST by mairdie
The researchers, who examined the brains of 199 females and 110 males, found that individuals with better wiring of the anterior insula and the anterior cingulate cortex - two areas of the brain associated with the cognitive processing of task-relevant information - demonstrated better cognitive function.
The university defined intelligence as the 'general mental capability that involves the ability to reason, to think abstractly, and to learn quickly from experiences,' and consulted graph theoretical network analysis methods to draw their conclusions.
'The different topological embedding of these regions into the brain network could make it easier for smarter persons to differentiate between important and irrelevant information which would be advantageous for many cognitive challenges,' Ulrike Basten, the lead researcher for Goethe University study, argued.
The anatomy of an individual's brain also played a role in higher intelligence, which helped increase the capacity of an individual to focus and avoid distraction.
(Excerpt) Read more at dailymail.co.uk ...
My husband had his IQ estimated at over 230
That is quite remarkable. The IQ scale is normalized at one standard deviation per 15 points: 120 is roughly 9% of the population, 130 is 2%, 140 is 0.4%, 150 is 0.04%, 160 is .003%, and 170 is .00015% (about 1 in a 600,000 people).
Anything above 160 is pretty much a crap shoot, and no generally recognized standardized IQ test even tries to measure above 180 (1 in 20 million people).
To have an IQ of 230, that works out to 8.67 standard deviations, or 2.225x10(-16) percent, which is 1 in 449 quadrillion people (1 in 449,483,457,956,756,989 people).
Given that the population of the Earth is roughly 7.4 billion (7,400,000,000) that seems a bit unlikely.
http://www.wolframalpha.com/input/?i=iq+230
Basically, any claim of an IQ above 190 (roughly 1 in a billion people) should be taken with a grain of salt.
Only repeating what he was told. Who knows where the testers got their information back in the 50’s.
They pulled him out of public school and put him into the University of Chicago grammar school. He’s pretty typical of the IBM Research people we worked with. Digs down to China and not very practical. But he is completely supportive of me and there is nothing I’ve accomplished since we married that I could have done without him. I stopped the head of research after a talk on the pursuit of excellence and told him that I gave him what I had to and my hobbies everything. I asked if he could reverse that. Took me to lunch and gave me an international multimedia magazine. Husband came over at night and built a video studio around me, learning how to edit on 1” broadcast machines off the consoles, then teaching me. Eventually he hired in to the project, since he was working on it anyway. My field was computer languages, but people always said that his claim to fame was that he could pick up a new language instantly and immediately write in it in the way it was meant to be used. He’s actually pretty wonderful.
Wow, an IQ of 230?
I bet he’s a lot of fun at parties.
Not really. But he’s sweet, which counts for a lot.
“Some people with high IQs dont have an ounce of common sense.”
That’s me!
I have a Chinese herbal doc. Really good results from his awful-tasting teas!
I agree with learning a new language. I think learning and practicing to play piano would be a hedge against Alzheimer’s as well. Maybe any musical instrument. I was forced, kindly, to learn the piano and violin as a child and teen and I know it was “good” for me. I gave my son a choice :) he went with the trumpet which he plays and loves to this day.
Listening to music changes a person. All sorts of music. Growing up in my family I was exposed to Broadway musicals, classical, opera, Benny Goodman and assorted big bands, a bit of old American folk and hymns. I look back with gratitude and appreciation toward my family. Though I can’t explain how, I believe this musical variety made my brain “smarter”.
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Best hedge against Alzheimers is to consume more saturated fats, and eschew all polyunsaturated fats to allow uptake of chromium and vanadium, which in turn allows cells to utilize insulin completely.
Chronic elevated blood glucose appears to be a factor in many alzheimers cases.
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True, brains lack wires, but they do constantly move electrons along conductive paths.
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Interesting. I’ll look into it. I use real butter, and some olive oil. I don’t eat any processed foods to speak of.
I started taking tumeric/curcumin for arthritis and noticed my memory improved too. Nice side effect.
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Yes, Tumeric is good, but don’t over-do it; it can be very irritating.
The coconut oil trick is becomming very popular because it yields visible improvement in a fairly short time. The blood glucose issues are less well defined.
Computers are no longer wired?
You, apparently, never built a prototype.
Or, do you not consider "printed wiring" to be "wiring"?
I havent read the research but I can add something else that is important as well to the development of a childs mind and that is playing games, whether were talking about card games, board games or even *gasp* some video games.
Ive had to develop my own mind because of my attention, concentration and memory difficulties. Its still a struggle and I become agitated when I cant grasp concepts that come so easily to some. So I guess I have become sort of an informal expert in brain development all for the purpose of overcoming my diffulties in order to cope with the challenges of life.
What should turn your blood cold is that the people you mention, particularly Pelosi and Hillary actually have minds operating at a high cognitive level. They know exactly how to manipulate their base almost into a killing frenzy. Youre average lib is fairly addled in the abstraction and logic department but their leaders are manipulative geniuses.
I really think you’re wrong about P and H. I think they’ve long passed the point where they’re improving cognitive function. At this point, I’d bet that they’re working on some level of instinct and that they’re being directed by staff, as Jarrett directed Obama. P and H still have the egos, so the manipulative skills are in the people working for them rather than in themselves.
> I was forced... to learn the piano... as a child.
I was too and hated it so as soon as possible (a few years) I quit. Now, some 50 years and change later I own MIDI keyboards and edit together multiple takes to get a tune that sounds OK from start to finish. It also proves the truism that the more one does something the easier it becomes. It’s nothing spectacular but I have fun doing it and a lot of time I think I’m spending 40 minutes it turns out to really be four hours.
> Listening to music changes a person. All sorts of music. Growing up in my family I was exposed to... I look back with gratitude and appreciation toward my family. Though I cant explain how, I believe this musical variety made my brain smarter.
Likewise. My dad was a truck-driver and he brought home tons of records he got as gifts from a distributor on his route. I’m sure this reflects my current musical tastes to some degree although many of my favorite musical genres didn’t even exist in the 50’s...
Vocaloid, Classical, Epic! / Orchestral, ProgRock, FolkRock,
Classic Rock, Opera Metal / Orchestral Metal, EDM / Dubstep / Chillstep, Experimental Electronic / My own E.E., Polka, Classical Indian, Hot Jazz from the early 1900s to about 1940 (Google Radio Dismuke Really good stuff), Big Band from the 30s and 40s.
I wonder what the above says about me ?
The people who remain unable to differentiate between important and insignificant information will still be able to get well paying media jobs.
Oh well I guess its better than the last study on the length of rat genitalia.
Wonderful. When you say six week old illness, do you mean she was older and had an illness for 6 weeks, or she sustained an illness at her 6 weeks age of life? Either way, how wonderful that shes doing so well.
My son with special needs has great gaps in his functioning and has surprised us more than once with feats of progress. Each child is such a miracle.
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