A Fascinating Sign Of High IQ
This sign indicates stronger
reasoning and better analytical and conceptual thinking.
Being a ‘night owl’ is a sign
of high IQ, research finds.
Night owls prefer to stay up
late at night and rise later in the morning.
This sleep pattern is linked
to stronger reasoning and better analytical and conceptual thinking.
Despite higher intelligence,
night owls tend to get slightly worse grades in school.
This may be because the school
day starts too early for them.
Morning types who rise early,
also known as ‘larks’, tend to do around 8% better in school.
Later in life, though, the
higher intelligence of night owls tends to shine through.
Once in the world of work,
night owls tend to do better because of their higher intelligence.
Higher inductive reasoning
abilities, in particular, are linked to more prestigious jobs and higher
incomes.
Around one-third of the
population are night owls, with one-quarter preferring to rise early.
The remainder fall somewhere
in between, being neither early risers nor late sleepers.
The conclusions come from a
study of 887 adolescents in Spain.
All were given tests of
intelligence and this was compared to their performance in school and sleep
habits.
The results showed that night
owls had higher IQs but did worse in school.
This
could be partly explained by night owls being nonconformists, the authors
write:
“Evening adolescents tend to
act out in an independent and nonconforming manner and resist following
traditional standards (perhaps early morning schedules), also they tend to be
creative, something that probably is not promoted at school.”
Commenting
on the study, Professor Jim Horne, of Loughborough University, said:
“Evening types tend to be the
more extrovert creative types, the poets, artists and inventors, while the
morning types are the deducers, as often seen with civil servants and
accountants. We have looked at morning and evening types and we found that
personalities tended to be different. Evening types were more social, more
people-oriented. They will probably be good at cryptic crosswords, while
morning types go for the more logical ones.”
The study was published in the
journal Personality and Individual Differences (Díaz-Morales & Escribano,
2013).
SOURCE: PSYBLOG
Comments
Post a Comment