Best Mental Ability Books For Competitive Exams

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Justina Ky

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Aug 3, 2024, 4:29:41 PM8/3/24
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Reasoning ability refers to the skills and strategies employed to draw inferences, reach conclusions, arrive at solutions, and make decisions based on evidence. Reasoning ability is diverse and studied in different subjects such as psychology (differential, cognitive), neuroscience, education, genetics, philosophy, and artificial intelligence.

Non-verbal reasoning books teach you how to solve diagrams and pictures. It tests your ability to study visual information and come to conclusions. You will often be asked to study the diagram series and spot the odd diagram or the next one in the sequence.

Often the best books for logical reasoning will also comprise a mathematical reasoning part. This segment is highly crucial to make your preparation for the competitive exams easy as a significant chunk of your aptitude test will have mathematical problems. These problems ask you to apply the concepts and skills to unique problems as efficiently as possible in the shortest time possible. Therefore, it is safe to say that such problems test your speed, mastery, and clarity over your mathematical concepts.

This is a top-rated book in the market, even recommended by teachers. This reasoning book helps you prepare for various competitive exams, especially for insurance and banking-related exams. Verbal reasoning comprises mental ability and logical deduction, while the non-verbal section contains classification, mirror-images, rule-detection, and series, to name a few.

This reasoning book helps make your basics strong by giving you detailed knowledge of logic. Going through this book thoroughly will help you minimize silly mistakes in the exam when you are under pressure.

How to Crack Test of Reasoning is among the perfect reasoning books if you have already completed your basics and want to apply your knowledge to the test. This reasoning book comes with over 2500 MCQ questions and is lucid for easy comprehension. Therefore, if you are preparing for any competitive exam, grab a copy of this reasoning book.

This reasoning book is structured in a beginner to an advanced format. Here, you can go through the basic concepts in the first section. After that, you can advance to the more challenging aspects of the same topics in the next section. This structure is helpful for quick revision right before the exams.

Ans- Many corporate companies have an initial test round to test your verbal reasoning and non-verbal reasoning skills. This helps them evaluate your problem-solving abilities. Therefore, practicing from reasoning books can help you crack the initial tests.

Answer- The first step to improving at GMAT Critical Reasoning is learning to understand the question/argument before looking at the answer choices. You can do this by breaking down every passage and understanding the structure.

Solving mental ability questions can take you far, especially since it enhances problem-solving aptitude which comes in handy in real-life situations. Given below are 25 Mental Ability test Questions and Answers that will help you gauge where you currently stand and subsequently, improve your aptitude. In addition to that, we have curated a list of helpful books that will instantly enhance your mental ability.

This was all about Mental Ability test Questions and Answers Apart from tests and books, you can try out sudokus and solve mental puzzles. For more such informative content, and more test Questions and Answers stay tuned with Leverage Edu!

The IB Junior Intelligence Grade II/Technical exam is for a General Central Service, Group-'C' (Non-Gazetted, Non-Ministerial) recruitment. It makes this exam a highly competitive one that cannot be cracked without the right amount of preparation like other Government exams. Before checking out the best IB JIO Books, candidates must be aware of the official IB Junior Intelligence Officer Syllabus and Exam Pattern to know the subjects to prepare. Although there are numerous options available in the market, we have curated the list of best books for IB Junior Intelligence 2023 exam to help you prepare without any hassle or confusion.

Candidates who have fulfilled the IB Junior Intelligence Officer Eligibility Criteria, must start preparing for Tier-I that consists of an online objective-type exam. To make it easier, we have compiled the list of best section-wise books for IB JIO exam for targeted preparation below.

We hope that you could be completely aware of the list of the best IB Junior Intelligence Officer Books for preparation. Now download the Testbook App to access more study materials, live classes, notes, mocks and previous year papers to crack Intelligence Bureau Executive-level exams in 1st attempt.

A thousand applicants apply every year for various Andhra Pradesh Public Service Commission (APPSC) posts. There are various departments under Group 1, 2, 3 & 4 posts. It is the most competitive exam in Andhra Pradesh. It is conducted every year for new recruitment.

To clear these exams students, need proper guidance and study material. If candidates follow the right path to success, then they can achieve that. The books mentioned below can help students to clear APPSC exams. With a wide variety of options available in the market, it is difficult to choose the right study material. But here are some books for APPSC Group 1, 2, 3 & 4 posts that can help you to cover the whole syllabus.

IS GEORGE W. BUSH stupid? It's a question that occupied a good many minds of all political persuasions during his turbulent eight-year presidency. The strict answer is no. Bush's IQ score is estimated to be above 120, which suggests an intelligence in the top 10 per cent of the population. But this, surely, does not tell the whole story. Even those sympathetic to the former president have acknowledged that as a thinker and decision-maker he is not all there. Even his loyal speechwriter David Frum called him glib, incurious and "as a result ill-informed". The political pundit and former Republican congressman Joe Scarborough accused him of lacking intellectual depth, claiming that compared with other US presidents whose intellect had been questioned, Bush junior was "in a league by himself". Bush himself has described his thinking style as "not very analytical".

How can someone with a high IQ have these kinds of intellectual deficiencies? Put another way, how can a "smart" person act foolishly? Keith Stanovich, professor of human development and applied psychology at the University of Toronto, Canada, has grappled with this apparent incongruity for 15 years. He says it applies to more people than you might think. To Stanovich, however, there is nothing incongruous about it. IQ tests are very good at measuring certain mental faculties, he says, including logic, abstract reasoning, learning ability and working-memory capacity - how much information you can hold in mind.

But the tests fall down when it comes to measuring those abilities crucial to making good judgements in real-life situations. That's because they are unable to assess things such as a person's ability to critically weigh up information, or whether an individual can override the intuitive cognitive biases that can lead us astray.

This is the kind of rational thinking we are compelled to do every day, whether deciding which foods to eat, where to invest money, or how to deal with a difficult client at work. We need to be good at rational thinking to navigate our way around an increasingly complex world. And yet, says Stanovich, IQ tests - still the predominant measure of people's cognitive abilities - do not effectively tap into it. "IQ tests measure an important domain of cognitive functioning and they are moderately good at predicting academic and work success. But they are incomplete. They fall short of the full panoply of skills that would come under the rubric of 'good thinking'." IQ isn't everything

"A high IQ is like height in a basketball player," says David Perkins, who studies thinking and reasoning skills at Harvard Graduate School of Education in Cambridge, Massachusetts. "It is very important, all other things being equal. But all other things aren't equal. There's a lot more to being a good basketball player than being tall, and there's a lot more to being a good thinker than having a high IQ."

IQ tests and their proxies, which are designed to measure a factor known as general intelligence, are used by many businesses and colleges to help select the "best" candidates, and also play a role in schools and universities, in the form of SAT tests in the US and CATs in the UK. "IQ tests determine, to an important degree, the academic and professional careers of millions of people in the US," Stanovich says in his book, What Intelligence Tests Miss (Yale University Press, 2008). He challenges the "lavish attention" society bestows on such tests, which he claims measure only a limited part of cognitive functioning. "IQ tests are overvalued, and I think most psychologists would agree with that," says Jonathan Evans, a cognitive psychologist at the University of Plymouth, UK.

Indeed, IQ scores have long been criticised as poor indicators of an individual's all-round intelligence, as well as for their inability to predict how good a person will be in a particular profession. The palaeontologist Stephen Jay Gould claimed in The Mismeasure of Man in 1981 that general intelligence was simply a mathematical artefact and that its use was unscientific and culturally and socially discriminatory. Howard Gardner at the Harvard Graduate School of Education has been arguing - controversially - for more than 25 years that cognitive capacity is best understood in terms of multiple intelligences, covering mathematical, verbal, visual-spatial, physiological, naturalistic, self-reflective, social and musical aptitudes.

Yet unlike many critics of IQ testing, Stanovich and other researchers into rational thinking are not trying to redefine intelligence, which they are happy to characterise as those mental abilities that can be measured by IQ tests. Rather, they are trying to focus attention on cognitive faculties that go beyond intelligence - what they describe as the essential tools of rational thinking. These, they claim, are just as important as intelligence to judgement and decision-making. "IQ is only part of what it means to be smart," says Evans.

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