AIMay 7, 2013

A short note on estimating intelligence from user profiles in the context of universal psychometrics: prospects and caveats

arXiv:1305.1655v11 citations
Originality Synthesis-oriented
AI Analysis

This addresses the problem of non-invasive intelligence assessment for researchers and developers in AI and psychology, but it is incremental as it builds on existing personality trait inference methods.

The paper investigates whether intelligence can be measured from user profiles in social networks or games without interactive tests, exploring this for humans, machines, and hybrids in the context of universal psychometrics.

There has been an increasing interest in inferring some personality traits from users and players in social networks and games, respectively. This goes beyond classical sentiment analysis, and also much further than customer profiling. The purpose here is to have a characterisation of users in terms of personality traits, such as openness, conscientiousness, extraversion, agreeableness, and neuroticism. While this is an incipient area of research, we ask the question of whether cognitive abilities, and intelligence in particular, are also measurable from user profiles. However, we pose the question as broadly as possible in terms of subjects, in the context of universal psychometrics, including humans, machines and hybrids. Namely, in this paper we analyse the following question: is it possible to measure the intelligence of humans and (non-human) bots in a social network or a game just from their user profiles, i.e., by observation, without the use of interactive tests, such as IQ tests, the Turing test or other more principled machine intelligence tests?

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