adversarial wrote:
... there are three separate tests - Abstract Reasoning, Numerical Reasoning and Verbal Reasoning...
I think if you use those tests simply as a relative measure of weaknesses and strengths, they are useful. I took the one you mentioned, and the results correlated well with what I know from getting a dx and also from my experiences of life. That is to say, my powers of abstract reasoning are very poor compared to my numerical and verbal ones. That is common in people with AS, so I've read.
I wish I'd known about this when I left school and went to uni at 18, because it would have meant I could have chosen a course that required the numerical and verbal skills, rather than the abstract ones. I suppose that's a failing in the UK education system: that the exams you take up to the age of 18 generally only require you to mess around with numbers and regurgitate facts. Perhaps taking a full IQ test at 16 would better prepare certain kids for further education, or work. But things might have changed, it's a while since I was at school.