| Literature DB >> 35324571 |
Abstract
At the level of the 50 U.S. states, an interconnected nexus of well-being variables exists. These variables strongly correlate with estimates of state IQ in interesting ways. However, the state IQ estimates are now more than 16 years old, and the state well-being estimates are over 12 years old. Updated state IQ and well-being estimates are therefore needed. Thus, I first created new state IQ estimates by analyzing scores from both the Program for the International Assessment of Adult Competency (for adults), and the National Assessment of Educational Progress (for fourth and eighth grade children) exams. I also created new global well-being scores by analyzing state variables from the following four well-being subdomains: crime, income, health, and education. When validating the nexus, several interesting correlations existed among the variables. For example, state IQ most strongly predicted FICO credit scores, alcohol consumption (directly), income inequality, and state temperature. Interestingly, state IQ derived here also correlated 0.58 with state IQ estimates from over 100 years ago. Global well-being likewise correlated with many old and new variables in the nexus, including a correlation of 0.80 with IQ. In sum, at the level of the U.S. state, a nexus of important, strongly correlated variables exists. These variables comprise well-being, and state IQ is a central node in this network.Entities:
Keywords: NAEP; PIAAC; aggregate IQ; g nexus; state IQ; well-being
Year: 2022 PMID: 35324571 PMCID: PMC8954344 DOI: 10.3390/jintelligence10010015
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Intell ISSN: 2079-3200
Correlation matrix and principal components analysis for the well-being sub-domains plus state IQ.
| Variable | % Variance in 1st Principal Component | Correlation Matrix | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6 | ||
| 1 Crime | 76% | -- | −0.73 | −0.39 | −0.57 | −0.76 | −0.74 |
| 2 Education | 92% | -- | 0.64 | 0.80 | 0.92 | 0.74 | |
| 3 Health | 84% | -- | 0.87 | 0.84 | 0.57 | ||
| 4 Income | 94% | -- | 0.94 | 0.71 | |||
| 5 Global Well-being 1 | 75% | -- | 0.80 | ||||
| 6 State IQ | -- | -- | |||||
1 Notes. Global well-being resulted from a hierarchical PCA of the four subdomains above it. Notice that crime loads negatively on global well-being. Note also that state IQ was derived separately from the well-being variables.
State ranks and standard scores for IQ and the well-being measures.
| State | IQ | Well-Being | Crime | Education | Health | Income |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Alabama | 47/96.4 | 45/76 | 47/80 | 44/81 | 46/77 | 44/79 |
| Alaska | 29/99.4 | 24/103 | 43/80 | 28/98 | 3/120 | 13/108 |
| Arizona | 37/98.3 | 39/91 | 39/89 | 42/84 | 27/102 | 35/93 |
| Arkansas | 44/97.1 | 48/71 | 49/75 | 47/79 | 49/70 | 46/76 |
| California | 45/97.1 | 17/108 | 37/90 | 29/97 | 4/118 | 8/119 |
| Colorado | 13/101.1 | 9/116 | 40/89 | 12/112 | 1/127 | 4/121 |
| Connecticut | 11/101.2 | 3/122 | 4/122 | 2/128 | 10/112 | 11/113 |
| Delaware | 35/98.7 | 28/100 | 29/96 | 14/109 | 41/89 | 23/103 |
| Florida | 34/98.8 | 36/92 | 38/90 | 34/93 | 31/98 | 37/92 |
| Georgia | 40/98.1 | 34/93 | 36/90 | 33/93 | 32/98 | 34/94 |
| Hawaii | 32/99.2 | 10/115 | 23/101 | 19/106 | 5/117 | 1/126 |
| Idaho | 20/100.5 | 25/103 | 9/117 | 38/88 | 18/107 | 26/101 |
| Illinois | 31/99.4 | 19/106 | 28/97 | 11/114 | 17/107 | 22/103 |
| Indiana | 19/100.6 | 32/94 | 19/104 | 36/91 | 36/91 | 33/95 |
| Iowa | 14/101.1 | 20/106 | 10/116 | 23/101 | 21/106 | 24/101 |
| Kansas | 21/100.5 | 30/97 | 35/90 | 25/100 | 30/100 | 28/100 |
| Kentucky | 33/98.8 | 41/83 | 15/111 | 41/85 | 48/71 | 45/79 |
| Louisiana | 49/95.2 | 46/74 | 50/73 | 45/80 | 43/84 | 48/74 |
| Maine | 17/100.9 | 22/106 | 1/128 | 13/111 | 42/88 | 29/98 |
| Maryland | 25/100 | 8/116 | 27/100 | 5/122 | 14/109 | 3/122 |
| Massachusetts | 2/103.1 | 1/126 | 8/117 | 1/131 | 7/116 | 2/125 |
| Michigan | 26/99.6 | 31/94 | 25/101 | 27/98 | 38/91 | 39/91 |
| Minnesota | 3/102.9 | 5/119 | 12/114 | 9/116 | 6/116 | 9/117 |
| Mississippi | 48/95.8 | 49/71 | 32/92 | 50/74 | 47/73 | 50/66 |
| Missouri | 27/99.5 | 40/89 | 42/81 | 30/97 | 37/91 | 38/92 |
| Montana | 15/101.1 | 27/101 | 33/92 | 16/107 | 16/109 | 32/95 |
| Nebraska | 10/101.2 | 21/106 | 24/101 | 18/106 | 19/107 | 16/107 |
| Nevada | 46/96.6 | 38/91 | 34/91 | 48/79 | 29/100 | 27/101 |
| New Hampshire | 1/103.2 | 4/121 | 2/126 | 6/121 | 20/106 | 7/120 |
| New Jersey | 16/101.0 | 2/124 | 5/121 | 3/128 | 11/112 | 6/121 |
| New Mexico | 50/95.0 | 43/80 | 44/80 | 43/81 | 33/97 | 47/74 |
| New York | 36/98.4 | 13/112 | 16/108 | 7/118 | 15/109 | 17/105 |
| North Carolina | 28/99.5 | 35/93 | 30/96 | 31/95 | 35/94 | 40/90 |
| North Dakota | 5/101.7 | 16/108 | 17/108 | 26/100 | 8/112 | 15/108 |
| Ohio | 24/100.0 | 37/92 | 26/100 | 35/92 | 39/90 | 36/92 |
| Oklahoma | 39/98.2 | 44/79 | 45/80 | 46/80 | 44/83 | 43/83 |
| Oregon | 22/100.3 | 23/104 | 21/103 | 22/101 | 25/104 | 18/105 |
| Pennsylvania | 23/100.2 | 26/102 | 18/106 | 17/107 | 34/96 | 30/97 |
| Rhode Island | 30/99.4 | 12/112 | 7/118 | 10/115 | 28/102 | 14/108 |
| South Carolina | 41/97.8 | 42/83 | 48/77 | 40/86 | 40/89 | 42/87 |
| South Dakota | 18/100.7 | 29/98 | 31/96 | 32/93 | 26/104 | 25/101 |
| Tennessee | 38/98.3 | 47/72 | 46/80 | 39/88 | 45/81 | 41/89 |
| Texas | 42/97.4 | 33/93 | 41/84 | 37/89 | 23/106 | 31/97 |
| Utah | 8/101.5 | 6/118 | 13/114 | 20/103 | 2/124 | 5/121 |
| Vermont | 4/102.2 | 7/117 | 3/124 | 4/126 | 24/105 | 19/105 |
| Virginia | 9/101.2 | 11/114 | 11/116 | 8/116 | 22/106 | 12/112 |
| Washington | 7/101.5 | 14/111 | 22/102 | 15/109 | 12/110 | 10/116 |
| West Virginia | 43/97.2 | 50/71 | 20/103 | 49/77 | 50/54 | 49/71 |
| Wisconsin | 12/101.2 | 18/108 | 14/111 | 21/103 | 13/109 | 21/105 |
| Wyoming | 6/101.7 | 15/110 | 6/120 | 24/100 | 9/112 | 20/105 |
Notes: All variables were converted to M = 100, SD = 15. For state-level IQ, though, the scores were derived first from the standard deviations of the individual PIAAC and NAEP exam administrations.
A well-being nexus of correlations, including IQ, global well-being, and various state-level measures of interest.
| Variable | 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6 | 7 | 8 | 9 | 10 | 11 | 12 | 13 |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1. IQ | -- | ||||||||||||
| 2. Well-being |
| -- | |||||||||||
| 3. Religiosity |
|
| -- | ||||||||||
| 4. Income inequality |
|
|
| -- | |||||||||
| 5. Conservatism |
|
|
| −0.04 | -- | ||||||||
| 6. COVID vaccinated |
|
|
| 0.10 |
| -- | |||||||
| 7. Price of cigarettes | 0.19 |
|
| 0.10 |
|
| -- | ||||||
| 8. Alcohol consumption |
|
|
| −0.16 |
|
|
| -- | |||||
| 9. Biden (%) | 0.18 |
|
| 0.20 |
|
|
|
| -- | ||||
| 10. Minimum wage | 0.13 |
|
| −0.19 |
|
|
|
|
| -- | |||
| 11. Temperature |
|
|
|
| 0.22 | −0.21 |
|
| 0.00 | −0.19 | -- | ||
| 12. Gunowners (%) |
|
|
| −0.16 |
|
|
|
|
|
| 0.06 | -- | |
| 13. FICO credit score |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
| -- |
Note. A correlation of r = 0.24 is significant at p < 0.05, as shown in bold.