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The psychology and biology of gifted children and highly

intelligent people
Much has been written about gifted and high IQ people and to a large extent, the focus has
been on their cognition, for obvious reasons. I have a gifted son and as many parents of
gifted children can attest, these kids can be quite challenging for any parent: from daily
chores, such as buckling up the kiddo in a car seat to the point when he or she fails in
conventional schools.
While cognitive psychology has been a passion of mine since my early years at university,
there comes a point when you can’t explain giftedness in cognitive terms anymore. For
example, when your kid prefers to cry for an hour over some simple piece of homework he
could easily do in a matter of a few minutes and threatens you to run away from home. Such
behavior would leave any parent just puzzled and perplexed.

Here are some traits gifted kids typically display, that have little to do with cognition:

 look younger than their age/have neotenous traits


 look more “unisex”, i.e. they don’t accentuate their gender
 start sex later than their peers
 have a highly developed sense of justice
 might be clumsy and/or ADHD sufferers
 tend to be socially awkward and at least a bit autistic;
 tend to suffer from social anxiety
 are likely into “alternative reality” stuff like fantasy, sci-fi, comics, etc.
 are playful and many of them really heavily into computer gaming
 might be quite lazy and reluctant to do work when they don’t see any point
 as a consequence might show signs of OCD (oppositional defiant disorder)
 picky eaters
 highly sensitive (HSPs)
 external motivation (like grades at school or money) is much less important than internal motivation
(their passions)

In order to make sense of these diverse behaviors and traits, I delved into personality psychology.
The one personality trait that correlates with high IQ is “Openness to experience”, which in turn
correlates with the (controversial) trait N (iNtuitive) in Myers-Briggs, first described by the Swiss
psychologist Carl Gustav Jung.
Giftedness and trait N are highly correlated, as you can see from the following statistics:
From Myers-Briggs studies some of the above traits can be accounted for: Ns tend to be very
creative (cognitive fluidity) and idealistic. It is also known that the introverted intuitives often suffer
from mental problems such as social anxiety and ASD.

However, I still couldn’t account for half of the traits on the above list, so I turned to evolutionary
biology. r/K selection seems to explain a lot: highly intelligent people have faster brain growth in
infancy but grow more slowly in general. My two boys (both IN types) are both quite short for their
age and their skeleton is almost two years behind the average.

What in our biology could make people grow more slowly? The answer is probably buried deep in
our past: hunter-gatherers grew up more slowly than later farmers and herders who had more
caloric intake at their disposal. They were highly egalitarian as they couldn’t accumulate wealth and
that also made them highly defiant when facing hierarchical power structures (European colonialists
never really could “domesticate” hunter-gatherers).
One by one those giftedness traits began to make sense: picking eating and being highly sensitive
were probably more advantageous out in the wilderness than in a farming village. Hunter-gatherers
(Ns in Myers-Briggs) are also more monogamous than herders (SP in Myers-Briggs), who have the
earliest onset of puberty and the shortest life span among the different early modes of subsistence
(the third being farmers or SJ in Myers-Briggs). It is, therefore, no big surprise that highly intelligent
people do not accentuate their gender, whereas people who inherited their personality from herders
or pastoralists do so to a high degree, i.e. sexual dimorphism is diminished in hunter-gatherers as
well as gifted people. Hunter-gatherers are also quite playful into adulthood, as play is used to
reduce conflict among them. Farmer personalities are more serious and business-like in contrast to
hunter-gatherer personalities.
The final piece of the puzzle is trying to explain why hunter-gatherer personalities should be more
intelligent than their farmer and herder counter-parts:

One explanation is that hunter-gatherers needed more cognitive fluidity and vigilance (hence the
ADHD) to survive in the Savannah than farmers who had to rely far more on conscientiousness,
routine and hard work. This explanation still doesn’t account for why hunter-gatherers (Ns) tend to
be more intelligent on average than herders (SPs). Here the answer lies probably in natural selection.
Hunter-gatherers have an out-group sociality and sharing and caring attitude. In mixed hunter-
gatherer, farmer and herder societies hunter-gatherer minds who were of average intelligence
probably lost out (nice guys came last) in the genetic race and there were high selective pressures on
hunter-gatherer genotypes to become more intelligent.

So, higher IQ might at the end of the day be nothing more than a protective mechanism! Just like
social anxiety: if you are very open, you better have a defense shield in place! Introverted intuitives
are already socially anxious by the time they go to kindergarten because they are aware they are
different. By the time they are in their teens, they might be complete outcasts because they don't
play power/alpha games and as they tend not to be violent they can become easy targets for
bullying. The extraverted intuitives also are in danger of becoming outsiders and social phobics
during their teens, unless they already have an established network with other hunter-gatherer
minds.

In modern slang, we could say that gifted kids/high IQ people with a hunter-gatherer personality run
on the updated operating system “Hunter-gatherer v2.0”.

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