Matches in DBpedia 2016-04 for { <http://books.google.com/books?vid=ISBN0-19-852367-X> ?p ?o }
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- books?vid=ISBN0-19-852367-X authorlink "Nicholas Mackintosh".
- books?vid=ISBN0-19-852367-X first "N. J.".
- books?vid=ISBN0-19-852367-X first "N.J.".
- books?vid=ISBN0-19-852367-X first "NJ".
- books?vid=ISBN0-19-852367-X isCitedBy History_of_the_race_and_intelligence_controversy.
- books?vid=ISBN0-19-852367-X isCitedBy Intelligence_quotient.
- books?vid=ISBN0-19-852367-X isCitedBy Level_of_measurement.
- books?vid=ISBN0-19-852367-X isCitedBy Race_and_intelligence.
- books?vid=ISBN0-19-852367-X isbn "0-19-852367-X".
- books?vid=ISBN0-19-852367-X last "Mackintosh".
- books?vid=ISBN0-19-852367-X laydate "2010-08-09".
- books?vid=ISBN0-19-852367-X laysummary ?view=usa&ci=9780198523673.
- books?vid=ISBN0-19-852367-X location "Oxford".
- books?vid=ISBN0-19-852367-X pages "30–31".
- books?vid=ISBN0-19-852367-X publisher "Oxford University Press".
- books?vid=ISBN0-19-852367-X quote "In the jargon of psychological measurement theory, IQ is an ordinal scale, where we are simply rank-ordering people. . . . It is not even appropriate to claim that the 10-point difference between IQ scores of 110 and 100 is the same as the 10-point difference between IQs of 160 and 150".
- books?vid=ISBN0-19-852367-X quote "In the jargon of psychological measurement theory, IQ is an ordinal scale, where we are simply rank-ordering people. ... It is not even appropriate to claim that the 10-point difference between IQ scores of 110 and 100 is the same as the 10-point difference between IQs of 160 and 150".
- books?vid=ISBN0-19-852367-X ref "harv".
- books?vid=ISBN0-19-852367-X title "IQ and Human Intelligence".
- books?vid=ISBN0-19-852367-X year "1998".