HPI

Could you be gifted?

Explore cognitive, emotional and sensory traits associated with high intellectual potential — 20 items.

⏱ 12 min ❓ 20 questions ✓ 100% Free
▶ Start Free Test
🔒 No registration · Instant results
🔬 High Potential Screening (HPI/HQI)
▶ Start Test Now
Download sample PDF →
⚠️ Disclaimer: Based on research on intellectual overexcitabilities (Dabrowski, 1964) and high-potential/giftedness traits. Educational screening purposes only — not a medical diagnosis. Please consult a qualified healthcare professional for any clinical concerns.
Claude AI
AI Interpretation powered by Claude (Anthropic)
claude-sonnet-4-20250514
Your results are analyzed by Claude, Anthropic's AI model, which provides a personalized narrative explaining what your answers reveal about your profile, with practical recommendations and professional guidance.

📋 What to expect

Answer honestly There are no right or wrong answers
Take your time Read each question carefully before answering
AI interpretation Claude AI will analyze and explain your results
PDF Report Get a full PDF report of your results

What is Giftedness / High Intellectual Potential?

High Intellectual Potential (HIP), commonly called giftedness, refers to a particular mode of cognitive and emotional functioning, generally associated with an IQ above 130 (top 2nd percentile). Approximately 2–3% of the population has HIP. Gifted adults are often characterised by tree-branch thinking (rapid associative connections), emotional hypersensitivity, an intense need for intellectual stimulation, a strong sense of justice, and a tendency to become bored in under-stimulating environments.

Common characteristics in gifted adults

Gifted adults often report: a sense of 'thinking differently' from others, insatiable creativity and curiosity, difficulty adapting to rigid or repetitive environments, over-analysis and perfectionism tendencies, hypersensitivity to injustice and conflict, and paradoxically, sometimes feelings of failure or underperformance (impostor syndrome, underachievement). HIP frequently co-occurs with ADHD, autism, and anxiety.

About the test

This test evaluates the main behavioural and cognitive markers associated with High Intellectual Potential. It does not replace a full neuropsychological assessment (WAIS-IV) for IQ measurement. It serves as a preliminary exploration tool to identify traits compatible with HIP and guide towards professional evaluation if appropriate.