Struggling with the "Orange vs Blue" rules? Our specialized AI analyzes the grids and identifies the hidden inductive logic instantly.
| Test Name | scales cls (Inductive Logical Thinking) |
| Typical Time Limit | 12 Minutes (12 Questions) |
| Question Format | Categorization (Assign grids to Group A or Group B) |
| Primary Challenge | Identifying the single rule distinguishing two sets of 6 grids. |
In the scales cls test, you are shown two groups of grids. Every grid in the "Orange" group follows a specific rule that the "Blue" group does not. You must reverse-engineer this rule.
The hardest part is not assigning the grids, but discovering the rule. Humans often fixate on irrelevant details (like color) when the real rule is about shape count or position.
Our AI compares the two groups simultaneously. It tests thousands of potential rules (symmetry, odd/even, intersection) and finds the correct discriminator in a few seconds.
Group A always has an even number of shapes, while Group B has an odd number.
Items in one group are symmetrical vertically or horizontally, while the others are not.
One group always contains a specific shape (e.g., a Triangle), regardless of other distractors.
Rules based on whether shapes touch the border or intersect with each other.
Don't waste time guessing the rule.
ReasonEra detects the pattern instantly.
The Scales cls test (often called the Orange and Blue test) requires you to identify a rule that applies to one group of grids (Group A) but not the other (Group B). Common rules involve symmetry, odd/even shapes, or positioning.
Practice identifying rules quickly. ReasonEra's AI solver can instantly analyze both groups to reveal the hidden rule, helping you understand the logic and pass the assessment under the 12-minute time limit.
No. Scales cls is a categorization test (Orange vs Blue groups). Scales ix is a pattern completion test (finding the missing object in a 3x3 grid). ReasonEra supports both.
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