Get Your Human Score

Complete a short series of scientifically grounded tests to measure your cognitive and motor performance compared to others.

Results are scored as percentiles and summarized into one number, so different units (ms, WPM, levels) stay comparable. You’ll see a per-test breakdown computed against real user distributions.

Who this is for
  • Curious users who want a grounded baseline.
  • Gamers, athletes, and anyone training speed and precision.
  • People benchmarking cognitive speed over time.
  • No signup required
  • One session, fixed configuration
  • Anti-gaming measures (no skipping or replaying during the run)
  • Scores are mildly clamped to reduce volatility
Most users finish in under 12 minutes.
See how scoring works
One configuration. One session. No gaming.
What you’ll do
  1. Visual reflex speed and motor response latency.
  2. Language processing, motor coordination, and sustained attention.
  3. Motor speed and rapid output under a fixed window.
  4. Hand–eye coordination, precision, and speed under pressure.
  5. Short-term recognition memory and interference control.
  6. Visual working memory and pattern recall capacity.
  7. Measures a key component of cognitive or motor performance.
  8. Auditory reflex speed and response latency.
  9. Cognitive control: inhibition, attention switching, and speed.
Why the flow is locked

Skipping and replaying changes outcomes in ways that are hard to compare fairly. A locked sequence keeps the session consistent across people and devices.

Replays during the run are blocked to reduce score farming and warm-up effects. You can still retake the full sequence later for a cleaner comparison.

How Human Score is calculated

The goal is a single, comparable summary across different tasks, without pretending that raw units mean the same thing.

Step 1 — Percentiles, not raw scores

Tests output different units (milliseconds, WPM, levels). We convert each result into a percentile so performance is comparable on one scale. For some tests, lower is better; for others, higher is better.

Step 2 — Multi-test aggregation

Each test contributes independently. No single test is meant to dominate the outcome, so strengths and weaknesses balance into an overall summary.

Step 3 — Score stabilization

We apply mild clamping and outlier resistance so one unusually good or bad moment doesn’t swing the final result too far. The goal is a score that feels consistent, not random.

What your Human Score represents

Your Human Score is a percentile-based summary of this session across multiple tasks. It’s a snapshot of performance under your current conditions, not a permanent label.

0–30

Below average performance for this session across the suite. Often improves substantially with rest, practice, and device consistency.

30–60

Typical range for most users. You’ll usually see a mix of strengths and weaknesses by test.

60–80

Above average overall performance. Usually reflects consistent speed and accuracy across multiple task types.

80–100

Exceptional performance for this session. You tend to score high across most tests, not just one.

Example interpretation: a score around 40 is roughly average; around 60 is above average; around 80 is top-tier for this session.

Accuracy & variability

Day-to-day performance can change. Fatigue, focus, stress, caffeine, device latency, and even screen size can affect reaction and speed tests. A single session is still useful as a baseline, but retesting under similar conditions is the best way to measure change.

Why results move

Small changes in sleep, attention, or device input delay can shift percentiles. That’s normal and expected.

How to retest

Use the same device, similar time of day, and a short warm-up. Comparing multiple sessions improves confidence.

Start your Human Score session

One guided run across all tests. Most users finish in under 12 minutes.