Published online by Cambridge University Press: 01 January 2025
The intercorrelations of thirty-seven variables, including the Minnesota battery of “mechanical ability” tests, the seven MacQuarrie tests of “mechanical ability,” O'Connor's Wiggly blocks, and the Stenquist picture-matching test, were analyzed by Thurstone's centroid method. Five factors, Perceptual, Verbal, Youth, Manual Agility, and Spatial, were taken out. Factors prominent in so-called mechanical ability tests are the Spatial and Perceptual ones with Mac-Quarrie's dotting test significantly high in the Manual Agility factor. Each of the factors can be measured with group pencil-and-paper tests.
Acknowledgment is gratefully made to the State Engineering Experiment Station at the Georgia School of Technology for sponsoring and financially supporting the studies; to the Graduate Research Committee of the University of Illinois for providing funds for the purchase of tests and the tabulation of data; and to Dr. E. L. Welker of the University of Illinois Mathematics Department for assistance with statistical problems.