1. THE RELATIONSHIP BETWEEN ALTITUDE-- I.Q. DISCREPANCY AND ANXIETY.
- Author
-
Purcell, Claire Kepler, Drevdahl, John, and Purcell, Kenneth
- Subjects
- *
ALTITUDES , *INTELLIGENCE levels , *PHYSICAL geography , *PERSONALITY , *PSYCHOLOGISTS , *ANXIETY - Abstract
The article reports that there has been increasing interest in the use of intra-individual test discrepancies as a measure of functioning efficiency. One of the major problems in estabhshing scatter patterns has been that of finding a suitable internal reference point. The three reference points most commonly employed are the mean or IQ, the vocabulary score, and the altitude or maximum score. Psychologists who believe that the G factor is an ability argue for the use of the IQ as a reference point while those who believe that it is a capacity use altitude as a reference point. In regarding intelligence as a capacity or potentiality rather than an ability, vocabulary and altitude proponents consider that test scores falling significantly below the potentiality indicate mental inefficiency or personality disorganization.
- Published
- 1952
- Full Text
- View/download PDF