Normative data stratified by age and sex are presented for 12 neuro‐psychological tests from a large neurologically intact, nonpsychiatric adult sample (127 males, 98 females, aged 15–40 years). The tests include Language Modalities Test for Aphasia, Memory‐for‐Designs, Coloured Progressive Matrices, Symbol‐Gestalt, Minute Estimation, Controlled Word Association, Written Word Fluency, Purdue Pegboard, Williams Clinical Memory, Symbol Digit Modalities, L. J. Tactile Recognition, and Wisconsin Card Sorting.
Normative data, stratified by age and sex, are presented for the Halstead‐Reitan neuropsychological tests: Name Writing, Speech‐Sounds Perception, Trail Making, Halstead Category, Finger Tapping, Dynamometer, Tactual Performance, Seashore Rhythm, Tactile Form Recognition, Finger‐Tip Number Writing Perception, Face‐Hand, and Finger Localization. Correlations of the test variables with age, education, and WAIS‐R Verbal and Performance IQ are reported. The normative sample consisted of 225 adults (127 males, 98 females) 15 to 40 years of age. The subjects who were included did not report any history of forensic involvement, head injury, neurological insult, prenatal or birth complication, psychiatric problems, or substance abuse.
A total of 775 pure-strain and Fi mice were obtained from a 6 X 6 diallel mating plan. Each subject completed a battery of 12 tests of emotionality, requiring 1 mo. for completion. The subsequent 42 measures were factor analyzed by alpha factoring with varimax and promax (K = 2) rotations. Fifteen factors with eigenvalues equal to or greater than 1.0 were found. Ten of these factors were interpreted as different facets of emotionality. Another factor was identified as weight, and four were underdetermined. The 10 emotionality factors were interpreted as motor discharge, acrophobia, underwater swimming, Tunneling 1, audiogenic reactivity, food motivation, autonomic balance, territorial marking, activity level, and Tunneling 2. Similarities with other major factor-analytic studies of emotionality were discussed.
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