1951
DOI: 10.1037/h0057479
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Cited by 88 publications
(39 citation statements)
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“…In explaining a factor pattern of this sort, one is tempted to mat~h it with some of the speed, tempo, or fluency factors found by other investigators (French, 1951;Lord, 1956;Rimoldi, 1951). However, when a candidate for such a match correlates markedly with intellectual ability, it should probably be ruled out.…”
Section: Factor Analytic Studies Of Response Stylesmentioning
confidence: 99%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…In explaining a factor pattern of this sort, one is tempted to mat~h it with some of the speed, tempo, or fluency factors found by other investigators (French, 1951;Lord, 1956;Rimoldi, 1951). However, when a candidate for such a match correlates markedly with intellectual ability, it should probably be ruled out.…”
Section: Factor Analytic Studies Of Response Stylesmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Furthermore, the techniques used to construct such scales are not limited to questionnaire items. They may be applied to simulated social situations like the In-Basket test or to tests of psychomotor speed or tempo, such as those studied by Rimoldi (1951). One might give inbaskets or tempo tests under both normal and "fake good" instructions and investigate the number and nature of the dimensions of performance change that are involved in making an optimally "geod" impression.…”
Section: Social Desirabilitymentioning
confidence: 99%
“…There is some evidence that there is more than one speed factor and that the speeds of motor, perceptual and complex cognitive functioning are relatively independent of one another and are controlled by different mechanisms (24,25,28,30). Various mechanisms have been implicated as involved in slowing down of psychological functioning in depressed people and in the aged.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Contrary to their own hypotheses, Allport and Vernon (1933) found no correlation between the tempo of motor actions and the tempo of cognitive operations. Rimoldi (1951), who analyzed 59 motoric and cognitive velocity tests, found no correlation between the parameters of these two groups. The exception is the finding by Eisenberg (1937) who compared speed, expansion in space, and pressure when walking, writing, and drawing in individuals with extremely high and low feelings of self-dominance, as measured with the Social Personality Inventory.…”
Section: The Bidirectional Link Between Movement Form and Movement Fumentioning
confidence: 99%