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A Comparison of Terman Merrill Scale Test Responses Among Large Samples of Normal, Maladjusted and Backward Children
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 08 February 2018
Extract
There is a considerable body of literature concerning the diagnostic value of differences in pattern and scatter found in response to intelligence tests.
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- Part I.—Original Articles
- Information
- Copyright
- Copyright © Royal College of Psychiatrists, 1953
References
Harris, A. J., and Shakow, D., “Scatter on Stanford Binet in Schizophrenic, Normal and Delinquent Adults,” J. abn. soc. Psychol., 1938, 33, 100–111.Google Scholar
Klein, G. S., “An Application of the Multiple Regression Principle to Clinical Predictions,” J. gen. Psychol., 1948, 38, 159–179.Google Scholar
Lorr, M., and Meister, R. K., “The Concept of Scatter in the Light of Mental Test Theory,” Educ. Psychol. Measmt., 1941, 1, 303–308.Google Scholar
Mayman, M., “An Analysis of Scatter in Intelligence Test Results: A Review of the Literature,” Trans. Kans. Acad. Sci., 1946, 48, 429–444.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Myers, C. R., and Gifford, E. V., “Measuring Abnormal Pattern on the Revised Stanford Binet Scale (Form L),” J. ment. Sci., 1943, 89, 92–101.Google Scholar
Terman, L. M., and Merrill, M. A., Measuring Intelligence, 1937. London: Geo. Harrap & Co., Ltd.Google Scholar
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