As part of a routine testing battery, 180 neuropsychiatric patients were administered Form 1 of the Quick Test, the Bender-Gestalt Test (scored by the Hain method), and the Memory-for-Designs Test. The relationships among the Quick Test and the two psychomotor tests were examined, taking age into consideration. Implications for the clinical use of these tests were discussed.
Get full access to this article
View all access options for this article.
References
1.
AbidinR. R., & ByrneA. V.Quick Test validation study and examination of form equivalency. Psychological Reports, 1967, 20, 735–739.
2.
AmmonsR. B., & AmmonsC. H.The Quick Test (QT). Missoula: Psychological Test Specialists, 1962.
3.
GrahamF. K., & KendallB. S.Memory-for-Designs test: revised general manual. Perceptual and Motor Skills, 1960, 11, 147–188. (Monogr. Suppl. 3-V11)
4.
HainJ. D.The Bender Gestalt test; a scoring method for identifying brain damage. Journal of Consulting Psychology, 1964, 28, 34–40.
5.
OgilvieR. D.Correlations between the Quick Test (QT) and the Wechsler Adult Intelligence Scale (WAIS) as used in a clinical setting. Psychological Reports, 1965, 16, 497–498.
6.
QuattlebaumL. F., & WhiteW. F.Relationship between two quick screening measures of intelligence for neuropsychiatric patients. Psychological Reports, 1969, 24, 691–693.
7.
StewartH.ColeS., & WilliamsR.Relationship between the QT and WAIS in a restricted clinical sample. Psychological Reports, 1967, 20, 383–386.