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  1. Jan 26, 2024 · James McKeen Cattell, an American psychologist, soon built upon Galton's physiological method of measuring intelligence. In 1890, he published a set of "mental tests," a catchy term he coined. Cattell suggested 10 mental tests for use with the general public. • Dynamometer pressure.

    • Anthropometrics at Cambridge 1885 - 1886
    • Cattell's Psychometric Laboratory 1887 - 1889
    • Cattell's Return to America
    • Sir Francis Galton and James Mckeen Cattell
    • References

    Before the arrival of Cattell, Galton had presented the Rede Lecture at Cambridge in June 1884 on the topic “The nature, principles and objects of the quantitative estimate of some of the less commonly and less easily measured of the human faculties”, and presented the University with several instruments similar to those he had used in his South Ke...

    While Venn was carrying out his anthropometric studies, James Ward, a Fellow of Trinity College (and later to become Professor of Moral Philosophy and Logic), had attempted to gain Senate approval for the establishment of a Psychology Laboratory atCambridge. However, this was turned down by Senate on the grounds that such a laboratory 1. “would ins...

    In 1889, Cattell moved with his new English wife (Josephine Owen from London, who he had first met while in Leipzig) to a newly established Professorship in Psychophysics at theUniversityof Pennsylvania, taking all his laboratory materials with him. No other psychology laboratory was to exist inCambridgefor at least ten years. However, the Cattells...

    Sir Francis Galton has often been described as ‘the father of psychometrics’, and as early as 1883 he had suggested that people of genius might also possess other psychological attributes such as unusually fine sensory discrimination. However, he appears to have been diverted from the point by other interests, having contented himself with the gene...

    Cattell, J. McK. (1886) Psychometrische Untersuchungen. Philosophische Studien, 3, 305-335; 452-492.
    Cattell, J. McK. (1888) The Psychological Laboratory at Leipzig. Mind, 13, 37-51.
    Cattell, J. McK. (1890) Mental Tests and Measurements. Mind, 15, 373-381.
    Cattell, J. McK. (1928) Early Psychological Laboratories. Science, 67, No.1744, 543-548.
  2. Mar 14, 2024 · Education: Earned a psychology doctorate from the University of Leipzig under Wilhelm Wundt. Notable Works: Advocated standardized testing, contributions to psychometrics, 16PF Model of Personality. Key Concepts: Pioneered applied psychology, emphasized individual differences, introduced mental tests.

  3. construct a modern intelligence test, the term "mental test" was first introduced in 1890 by James McKeen Cattell (Geisinger, 2000). According to Boake (2002), however, tests assessing cognitive and perceptual abilities had been developed well before then. “The first widespread use of psychological and educational

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  5. Jun 2, 2016 · When James McKeen Cattell (1890) introduced the term mental tests (above) in the British journal Mind, he was already cognizant that measurement was essential to establishing the field of psychology as an emerging experimental science.

  6. written under the supervision of William James and later James McKeen Cattell. Cattell was the world's first Professor of Psychology and is thought to have been the first person to use the term 'mental test', in an article in the British journal Mind in 1890 (Joncich, pp. 113-114). Thorndike later acknowledged the influence of the

  7. Nov 23, 2023 · Cattell was the first psychologist in the United States to emphasize quantification and value testing and individual differences. In 1890, he was the first to use the term “mental test” in his article “Mental Tests and Measurements.”

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