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A COMPARATIVE FACTOR ANALYTIC STUDY OF NORMAL AND NEUROTIC VETERANS. A STATISTICAL INVESTIGATION OF THE INTERRELATIONSHIPS OF INTELLECTUAL AND EMOTIONAL FACTORS AS DISCLOSED IN THE PRIMARY MENTAL ABILITIES EXAMINATION AND THE MINNESOTA MULTIPHASIC PERSONA PDF

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Preview A COMPARATIVE FACTOR ANALYTIC STUDY OF NORMAL AND NEUROTIC VETERANS. A STATISTICAL INVESTIGATION OF THE INTERRELATIONSHIPS OF INTELLECTUAL AND EMOTIONAL FACTORS AS DISCLOSED IN THE PRIMARY MENTAL ABILITIES EXAMINATION AND THE MINNESOTA MULTIPHASIC PERSONA

December 5, 1949 Committee on Doctoral Study School of Education New York Unirersity The student hereby guarantees that no part of the dissertation or document which he has submitted for publication has been heretofore published and (or) copyrighted in the United States of America, except in the case of passages quoted from other published sources; that he is the sole author and proprietor of said dissertation or document; that the dissertation or document contains no matter which, if published, w ill be libelous or otherwise injurious, or infringe in any way the copyright of any other party; and that he w ill defend, indemnify and hold harmless New York Unirersity against a ll suits and proceedings which may be brought and against a ll claims which may be made against New York Unirersity by reason of the publication of said < E lias N. Abrams Sponsoring Committee: Professor Brian E. Tomlinson, Professor Leonard A. Larson and Professor William P. Sears A COMPARATIVE FACTOR ANALYTIC STUDY •OF NORMAL AND NEUROTIC VETERANS A S tatistical Investigation of th e Interrelationships of In tellectu al and Emotional Factors as Disclosed in the Primary M ental A bilities Examination and the Minnesota Multipbasic Personality Inventory ELI A3 NELSON ABRAMS Submitted in p a rtial fulfillm ent of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy in the School of Education of New York U niversity 1949 35 tab le of contents Chapter Topic Page I The Problem ........................................... 1 Introduction .................. 1 General Statement .................. 3 Specific Problems ............ 4 D efinition of Terms ........................................................ 4 Delimitations .............................................................. 7 The Need for the Study ............ 7 II H istorical Background of the Problem ... . . . . . . . . . . . . . 10 Introduction ................................... 10 Factor Studies in Mental A b ilities.............. 12 Factor Studies in Personality and Emotional Adjustment ......................................... 13 Studies in Pattern Analysis ......................... 21 III Procedure in Collecting D ata................................................ 25 The Subjects .................................................................................. 25 Comparison ox the Guidance and Non-Guidance Parts of the "Normal" Group.................................................. 28 Age Levels of the Two Groups ............ 30 Educational Achievement Levels of the Two Groups .... 31 The Instruments ........................................................................... 32 Primary Mental A bilities ............................ 33 Minnesota Multiphasic Personality Inventory ......... 35 The Method ............................. 38 IV Results ................................................................... 43 Comparison of the "Normal" and Neurotic Groups 43 Comparison of the Correlation Matrices for Both Groups ............... 49 Comparison of the Factor Matrices for Both Groups ... 52 Comparison of the Unrotated Factor Loadings ......... 55 Interpretation of the Factors .............................................. 63 The "Normal" Group Factors .................................................... 65 The Neurotic Group Factors ......................................... 67 V General Discussion, Summary and Conclusions................... 70 The "Normal" Factors ................................................................. 71 The Neurotic Factors ................................................................. 72 Comparison of the Factors .................... 74 Implications for Further Research................ 75 Bibliography .................................................................................. 76 Appendix I: Partial Correlation for the Removal of the Influence of Level of Educational Achievement . 80 Appendix II: Factor Loadings Derived from the Rotation of the Reference Axes .......................................................... 82 Appendix III: Compilation of Scale Items of the Minnesota Multiphasic Personality Inventory and Sample Test Booklet............................. 92 Appendix IV: Sample Test Booklet - S.R.A. Primary Mental A bilities.........................................................................123 list of tables Table T itle Page I Sources of the Neurotic Group............... 25 II Sources of the "Normal" Group .................................. 27 III Significances of the Differences between Means of the Guidance and Non-Guidance Parts of the " Normal" Gro up .................................................... 29 IV Frequency and Percentage of "Normal" and Neurotic Subjects at Various Age Levels ....................... 30 V Frequency and Percentage of "Normal" and Neurotic Subjects at Various Levels of Educational Achievement .................................................................. 31 VI Means, Their Standard Deviations and Standard Errors, and C ritical Ratios of the Difference Between "Normal" and Neurotic Subjects in Level of Educational Achievement ....................... 32 VII Frequency D istribution of Scores on Test Variables of the Primary Mental A bilities for "Normal" and Neurotic Groups ..................................... 44 VIII Frequency D istribution of Scores on Test Varia­ bles of the Minnesota Multiphasic Personality Inventory for "Normal" and Neurotic Groups .. 45-46 IX Significance of Differences in Variables between "Normal" and Neurotic Groups .................. 48 X Zero-order Inter correlations of Variables of the PMA and MMPI "Normal" Group ................... 50 XI Zero-order Intercorrelations of Variables of the PMA and MMPI Neurotic Group ............................. 51 XII Frequency D istribution of the Inter correlations of the Seventeen Variables in "Normals" and Neurotics Before and A fter the Influence of Educational Achievement Had Been Removed.... 52 XIII Unrotated Factor Loadings, Communalities, and Uniqueness ...................................................................... 54 XIV Significance of the Difference between Factor Loadings on Test Variables for Unrotated Factor I .......................................................... 58 XV Significance of the Difference between Factor Loadings on Test Variables for Unrotated Fac­ to r I I ............................................................................... 59 XVI Significance of the Difference between Factor Loadings on Test Variables for Unrotated Factor III ................................................................. 60 XVII Significance of the Difference between Factor Loadings on Test Variables for Unrotated Factor IV ..................................................................... 61 XVIII Recapitulation of Significances of Differences between Unrotated Factor Loadings in Test Variables of "Normals" and Neurotics .............. 62 XIX Rotated Factor Loadings, Communalities, and Uniqueness....................................................................... 64 v LIST OF TABLES APPENDIX II Table Title Page The "Normal" Group A Centroid Factor Loadings .................................................. 83 B Results of the Rotation of -§• through 27° > Counterclockwise ............................................................. 84 C Results of the Rotation of ^ ^ through 49 °> Counterclockwise .............................................................. 85 The Neurotic Group A’ Centroid Factor Loadings ............................... 86 B1 Results of the Rotation of & through 28 , Counterclockwise ............................................ 87 C1 Results of the Rotation of %~<P through 53 , Counterclockwise ...............................................^............ 88 D' Results of the Rotation of ^ 0 through 45 > Counterclockwise ................................................ 89 S' Results of the Rotation of 4-9* through 75 » Counte r clo ckwi se ................................................ 90 F' Results of the Rotation of $.<$ through 15 , Counterclockwise ........................................................... 91 vi CHAPTER I THE PROBLEM Introduction From time immemorial man has sought to discover and inspire meaning in observable existences where previously no such meaning was readily discern­ ible. In a Kantian sense, he has never ceased to wonder at the order in the universe and the moral law. He has never ceased to inquire whether in the outer world of science or the inner world of experience there is anything which calls for or answers to this meaning. Astonishingly, he has been able to produce in te llig ib le orderliness with respect to the former. He is s t i l l groping in the dark, s.s i t were, to give a semblance of order to the understand­ ing of the a c tiv itie s of his own kind. Through the concept of cosmic constel­ lations, he has been able to project order in the heavens. It cannot be said that he has accomplished as much in the realnof the human personality. "The fundamental variables or dimensions of human ability are s till very much w ithin the unexplored te rrito ry reserved for psychologists."1 That he is on the thresh­ old of the discovery of laws which govern the activities of individuals is an ever-present incentive. The status of this last is not unlike the concept of the universe in the ancient world, Man has moved far in his knowledge of the ordering of th e universe. He has extended his knowledge tremendously beyond mere positional references to constellations. With respect to the systemiza- 1. J. P. G uilford, Psychometric Methods, p. 457. - 2 - tion and compositon of personality and the study of the functional aspects man presently occupies a position sim ilar to that of a sophisticated philos­ opher of those ancient times. / There are lite ra lly thousands of concepts representing observable traits whereby human ab ility and human personality can be described. These concepts are available to scien tific thinkers. To use a ll would be wasteful of time and energy, and therefore, economically disadvantageous. The law of parsi­ mony must obtain. One of the objectives of science is to reduce that which is complex to that which is simple. Its aim, in part, is to describe and understand adequately and comprehensively the complex and the multiplex by means of the least number of concepts. Then, to pursue the analogy of the ancient and the contemporary the concept of constellation for the ancient philosopher served as a lever by means of which further knowledge could be pried loose from the secrets of nature, well-concealed by ignorance and frus­ tra tin g superstition. For the contemporary thinker in the realm of the func­ tioning personality, the analogy of configuration or gestalt serves a like purpose. For centuries man has pondered about the interrelationships of different tra its th at, when integrated, describe a personality. He has speculated about these m atters and has devised many theories to account for the differ­ ences th at ex ist among his fellows. He has attempted to discover in what respect and to what extent tra its w ithin a single individual are related to each other. He has contrived many methods, logical and mathematical, to a ssist him in these endeavors. One of the latest developments is the adapt­ ation of the tool of factor analysis to these problems. The identification of c rite ria to account for differences in personality lias in the past given rise to concepts which account for these differences in - 3 - terms of types. Young takes to task some of the critics of the theory of types by assertin g th at far too many of them "have employed measures of specific and rather simple perceptual, memory, and associational a b ilitie s rather than large configurations of personality—involving both in tellectu a l and em otional features—as the basis for their testings."-'- I t is th is com­ mingling of a b ilitie s in intellectual functioning and tra its of emotional adjustment in an attem pt to search out the factors that distinguish neurotics from "normals" that is the burden of this research. The Problem General Statement The concept th at intellectual functioning can be organized into a pat­ tern of specific a b ilitie s is generally recognized.* That emotional in sta ­ b ility is refle cted in the performance of intellectual tasks is both an in fere n tia l conclusion and an empirical fact. It is, by and large, these considerations which have led to the undertaking of the present problem. The purpose of the present research is to explore and to investigate certain underlying factors of intellectual efficiency and emotional sta b il­ ity in "normal" and neurotic persons. The nature of these factors and th eir in terrelatio n sh ip s w ill be disclosed by means of factorization of th e data *Any te s t of in tellig en ce that utilizes a differential weighting technique to equate the scores of subtests involves the patterning of specific a b ilitie s . This is brought sharply into focus when there is , for example, scatter in some of the sub tests of -the Wechsler-Bellevue as in D. W echsler, The Measurement of Adult Intelligence, pp. 150-151, q.v. 1. K. Young, Personality and Problems of Adjustment, p. 329 - 4 - derived and a comparison of the factor loadings of each in "normal" and neurotic adult subjects. In essence, th is research is a s ta tistic a l investigation of the inter­ relationships of in tellectu a l and emotional factors as disclosed in the Primary Mental A b ilities Examination and the Minnesota Multiphasic Person­ a lity Inventory for the purpose of scientific parsimony in describing the least number of concepts by means of which differences between "normals" and neurotics can be accounted. Specific Problems The specific problems of th is inquiry are: 1. What are the factors that are descriptive of the interaction of intellec­ tual functioning and emotional adjustment in a "normal" group? 2. Are these factors sim ilarly constellated in the interaction of these variables in a neurotic group? 3. What, if any, indices exist in these factors that would provide discrim- inable differences between the "normal11 and the neurotic group? D efinition of Terms The term factor is defined as "one of the elements that contribute to produce a resu lt; a constituent."^ As used in this research, it can be spe­ c ific a lly id en tified as a tra it, attrib u te, or descriptive variable that has been incorporated into a variety of tests from which, also} it can be extracted. More specifically and as particularly pertinent here is the inter- p pretation of Thurstone that a factor may be regarded as a postulated ability 1. W ebster's C ollegiate Dictionary, C. & C. Merriam Company, 5th edition, 2. L. L. Thurstone, M ultiple-Factor Analysis, p. 52 - 5 - or attrib ute and its absence as primary cause of the successful completion of a task by some individuals and of the failure of other individuals in the same task with the avowed purpose of assaying demonstrable differences among individuals in respect of this ability or attrib u te. By factor analysis is meant that branch of statistical theory concerned with the resolu­ tion of a set of descriptive variables in terms of a small number of categories or factors. This resolution is accomplished by the analysis of the intercorralations of the variables. A satisfactory solution w ill yield factors which convey all the essential information of the original set of variables. The chief aim is thus to attain scientific parsimony or economy of description. A factor loading is the weight or saturation of a known factor in a given te st. ’’The validity of a test as a measure of one of these factors HO is indicated by its correlation with the factor, which is its factor loading. The term, mental is to be understood as intellectual as distinguished f r om emo ti o n al. By normal is meant typical or average and characterizes a condition which does not depart or deviate too much from the average. S pecifically, it w ill mean th at the individual has not presented himself at a mental hygiene clin ic for treatment, that he has no known psychiatric disorder, and, for the particular purpose of this research, that he has not revealed a significantly unfavorable elevation on any of the scales of the LELnnesota M ultiphasic Personality Inventory. From an operational standpoint th is means that to be regarded as "normal” an individual's scores must lie between 1. K. J. Holzinger and II. H. Harman, Factor Analysis, p. 3 # 2. J. P. Guilford, Fundamental Statistics in psychology and Eduoati on. p . 264' . " '

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