Authors
Harrison J Kell, David Lubinski, Camilla P Benbow, James H Steiger
Publication date
2013/9
Journal
Psychological science
Volume
24
Issue
9
Pages
1831-1836
Publisher
Sage Publications
Description
In the late 1970s, 563 intellectually talented 13-year-olds (identified by the SAT as in the top 0.5% of ability) were assessed on spatial ability. More than 30 years later, the present study evaluated whether spatial ability provided incremental validity (beyond the SAT’s mathematical and verbal reasoning subtests) for differentially predicting which of these individuals had patents and three classes of refereed publications. A two-step discriminant-function analysis revealed that the SAT subtests jointly accounted for 10.8% of the variance among these outcomes (p < .01); when spatial ability was added, an additional 7.6% was accounted for—a statistically significant increase (p < .01). The findings indicate that spatial ability has a unique role in the development of creativity, beyond the roles played by the abilities traditionally measured in educational selection, counseling, and industrial-organizational psychology. Spatial …
Total citations
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Scholar articles
HJ Kell, D Lubinski, CP Benbow, JH Steiger - Psychological science, 2013