A NOTE ON THE RELATIONSHIP OF THE INTERACTION POTENTIAL INVENTORY TO PEER RATINGS OF LEADERSHIP AND OTHER NAVAL AVIATION CADET CRITERIA.

Abstract

The Interaction Potential Inventory was administered to 257 naval aviation cadets upon their entering pre-flight training in the Summer of 1954. The relationship between the criteria of part-time work or college leadership and the scales of the Interaction Potential Inventory confirm previous findings and may be regarded as a cross validation of those findings. Peer ratings of leadership potential are not determined by those aspects of personality tapped by the IPI. The non-significant correlations between the scales of the IPI and the criterion of high school leadership, contrary to previous findings, may be due to the attenuating effects of restriction of range. The presence of a relationship between college subject failure and the IPI and the lack of a similar relationship between the IPI and high school standing may indicate that the IPI is related to a factor, or factors, uniquely determining college success, since high school class standing is known to be a useful predictor of college success. The apparently contradictory findings with regard to pre-flight grade average and college subject failure may be due either to change or to the possibility of a real difference between the determiners of these two criteria, and replication is therefore indicated. The correlations reported here have been attenuated by the effect of restriction of range, and the true values are at least somewhat larger. (Author)

Document Details

Document Type
Technical Report
Publication Date
Feb 13, 1957
Accession Number
AD0468261

Entities

People

  • George E. Brehman Jr.

Tags

DTIC Thesaurus Topics

  • Behavior And Behavior Mechanisms
  • Education
  • Flight Training
  • Human Behavior
  • Inventory
  • Leadership
  • Naval Aviation
  • Personality
  • Training
  • Validation

Fields of Study

  • Psychology

Readers

  • Brain and Cognitive Science; Experimental Psychology; Cognitive Neuroscience
  • Military History of the United States in the 20th Century.
  • Regression Analysis.