General Aptitude Test Battery


The General Aptitude Test Battery is a work-related cognitive test developed by the U.S. Employment Service, a division of the Department of Labor. It has been extensively used to study the relationship between cognitive abilities, primarily general intelligence, and job performance.

National Academy of Science review (1989)

The test was extensively reviewed by the National Academy of Science in 1989 in the report Fairness in Employment Testing.
NAS concluded that the GATB is "adequate in psycho-metric quality", but that there were two problems if it was to be extensively used in practice. The first was that there were few alternate forms, which makes it likely that others will obtain a copy of the test and provide on-test training which decreases the validity. The second was that many of the tests were heavily speeded, and that there were several easy to test strategies for increasing scores on speeded tests e.g. filling out the remaining items with random answers when one is running out of time. The report similarly examined questions of test bias, validity.

Composition

The battery consists of a 12 tests which purport to measure 9 abilities or aptitudes:
SymbolNameTest
GGeneral IntelligenceVocabulary, Arithmetic Reasoning, Three Dimensional Space
VVerbal AptitudeVocabulary
NNumerical AptitudeComputation, Arithmetic Reasoning
SSpatial AptitudeThree Dimensional Space
PForm PerceptionTool Matching, Form Matching
QClerical-PerceptionName Comparison
KMotor CoordinationMark Making
FFinger DexterityAssemble, Disassemble
MManual DexterityPlace, Turn


The abilities are also sometimes clustered into 3 groups: cognitive, perceptual and psychomotor.