Comparison of Two Administration Times for the Remote Associates Test
The Remote Associates Test (RAT) was administered to 41 graduate students in psychology and 26 graduate nurses; 30-min. and 40-min. scores were obtained from all Ss. Miller Analogies Test scores and graduate school grade point averages were available on most Ss. No significant change in the correlation between GPA and RAT resulted from shortened administration time, although the slight change was in the direction of a more positive relationship. Decreased administration time significantly raised the correlation between RAT and MAT for a heterogeneous group, but not for the more homogeneous group. With a decrease in administration time 22 to 27% of Ss fell in different thirds of the distribution than they did with the longer time limit. Shortening the administration period to 30 min. is unwise, particularly for heterogeneous samples.