3 6 EMPLOYMENT PSYCHOLOGY No doubt it would have been possible to devise or select tests which would have been more applicable to the work of gauging. However, this particular type of gauging was only a temporary process and was almost completed at the time. It was therefore considered inad visable to go further in this direction. Besides the work of inspecting shells which has just been described and for which significant tests were found, there was a large amount of inspection differing from the work described only in respect to the size and shape of the object inspected. With regard to the fundamental qualifications required to do the work, there was almost complete identity. It would have been very valuable if the tests found applicable to the work of shell inspection should also be applicable to these other kinds of inspect- However, it was not permissible at this early stage ion. of the experiment to assume that tests found significant for one kind of work would be as significant for another kind, much as the two kinds resembled each other to the ordinary observation. Therefore, in order to avoid all uncertainty and guesswork, it was decided to give the three tests (exclusive of the eye test) which had been found most significant, to representative groups of inspec tors for other kinds of work. This was done in the same way in which the first tests were given. Twenty-eight cartridge inspectors, thirty paper shot shell inspectors, and ten bullet inspectors were examined. The results are given in the table of correlations on page 37. From these figures it can be seen that the correlations for the cartridge and bullet inspectors are almost but not quite as high as those found for shell inspectors. The dif ference was due in part to the fact that when the later tests were given, about four-fifths of the girls had beem