Yahoo Web Search

Search results

    • English psychologist

      • Charles Edward Spearman, FRS (10 September 1863 – 17 September 1945) was an English psychologist known for work in statistics, as a pioneer of factor analysis, and for Spearman's rank correlation coefficient.
      en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Charles_Spearman
  1. People also ask

  2. Charles Edward Spearman, FRS (10 September 1863 – 17 September 1945) was an English psychologist known for work in statistics, as a pioneer of factor analysis, and for Spearman's rank correlation coefficient.

  3. Charles E. Spearman (born September 10, 1863, London, England—died September 17, 1945, London) was a British psychologist who theorized that a general factor of intelligence, g, is present in varying degrees in different human abilities.

    • The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
  4. Charles Edward Spearman was born in London on 10 September 1863. His father, Alexander Young Spearman, was the eldest son of Sir Alexander Young Spearman, a senior Treasury official who had been created a baronet in 1840.2 But the younger Alexander never succeeded to the baronetcy because he died in 1865

  5. Charles Edward Spearman. 1863-1945 British theoretical and experimental psychologist who pioneered studies of intelligence. Charles Edward Spearman was an influential psychologist who developed commonly used statistical measures and the statistical method known as factor analysis.

  6. Charles Edward Spearman (September 10, 1863 - September 7, 1945) was an English psychologist known for work in statistics, as a pioneer of factor analysis, and for Spearman's rank correlation coefficient.

  7. Spearman served as President of the British Psychological Society from 1923-1926 and of Section J (psychology) of the British Association for the Advancement of Science in 1925. In 1934 he was elected an Honorary Member of the British Psychological Society.

  8. Jan 1, 1996 · The year 1995 marked the fiftieth anniversary of the death of Charles Edward Spearman, one of the comparatively few psychologists to have become a Fellow of the Royal Society.