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Public Domain · 1918 · Non-Verbal

The Army Beta Test: Non-Verbal Intelligence

The 1918 companion to the Army Alpha, designed for the roughly 25% of WWI recruits who could not read English well enough to take a verbal test. Seven visual subtests: mazes, cube counting, pattern continuation, digit-symbol substitution, number checking, picture completion, and geometric construction.

About the Army Beta

The Beta was created in 1917 alongside the Alpha by the same Yerkes committee. The Army discovered early in WWI that a large fraction of draftees - both recent immigrants and native-born Americans with limited schooling - could not read instructions on the Alpha. Two solutions were tried: individual examination (too slow for millions of recruits), and a fully non-verbal group test. The Beta was the second solution.

Every Beta subtest is administered with gestures and pantomime. The examiner demonstrates the task on a blackboard or chart; the recruit copies the procedure on the printed test booklet. No spoken or written language is required. The seven subtests were designed to tap different aspects of non-verbal reasoning - visual scanning, spatial relations, pattern recognition, motor speed, attention to detail.

The Beta survived in adapted form for decades. The Digit-Symbol Substitution subtest is essentially unchanged in the Wechsler Adult Intelligence Scale (WAIS) today. Picture Completion survives as a WAIS subtest. Cube Counting ancestrally relates to modern spatial-reasoning tests. The maze format is still used in clinical neuropsychology.

About this interactive version: Two of the seven Beta subtests (Cube Counting and Picture Completion) are fully scoreable in a browser - they appear below as interactive multiple-choice. The other five (Maze, X-O Series, Digit-Symbol, Number Checking, Geometrical Construction) require drawing or pencil-and-paper work that does not translate cleanly to a web interface. For those, we reproduce the original 1918 page scans so you can take them on paper, with the original solutions also visible on the scans.

The seven subtests

How the Beta connects to modern IQ tests

The Beta was the most successful non-verbal cognitive battery of its era and directly influenced every modern non-verbal intelligence test:

  • Performance subscales of the Wechsler tests (WAIS-IV Perceptual Reasoning, WISC-V Visual Spatial Index) descend from the Beta's design philosophy.
  • Digit-Symbol Coding (WAIS-IV) is the Beta Test 4 with cosmetic changes.
  • Picture Completion (WAIS-IV until 2008) was the Beta Test 6 with updated images.
  • Block Design (WAIS-IV) descends from the Kohs Block Design (1923), which in turn was influenced by the Beta's spatial-construction items.
  • Raven's Progressive Matrices (1938), though developed independently in the UK, drew on the same idea: that visual pattern reasoning could be measured without language.

The Army Beta's lasting contribution was demonstrating that a meaningful intelligence score could be obtained from people who shared no language with the examiner. That premise is now uncontroversial; in 1917 it was a major theoretical claim.

Source and verification

All test materials and answer keys on this page are transcribed from:

Yoakum, C. S. & Yerkes, R. M. (1920). Army Mental Tests. New York: Henry Holt and Company. Published by direction of the War Department. Beta materials reproduced on pages 277-283.

The full book is in the public domain in the United States: archive.org/details/armymentaltests00yoak. Note that the Yoakum & Yerkes volume reproduces the Beta with the correct answers marked directly on the page (mazes show the path, digit-symbol shows the filled symbols, etc.). The "keyed" version is what you see in our interactive subtests.

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