%0 Journal Article %J J Clin Exp Neuropsychol %D 2012 %T A single g factor is not necessary to simulate positive correlations between cognitive tests. %A Dennis J. McFarland %K Aptitude %K Cognition %K Humans %K Models, Theoretical %K Neuropsychological Tests %X In the area of abilities testing, one issue of continued dissent is whether abilities are best conceptualized as manifestations of a single underlying general factor or as reflecting the combination of multiple traits that may be dissociable. The fact that diverse cognitive tests tend to be positively correlated has been taken as evidence for a single general ability or "g" factor. In the present study, simulations of test performance were run to evaluate the hypothesis that multiple independent abilities that affect test performance in a consistent manner will produce a positive manifold. Correlation matrices were simulated from models using either one or eight independent factors. The extent to which these factors operated in a consistent manner across tests (i.e., that a factor that facilitates performance on one test tends to facilitate performance on other tests) was manipulated by varying the mean value of the randomly selected weights. The tendency of both a single factor and eight independent factors to produce positive correlations increased as the randomly selected weights operated in a more consistent fashion. Thus the presence of a positive manifold in the correlations between diverse cognitive tests does not provide differential support for either single factor or multiple factor models of general abilities. %B J Clin Exp Neuropsychol %V 34 %P 378-84 %8 01/2012 %G eng %U http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/22260190 %N 4 %R 10.1080/13803395.2011.645018