The classic Holzinger and Swineford (1939) dataset consists of mental
ability test scores of seventh- and eighth-grade children from two
different schools (Pasteur and Grant-White). In the original dataset
(available in the MBESS
package), there are scores for 26 tests.
However, a smaller subset with 9 variables is more widely used in the
literature (for example in Joreskog's 1969 paper, which also uses the 145
subjects from the Grant-White school only).
data(HolzingerSwineford1939)
A data frame with 301 observations of 15 variables.
id
Identifier
sex
Gender
ageyr
Age, year part
agemo
Age, month part
school
School (Pasteur or Grant-White)
grade
Grade
x1
Visual perception
x2
Cubes
x3
Lozenges
x4
Paragraph comprehension
x5
Sentence completion
x6
Word meaning
x7
Speeded addition
x8
Speeded counting of dots
x9
Speeded discrimination straight and curved capitals
Holzinger, K., and Swineford, F. (1939). A study in factor analysis: The stability of a bifactor solution. Supplementary Educational Monograph, no. 48. Chicago: University of Chicago Press.
Joreskog, K. G. (1969). A general approach to confirmatory maximum likelihood factor analysis. Psychometrika, 34, 183-202.
cfa