5 research outputs found
Predicting Basic Military Performance for Conscripts in the Norwegian Armed Forces
The Norwegian Armed Forces have made major changes to the enlistment and selection
system for conscripts in recent years. In this paper, the predictive validity of various selection
criteria for Military Performance is examined. The sample consisted of 3,276 conscripts, of
whom 18 percent were female. The predictors in the analysis were General Mental Ability,
Self-Perceived Physical Fitness, Social and Life Skills, Self-Perceived Military Fit, Tested
Physical Fitness and Officer-Rated Suitability. Military Performance was assessed by an
officer towards the end of the basic one-year military service. Bivariate correlations between
the predictors and Military Performance were studied for men and women separately. The
best predictors were Tested Physical Fitness for men and Officer-Rated Suitability for
women. A step-wise hierarchical moderated multiple regression analysis was conducted. A
small, but significant part of the variance was explained by the model. Both self-reported
variables and other predictors made a small, but significant contribution to improving the
model. The results indicated that the two-step selection process was valid for predicting
military performance for both men and women
Domain representations of spaces of compact subsets
Compactness is a central concept in topology, its usefulness is in allowing to treat spaces as 'finite' in some sense. This has particular value for computability. We construct in the paper a domain representation of the space of all compact subspaces of an already domain represented space. This is done by using the Plotkin power domain