Mishara, Brian L.Baker, A. Harvey2011-01-252011-01-251978Mishara, Brian L & Baker, A. Harvey. (1978). Kinesthetic aftereffect scores are reliable. Applied Psychological Measurement, 2, 239-247. doi:10.1177/014662167800200206doi:10.1177/014662167800200206https://hdl.handle.net/11299/99278The validity of the Kinesthetic Aftereffect (KAE) as a measure of personality has been criticized because of KAE’s poor test-retest reliability. However. systematic bias effects render KAE retest sessions invalid and make test-retest reliability an inappropriate measure of KAE’s true reliability. Internal consistency calculations, a better estimate of KAE’s true reliability, have been flawed in the past. New analyses of internal consistency data from 10 samples using 2 different KAE procedures are presented. Internal consistency of KAE scores was found to be high (median .89 for 5 samples with Petrie’s procedure and median .59 for 5 samples with Weintraub’s procedure). Some increment in reliability can apparently be obtained by extending the number of trials in the Weintraub procedure.enKinesthetic aftereffect scores are reliableArticle