FEUCAT Abstract Reasoning — Perceptual Speed & AccuracyCheat Sheet
One-page cheat sheet for FEUCAT Abstract Reasoning — Perceptual Speed & Accuracy. Every formula, definition, and key fact you need for this chapter, condensed to a single printable page. Designed for the final review session before the FEUCAT 2026.
Exam context
For the Far Eastern University College Admission Test, Far Eastern University tests Abstract Reasoning under a "Core" label, with Perceptual Speed & Accuracy in the 3rd slot across 5 chapters. FEUCAT candidates must clear the Competitive overall score cut on the 2026 paper, which draws about a meaningful share of Abstract Reasoning questions. Date to watch: Q3–Q4 2026.
Perceptual Speed & Accuracy - Cheat sheet
Your last-minute revision companion for mastering speed and accuracy tests in Abstract Reasoning exams
Sections
Section Title
Test Format & Structure
Important Facts
- Tests routine clerical task abilities
- Predicts success in filing, coding, and data entry
- Measures hand-eye coordination skills
- Critical for secretarial, administrative, and technical jobs
- Time pressure is the main challenge
- Accuracy is more important than speed initially
Key Definitions
Term
Perceptual Speed & Accuracy
Example
Identifying AB from list: aA, aB, Ba, BA, Bb
Definition
Test measuring ability to compare and mark written lists quickly and accurately under time pressure
Term
Underlined Combination
Example
If 'B7' is underlined, mark B7 not 7B
Definition
The specific letter/number sequence that must be found and marked on the answer sheet
Term
Combination Types
Example
AB (letters), 47 (numbers), A7 (mixed)
Definition
Letters only, numbers only, or mixed alphanumeric sequences
Section Title
Common Traps & Distinctions
Important Facts
- Uppercase vs lowercase: A, a, B, b are all different
- Letter order matters: AB ≠ BA
- Number order matters: 47 ≠ 74
- Mixed sequences: A7 ≠ 7A
- Watch for O vs 0, I vs 1, l vs 1
- Double letters: AA ≠ Aa ≠ aA ≠ aa
Key Definitions
Term
Case Sensitivity
Example
A ≠ a, B ≠ b
Definition
Uppercase and lowercase letters are different items
Term
Order Sensitivity
Example
AB ≠ BA, 47 ≠ 74
Definition
Sequence of characters matters completely
Term
Character Substitution
Example
0 (zero) vs O (letter), 1 (one) vs I (letter)
Definition
Similar-looking characters that are actually different
Diagrams To Know
- Grid format with rows A, B, C and columns with combinations
- Answer sheet marking format
- Time allocation visual guide
Section Title
Strategic Approaches
Important Facts
- Accuracy first, then build speed through practice
- Use systematic scanning patterns
- Double-check when unsure
- Skip difficult items and return later
- Mark clearly and completely
- Don't second-guess obvious matches
Key Definitions
Term
Scanning Pattern
Example
Check each combination in sequence rather than jumping around
Definition
Systematic left-to-right, top-to-bottom visual search method
Term
Character-by-Character Method
Example
For AB: check A matches, then check B matches
Definition
Compare each letter/number individually before confirming match
Must Remember
- Accuracy is MORE important than speed - wrong answers lose points
- Case matters: A ≠ a, B ≠ b in all combinations
- Order matters: AB ≠ BA, 47 ≠ 74 completely different
- Watch for O vs 0, I vs 1 character substitutions
- Use systematic left-to-right scanning pattern
- Mark clearly and completely on answer sheet
- Skip difficult items and return if time allows
- Practice builds both speed AND accuracy together
- Double-check when characters look similar
- Time pressure is the main challenge to overcome
Last Minute Tips
- Do 5 practice items slowly to calibrate your eye before starting
- If you see double letters (AA, BB), check if both are same case
- When scanning, use your finger to track position and avoid losing place
- For mixed alphanumeric, check letters first then numbers
- If running out of time, focus on single-character differences first
Comparison Tables
Rows
Values
- O vs 0
- Zero has slash, letter O is round
Property
Letters vs Numbers
Values
- I vs 1
- Number 1 may have serif, letter I has horizontal lines
Property
Letters vs Numbers
Values
- B vs b
- Size and shape completely different
Property
Case Variations
Values
- AB vs BA
- First letter determines primary position
Property
Order Variations
Columns
- Character Type
- Easy to Confuse
- Key Difference
Table Title
Common Character Confusions
Rows
Values
- Accuracy
- Take time to understand format
Property
Beginning
Values
- Building Speed
- Maintain accuracy while increasing pace
Property
Middle
Values
- Strategic Completion
- Focus on easier items first
Property
Final Minutes
Columns
- Phase
- Focus
- Strategy
Table Title
Speed vs Accuracy Balance
Ready to practise for the FEUCAT 2026?
Super Tutor's AI review plan adapts to your weak areas and builds a weekly practice schedule around your target FEUCAT exam date.