Rectangular cuboid shapes are often used for boxes, cupboards, rooms, buildings, containers, cabinets, books, sturdy computer chassis, printing devices, electronic calling touchscreen devices, washing and drying machines, etc. They are among those solids that can
tessellate three-dimensional space. The shape is fairly versatile in being able to contain multiple smaller rectangular cuboids, e.g.
sugar cubes in a box, boxes in a cupboard, cupboards in a room, and rooms in a building. American psychologist
Joy Paul Guilford modelled a three-dimensional 5×4×6 cube, called "Guilford's cube", displaying 120 possible ways of thinking apropos of the intelligence structure. Each dimension represents the mental factors, which includes five operations (
cognition,
memory,
convergent thinking,
divergent thinking, and
evaluation); four contents (figural, symbolic,
semantic, and
behavioral); and six products (units, classes, relations, systems, transformations, and implications). An extension into a 5×5×6 cube by adding two-factor contents, which replace figural with visual and auditory, yielding 150 possible ways. == Related polyhedra ==