They test all kinds of materials, including wood.
The cabinets for the speakers I'm using now are MDF and, because they were supposed to be a work in progress, I cut grooves and dados for the pieces to fit together, then used brad nails to hold the cabinets together while the wood glue dried. I use TiteBond II and it's one of the best for indoor use. The grooves and dados are very close, which adds rigidity, so any elasticity in the glue will be negligible. Since I hadn't decided that the crossovers were "done", I put terminal blocks on the rear for each band, so I wouldn't have to deal with threaded inserts, MDF failing from repeated screw removal and breaking any seals. About six months after I started using them, I heard a weird sound coming from one side, so I went to look at it. Being Winter, I found that the MDF had shrunk and it was then that I realized something- I had never glued the fronts onto the cabinet. I loaded the drivers when they were in my garage, carried them in and up the stairs of the house and never realized they could come off because they weren't simply inset or laid on the box. DOH!
I slapped the face into position and they still haven't been glued in.
The photos should show the dados and grooves- when they're this tight, it's sometimes called a 'piston fit'.
The screen shot is from where my head would be, at the listening position.