Lesson 12: Personality Assessment Methods

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53 Terms

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objective methods

Characteristically contain short-answer items for which the assessee’s task is to select one response from the two or more provided

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objective methods

Usually administered by paper-and-pencil means or by computer

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objective methods

The scoring is done according to set procedures involving little, if any, judgment on the part of the scorer

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objective methods

May include items written in a multiple-choice, true–false, or matching format.

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objective methods

The items can be answered quickly, allowing the administration of many items covering varied aspects of the trait or traits the test is designed to assess

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group and computerized

If the items on an objective test are well written, then they require little explanation; this makes them well suited for ____ administration

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objective ability test

determines the presence or absence of an ability

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objective personality test

provides information relevant to something about the testtaker

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objective, multiple-choice tests of ability

its scoring left little room for emotion, bias, or favoritism on the part of the test scorer

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objective personality tests

they typically contain no one correct answer

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objective ability tests

they typically contain one correct answer

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not objective

Testtakers’ self-reports of what they like or dislike, what they agree

or disagree with, what they do or do not do, and so forth

objective or not objective?

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objective methods

in this method, Some respondents respond in a manner that they believe will place them in the best or worst possible light (faking good or faking bad)

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objective

this term as applied to most personality tests may be best thought of as a shorthand description for a test format

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projective methods

A technique of personality assessment in which some judgment of the assessee’s personality is made on the basis of performance on a task that involves supplying some sort of structure to unstructured or incomplete stimuli

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projective hypothesis

an individual supplies structure to unstructured stimuli in a manner consistent with the individual’s own unique pattern of conscious and unconscious needs, fears, desires, impulses, conflicts, and ways of perceiving and responding.

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projective tests

they are indirect methods of personality assessment; assessees aren’t being directly asked to disclose information about themselves

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projective methods

in this method, the ability of examinees to fake is greatly minimized

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projective methods

Also minimized sometimes when using this method is the testtaker’s need for great proficiency in the English language

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projective methods

A major advantage of such measures is that they tap unconscious as well as conscious material

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projective tests

they were born in the spirit of rebellion against normative data and through attempts by personality researchers to break down the study of personality into the study of specific traits of varying strengths

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projective techniques

they were once the technique of choice for focusing on the individual from a purely clinical perspective—a perspective that examined the unique way an individual projects onto an ambiguous stimulus “his way of seeing life, his meanings, significances, patterns, and especially his feelings”

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inkblots, pictures, words, sounds, figure drawings

some projective methods

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hermann rorschach

developed the rorschach inkblot test

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rorschach inkblot test

What hermann rorschach called a “form interpretation test” using inkblots as the forms to be interpreted.

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rorschach inkblot test

Goldfield (1971) viewed it as an “unstructured interview”​

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rorschach inkblot test

Korchin and Schuldberg (1981) regard it as “less of a test” and more “an open and flexible arena for studying interpersonal transactions”​

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thematic apperception test

Originally designed as an aid to eliciting fantasy material from patients in psychoanalysis

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thematic apperception test

The client’s task is to tell what events led up to the scene in the picture, what is happening at that moment, and what the outcome will be

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thematic apperception test

If the blank card is administered, examinees are instructed to imagine that there is a picture on the card and then proceed to tell a story about it.

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rorschach inkblot test

Included in the box:

10 cards​

5 achromatic​

2 black-and-white-and-red​

3 multicolored

No test manual​

No administration instructions​

No scoring​

No interpretation instructions

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thematic apperception test

The stimulus materials consisted, as they do today, of 31 cards, one of which is blank.

The 30 picture cards, all black-and-white, contain a variety of scenes designed to present the testtaker with “certain classical human situations”

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thematic apperception test

Examiners tend to take liberties with various elements pertaining to the administration, scoring, and interpretation of the this test

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thematic apperception test

Some of the cards are suggested for use with adult males, adult females, or both, and some are suggested for use with children.​

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thematic apperception test

The administering clinician selects the cards that are believed likely to elicit responses pertinent to the objective of the testing.​

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word association tests

A semistructured, individually administered, projective technique of personality assessment that involves the presentation of a list of stimulus words, to each of which an assessee responds verbally or in writing with whatever comes immediately to mind first upon first exposure to the stimulus word.

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sentence completion tests

a task in which the assessee is asked to finish an incomplete sentence or phrase.

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bf skinner

A behaviorist whose name has seldom been uttered in the same sentence as the term projective test by any contemporary psychologist

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verbal simulator

The device was something “like auditory inkblots”

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verbal simulator

Skinner created a series of recorded sounds much like muffled, spoken vowels, to which people would be instructed to associate.

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figure drawings

A projective method of personality assessment whereby the assessee produces a drawing that is analyzed on the basis of its content and related variables

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draw-a-person test

the examinee is given a pencil and a blank sheet of 8½x11” white paper and told to draw a person

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house-tree-person test

the testtaker’s task is to draw a picture of a house, a tree, and a person

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kinetic family drawing

valuable in learning about the examinee in relation to her or his family

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behavior

it is the focus of assessment in behavioral assessment—not traits, states, or other constructs presumed to be present in various strengths—just behavior.

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sign approach

test responses are deemed to be signs or clues to underlying personality or ability

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sample approach

Emitted behavior is viewed not as a sign of something but rather as a sample to be interpreted in its own right

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behavioral observation and rating scales

Involves watching the activities of targeted clients or research subjects and, typically, maintaining some kind of record of those activities.

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self-monitoring

The act of systematically observing and recording aspects of one’s own behavior and/or events related to that behavior.

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analogue studies

A research investigation in which one or more variables are similar or analogous to the real variable that the investigator wishes to examine.

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situational performance measures

A procedure that allows for observation and evaluation of an individual under a standard set of circumstances.

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role play

Acting an improvised or partially improvised part in a simulated situation, can be used in teaching, therapy, and assessment

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psychophysiological methods

Involves recording and quantifying various physiological responses in controlled conditions using specialized equipment