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PSYCH 105 CHAPTER 12 PT 5

Personality Assessment

  • Personality scales and self ratings

  • Interview data

  • Reports/ratings by other people

  • Behavioural assessment

  • Physiological measures

  • Responses on Projective tests

Reliability and Validity

  • Reliability: the consistency of a measure

    • You should score similarly on a personality test every time you take it

    • Test-retest reliability - tests are consistent over, scores are stable

      • if tests are consistent, that is high test retest reliability

    • Interjudge reliability - level of agreement among observers

  • Validity: the accuracy of a measure, as assessed by the degree to which you are actually measuring what you think you are measuring

Personality Assessment

  • Interviews

    • A structured set of standardized questions

    • Note other behaviours - appearance, speech patterns, etc

    • Drawbacks:

      • Characteristic of interviewer can affect answers

      • Depend on co-operation and honesty of interviewee

  • Behavioural Assessment

    • Need explicit coding system

    • aim is not to solely describe behaviour

    • specific behaviour, frequency, specific situations, under what conditons

  • Remote Behaviour Sampling

    • Sample behaviour at random times over a period of days, weeks, etc.

    • Allows for data collection of behaviour that may otherwise not be revealed

  • Personality Scales

    • Objective measures

    • use standard questions and agreed upon scoring key

    • Advantage

      • collect tons of data

    • Disadvantages

      • Validity of answers - are the answers true

      • Used to detect a ‘pattern’ in responses

      • Have to have analysis of validity of your own questions

  • Projective Tests

    • Presented with ambiguous stimuli, and ask people to interpret that stimuli

    • Interpretation = ‘projection’ of inner needs, feelings, ways of viewing the world

    • Two main tests

      • Rorshach Inkblots

      • Thematic Apperception Tests

Developing Personality Scales

  • Rational Approch: Based on idea of what the trait is

    • ask questions that are relevant to that trait

    • eg, NEOPI (Costa and McCrae)

  • Empirical Approach: Base our grouping on responses to differentquestions, and having patterns in those responses

    • MMPI -2

Theory and Assessment

  • Who uses what tools?

    • Psychodynamic = projective techniques

    • Humanistic = self report measures

    • Social cognitive = behavioural assessments

    • Biological = physiological measurement

    • Trait theorists = inventories (MMPI, NEO-PI)

MF

PSYCH 105 CHAPTER 12 PT 5

Personality Assessment

  • Personality scales and self ratings

  • Interview data

  • Reports/ratings by other people

  • Behavioural assessment

  • Physiological measures

  • Responses on Projective tests

Reliability and Validity

  • Reliability: the consistency of a measure

    • You should score similarly on a personality test every time you take it

    • Test-retest reliability - tests are consistent over, scores are stable

      • if tests are consistent, that is high test retest reliability

    • Interjudge reliability - level of agreement among observers

  • Validity: the accuracy of a measure, as assessed by the degree to which you are actually measuring what you think you are measuring

Personality Assessment

  • Interviews

    • A structured set of standardized questions

    • Note other behaviours - appearance, speech patterns, etc

    • Drawbacks:

      • Characteristic of interviewer can affect answers

      • Depend on co-operation and honesty of interviewee

  • Behavioural Assessment

    • Need explicit coding system

    • aim is not to solely describe behaviour

    • specific behaviour, frequency, specific situations, under what conditons

  • Remote Behaviour Sampling

    • Sample behaviour at random times over a period of days, weeks, etc.

    • Allows for data collection of behaviour that may otherwise not be revealed

  • Personality Scales

    • Objective measures

    • use standard questions and agreed upon scoring key

    • Advantage

      • collect tons of data

    • Disadvantages

      • Validity of answers - are the answers true

      • Used to detect a ‘pattern’ in responses

      • Have to have analysis of validity of your own questions

  • Projective Tests

    • Presented with ambiguous stimuli, and ask people to interpret that stimuli

    • Interpretation = ‘projection’ of inner needs, feelings, ways of viewing the world

    • Two main tests

      • Rorshach Inkblots

      • Thematic Apperception Tests

Developing Personality Scales

  • Rational Approch: Based on idea of what the trait is

    • ask questions that are relevant to that trait

    • eg, NEOPI (Costa and McCrae)

  • Empirical Approach: Base our grouping on responses to differentquestions, and having patterns in those responses

    • MMPI -2

Theory and Assessment

  • Who uses what tools?

    • Psychodynamic = projective techniques

    • Humanistic = self report measures

    • Social cognitive = behavioural assessments

    • Biological = physiological measurement

    • Trait theorists = inventories (MMPI, NEO-PI)

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