Download presentation
Presentation is loading. Please wait.
2
What Do We Measure? Intelligence Achievement Personality Symptoms Memory Vocational match Perception Social skills Stress Coping Etc, etc etc. Can psychologists measure everything?
3
Why Is Assessment Important? It can drastically change someone’s life Diagnosis of a learning disability Admittance to a hospital Diagnosis of a disorder w/ stigma Decline offer of employment Custody of children
4
Creating Confident Conclusions Convergence between sources Reliability Inter-rater Test-retest Internal consistency
5
Creating Confident Conclusions Validity - assessing what we intend to assess Concurrent - other current measures Predictive - future events Content - covers all content Face validity - appearance
7
What are some ways to gather information?
8
How Do We Gather Info? Interviews Self-report tests IQ tests* Neuropsych tests Projective tests Behavioral Assessment Biological tests*
9
Interviews Structured Semi-structured Unstructured
10
Structured Interviews PRO Precise Consistent Decrease defensiveness or judging Accurate Exhaustive CON Length/time Irrelevance
11
Unstructured Interviews PRO Use own words Adaptive Good for “undiagnosable” issues CON Unreliable Subjective Not for research Clinician info-seeking bias
12
Self-report Questionnaires Individuals read questions & select most appropriate answer Why use? Quick & easy Norms & scoring Empirically supported Track change Client comfort Quick and easy for research
13
Self-Report Questionnaires When are they bad? Language problems Reading problems Can be long (e.g. MMPI-2 = 567 items) Faking or Response Bias
14
The Kansas Marital Satisfaction Scale How satisfied are you with your marriage? How satisfied are you with your husband/wife as a spouse? How satisfied are you with your relationship with your husband/wife? Rated on a 7 point Likert scale from 1 (extremely dissatisfied) to 7 (extremely satisfied)
15
Neuropsychological Assessment Used to measure brain (dys)function Often used for: Testing after brain injuries Memory concerns Dementia and other cognitive declines
16
Neuropsychological Tests Typically a battery measure different skills/elements E.g. memory, language, sensory-motor integration, perception, motor skills Conclusions based on patterns
17
Behavioral Assessment Behavioral observations = observing people in a “natural” environment Role-playing = observing people in an imagined situation Why use behavioral assessment?
18
Why Use? Lie about their usual behavior Behavior may not apply to a therapy situation Natural environment Practice and observe rare behaviors
19
Why Not Use? Social desirability/undesirability Time commitment E.g. school observations Role-played behavior may not carry-over outside therapy
20
Projective Tests Individuals respond to vague stimuli inkblots Pictures of events Colors Pictures of hands Open-ended sentences Clients “project” their experiences/disorder/personality
21
Rorschach Inkblot Test First released in 1921 Comprehensive System (1970s) Results scored on 100+ characteristics Parts vs. whole Reactions unusual vs. typical Use of white space vs. black space Does the tester see the reaction?
22
General Inkblot Instructions 1. What do you see here? 2. Do you see anything else? 3. Will you please show me where you see that?
23
Criticisms of Rorschach 1. Poor test-retest reliability 2. Questionable ability to detect pathology 3. Many people score as abnormal 4. Poor incremental validity 5. Few norms for ethnic minorities
24
I need to collect data on Depression levels from 500 undergraduate students enrolled in Introductory Psychology
26
I suspect Aaron might be having hallucinations, but he hasn’t disclosed them and he seems like he’s going to get very angry and defensive if I bring the subject up…
27
Finding Appropriate Tests
Similar presentations
© 2025 SlidePlayer.com. Inc.
All rights reserved.