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Published byChristina Hardy Modified over 9 years ago
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MEASURING PERSONALITY
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MANY METHODS ALL HAVE STRENGTHS & WEAKNESSES Observation Interview Objective Tests Projective Tests
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BEHAVIORAL OBSERVATIONS Record certain “actions” Rating scales Situational testing- simulations (test how someone would act in a given situation)
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INTERVIEW Unstructured=led by responses-informal Structured=planned series of questions Computerized Diagnostic=look for symptoms/feelings
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Pre-conceptions of interviewer (house- wife, college student, ski bum) People try to deceive Halo effect =generalize a favorable /unfavorable impression to unrelated details of personality Limitations of Interview
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OBJECTIVE TESTS= PERSONALITY QUESTIONNAIRES Paper & Pencil tests Questions & Scoring are standardized Reliable Valid
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MINNESOTA MULTIPHASIC PERSONALITY INVENTORY 567 TRUE OR FALSE ITEMS Everything tastes the same. There is something wrong with my mind. I enjoy animals. Whenever possible, I avoid being in a crowd. I have never done anything dangerous for the thrill of it. I daydream often. Someone has been trying to poison me.
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PROJECTIVE TESTS Each stimulus has no “specific” significance so meaning applied is a “projection” of the subject’s interests/conflicts Many tests
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DRAW A PERSON
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SENTENCE COMPLETION I am happiest when….. My mother….. If I could do anything I would… I get angry when…. People don’t understand why I….
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THEMATIC APPERCEPTION TEST (TAT) Henry Murray Vague pictures Subject tells “story” about what they see Before and after prompts
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RORSCHACH (INKBLOT TEST) 10 Ink blots Reflect inner feelings & conflicts Lowest validity among personality tests Culturally sensitive
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