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Personality Assessment. What is Personality? Aiken (2003) defines personality as “a composite of cognitive abilities, interests, attitudes, temperament,

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Presentation on theme: "Personality Assessment. What is Personality? Aiken (2003) defines personality as “a composite of cognitive abilities, interests, attitudes, temperament,"— Presentation transcript:

1 Personality Assessment

2 What is Personality? Aiken (2003) defines personality as “a composite of cognitive abilities, interests, attitudes, temperament, and other individual differences in thoughts, feelings, and behaviors.”

3 Important Definitions:

4 Factor analysis identifies the number of traits underlying a set of items on an inventory. Example: NEO.

5 Purposes

6 Two Major Divisions:

7 Test Construction Strategies:

8 Test Construction Strategies

9 NEO-PI Series  Based on the “Big Five” Model (Neuroticism, Extraversion, Openness, Agreeableness, & Conscientiousness): all descriptions of personality can be placed in one of these five categories.  Norm-referenced test: an examinee’s scores are compared to the standardization group and expressed as T- scores (M = 50, SD = 10).

10 Big-Five

11 Big-Five

12 MBTI  Based on Carl Jung’s theory of personality.  Examinees are assessed on four dichotomous dimensions, resulting in 16 code-types.

13 MBTI: 4 bipolar dimensions Extroversion....... Introversion Sensation............ iNtuition Thinking.............. Feeling Judging............ Perceiving

14 Problems with MBTI 

15 MMPI/MMPI-2

16 Examples of MMPI-2 Scales  Depression.  Psychopathic deviate.  Paranoia.  Schizophrenia.  Hypomania.  Social Introversion.  Health Concerns.  Cynicism.  Type A.  Family Problems.  Ego Strength.  College Maladjustment.  Marital Distress Scale.  Self-Alienation.  Somatic Complaints.  Need for Affection.  Dominance.  Addiction Potential Scale.

17 Special Applications:

18 Response Sets: responding to the structure, rather than the content, of test items  Social Desirability.  Faking Good or Bad.  “Yea” Saying (acquiescence).  Constant Errors: selecting the same response over and over.  Central Tendency Error: tendency to respond in the middle of a rating system.

19 Projective Techniques

20 Examples:  Word Associations.  Sentence Completions.  Draw-A-Person Test.  Rorschach Inkblot Test.  Thematic Apperception Test.  Play materials with children.

21 Projective Techniques


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