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Module 2

The document discusses personality assessment, highlighting the Barnum Effect, which leads people to believe vague statements apply to them, and the importance of validity, reliability, and generalizability in personality tests. It outlines various types of personality tests, including self-report and projective tests, and emphasizes ethical considerations and biases in testing. Additionally, it covers biological measures and methods for assessing personality, such as clinical interviews and behavioral assessments.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
11 views10 pages

Module 2

The document discusses personality assessment, highlighting the Barnum Effect, which leads people to believe vague statements apply to them, and the importance of validity, reliability, and generalizability in personality tests. It outlines various types of personality tests, including self-report and projective tests, and emphasizes ethical considerations and biases in testing. Additionally, it covers biological measures and methods for assessing personality, such as clinical interviews and behavioral assessments.

Uploaded by

hemansaptha7
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as DOCX, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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🧠 Quick Summary: Personality Assessment

📌 1. The Barnum Effect

People believe vague, general statements apply specifically to them.

Example: "You sometimes worry about the future."

Common in fake internet personality quizzes.

Leads to false belief in test accuracy.

2. What is Personality Assessment?

Measuring traits to understand people.

Used in:

Clinical psychology (diagnosis)

Schools (student behavior)

Workplaces (hiring)

Research (correlation studies)

3. Famous Personality Tests

Tes
Use
t

M
MP Clinical diagnosis (mental health, also jobs)
I

CPI Non-clinical people (normal traits)

HPI Used in employee selection (by companies)

✔️4. What Makes a Good Personality Test?


✅ Validity – Does it measure what it says?

Types of Validity:

Type Meaning Example

Face Looks like it A depression test asks about sadness


Type Meaning Example

measures the trait

Constru Actually measures


Empathy test matches empathy theory
ct the concept

Criterio Predicts real-world Professors score higher on deep thinking


n outcome test than factory workers

✅ Reliability – Is it consistent?

Types of Reliability:

Type Meaning Example

Tempora
Consistent over time Same score in 2 weeks
l

Items within test


Internal Questions on anxiety give similar results
match

Interrate
Judges agree Two teachers rate student similarly
r

✅ Generalizability – Works in different contexts?

Should work for:

Different ages, cultures

Different settings (school, work)

Cross-cultural fairness is very important.

⚖️5. Ethical Issues in Personality Testing


Informed Consent – People must know the purpose.

Confidentiality – Keep results private.

Valid & Reliable Tests – Must be scientifically sound.

Avoid Discrimination – Tests shouldn’t favor certain groups.

Respect Diversity – Fair for all cultures and people.

📚 Misuse Example:
In history, scientists like Broca misused tests to claim racial/gender superiority. This was
scientific racism, later criticized by Stephen Jay Gould.
⚠️6. Biases in Personality Testing
Bias
What it means Example
Type

Test doesn’t fit all Assertiveness test made for Westerners


Ethnic
cultures may misjudge Asians

Leadership = masculine, empathy =


Gender Reinforces stereotypes
feminine

Respon Saying “I’m honest” to look good even if


People fake answers
se not true

🎯 Objective Questions (MCQs)

What is the Barnum effect?


A) Cultural bias in tests
B) Belief in vague personality descriptions ✅
C) Random test errors
D) Scientific personality theory

Which test is mainly used in clinical psychology?


A) HPI
B) CPI
C) MMPI ✅
D) MBTI

What does construct validity check?


A) If test seems valid
B) If test matches theory ✅
C) If test is biased
D) If scores are consistent

Which of these is NOT a type of reliability?


A) Face reliability ✅
B) Interrater reliability
C) Internal consistency
D) Temporal consistency

Which bias happens when people try to look good on tests?


A) Ethnic bias
B) Gender bias
C) Response bias ✅
D) Cultural bias

Which type of validity checks if a test predicts real-world behavior?


A) Face
B) Construct
C) Criterion ✅
D) Internal
HPI is most useful for:
A) Therapy
B) Job selection ✅
C) School testing
D) Relationship counseling

Ethical personality testing should include all EXCEPT:


A) Confidentiality
B) Stereotyping ✅
C) Informed consent
D) Cultural fairness

Use this trick to remember VRC-GE:


V – Validity (Face, Construct, Criterion)

R – Reliability (Temporal, Internal, Interrater)

C – Cultural fairness

G – Generalizability

E – Ethics

🧠 Quick Summary: Personality Assessment


Methods
🔹 1. Types of Personality Tests

Personality tests are broadly classified into two types:

Type Description Example

You answer about


Self-Report Tests MMPI, NEO-PI, Q-Sort
yourself

Performance-Based / You respond to Rorschach, TAT, Word


Projective Tests ambiguous stimuli Association

✏️2. Self-Report Tests


What are they?

Based on what you say about yourself

Use Likert scales, true/false, checklists, etc.


Quick, easy, objective but need validity checking

✅ Examples:

🔸 MMPI (Minnesota Multiphasic Personality Inventory)

500+ true/false questions

Measures psychopathology (e.g., depression, anxiety)

Revised as MMPI-2 (1989) and MMPI-2-RF (2008)

🔸 NEO-PI (by Costa & McCrae)

Measures the Big Five:


🧠 Openness
💬 Conscientiousness
😄 Extraversion
❤️Agreeableness
😬 Neuroticism

🔸 Q-Sort Test

Sort personality traits into piles (e.g., most like me → least like me)

More personalized than tick-box tests

Developed by William Stephenson

🔁 R vs Q Methodology
R-Methodology Q-Methodology

People (whole personality) are


Variables are correlated
compared

Measures average traits Measures individual uniqueness

Used in most tests (e.g.,


Used in Q-Sort, person-centered
MMPI)

🎭 3. Projective Tests (Freud’s idea)


What are they?

Use ambiguous stimuli to project unconscious thoughts

Subjective, low reliability but can uncover deep insights

✅ Examples:
🔸 Rorschach Inkblot Test

Inkblots shown, you say what you see

Interpretation based on what you see and how you describe it

Responses may reveal inner fears, desires, fantasies

🔸 TAT (Thematic Apperception Test)

Vague pictures → tell a story

Reveals motives, emotions, personality traits

Used for assessing achievement motivation (McClelland)

🔸 Word Association Test (by Jung)

You hear a word → say the first word that comes to mind

Delays or weird responses → unconscious conflicts (e.g., complexes)

🔸 Sentence Completion Test

Finish sentences like “I feel afraid when…”

Reveals thoughts, values, emotions

Example: Rotter Incomplete Sentence Blank (structured scoring)

📚 Summary Table of Methods


Test Type Method Key Use Example

Self-
MMPI Mental illness True/false items
Report

Self-
NEO-PI Big Five traits Likert scale
Report

Self-
Q-Sort Personalized sorting Cards with traits
Report

Projective Rorschach Unconscious content Inkblots

Motivation, Ambiguous
Projective TAT
relationships pictures

Projective WAT Hidden complexes Word replies

Projective Sentence Values & thoughts Fill-in sentences


Test Type Method Key Use Example

Completion

📝 MCQs: Practice Questions


Which test uses inkblots to assess personality?
A) MMPI
B) TAT
C) Rorschach ✅
D) NEO-PI

Which personality test uses 500+ true/false items?


A) MMPI ✅
B) TAT
C) Q-Sort
D) Sentence Completion Test

The Big Five are measured using:


A) MMPI
B) NEO-PI ✅
C) TAT
D) Rorschach

In Q-Sort, traits are:


A) Projected unconsciously
B) Ranked by significance ✅
C) Timed for speed
D) Written as sentences

Which method is most subjective and has low inter-rater reliability?


A) MMPI
B) NEO-PI
C) Projective tests ✅
D) Q-Sort

Thematic Apperception Test (TAT) asks participants to:


A) Choose traits
B) Draw pictures
C) Tell stories about vague images ✅
D) Solve puzzles

Which projective test was developed by Jung to uncover complexes?


A) TAT
B) Rorschach
C) WAT ✅
D) MMPI

Q-methodology is focused on:


A) Averaging variable traits
B) Person-centered analysis ✅
C) Biological testing
D) IQ scoring
🔍 Are Projective Tests Valid?
🧪 Mixed Evidence:

Used for 50+ years, but validity is debated.

Key issues:

Variable Validity: May predict some outcomes well (e.g. motivation) but not
others.

Different Scoring Systems: Multiple systems = different results. Reliability


depends on the system used.

✅ Positive Case:

TAT (achievement motive scoring by McClelland) can predict motivated behavior.

Example: People who write achievement-focused TAT stories tend to perform well in
competitive environments.

❌ General Limitations:

Rorschach scores don't consistently predict behavior.

Many TAT scoring methods lack consistent validity.

APA committee recommends: ❌ Not suitable for modern clinical training.

Clinical Interviews
📋 What it is:

Structured conversation with patient to assess:

Behavior

Emotions

Thought processes

Appearance, expressions, concerns

✅ Use:

Often paired with MMPI or other test results.

Provides subjective but deep insights.

👀 Behavioral Assessment
📌 What it is:

Observer watches a person’s actions in real settings.

More accurate if observer knows the person well.

✅ Clues considered:

Nervous gestures

Eye contact

Facial expressions

Behavior in interviews

🧬 Biological Measures in Personality


Assessment
Method Description Example/What It Tells

Brain activity Risk-taking = high reward center


fMRI / PET scans
images activity

Genes linked to serotonin →


Genetic markers DNA differences
mood traits

Hormone/neuro Low serotonin = impulsivity,


Neurochemicals
levels High cortisol = stress

Psychophysiologi Body’s automatic Sweating, heart rate = stress


cal reactions response

Left brain activity = happiness,


EEG / ERP Brain wave patterns
Right = sadness

📝 Objective Questions (MCQs)


Which of the following is a limitation of projective tests?
A) Expensive
B) Low inter-rater reliability ✅
C) Too short
D) Always clinical

Which test showed valid results when scoring for achievement motivation?
A) Rorschach
B) TAT ✅
C) NEO-PI
D) MMPI

Which of these is NOT a biological method of personality assessment?


A) fMRI
B) MMPI ✅
C) PET Scan
D) EEG

What does EEG measure?


A) Brain blood flow
B) Hormone levels
C) Brain electrical activity ✅
D) Genetic variation

Which method involves observing behavior in a natural or interview setting?


A) fMRI
B) Clinical interview ✅
C) Sentence Completion Test
D) Q-sort

Genetic markers used in personality research are found through:


A) Eye scans
B) EEG
C) Genotyping ✅
D) Brain dissection

Which hormone is linked with stress in personality testing?


A) Dopamine
B) Oxytocin
C) Cortisol ✅
D) Adrenaline

Psychophysiological methods include all EXCEPT:


A) Skin conductance
B) Heart rate
C) PET scans ✅
D) Pupil dilation

✅ Final Revision Trick


Use the acronym "C-BIO" to remember:

C – Clinical Interviews

B – Behavioral Assessment

I – Imaging (fMRI, PET, EEG)

O – Other (Genetic, Neurochemical, Psychophysiological)

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