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Projective Assessment

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Dream Analysis. Projective Hypothesis 'personal interpretations of ambiguous ... Theoretical Foundation. Ego Psychology (Murray, Bellak, etc. ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Projective Assessment


1
Projective Assessment
  • Is it Still Appropriate in 2004?

2
Projective and Expressive Techniques
  • Standards
  • Projective Hypothesis
  • Theoretical Foundation
  • Types of Techniques
  • Examples
  • The Paradox of Projective Techniques
  • Evaluation of Projective Techniques
  • Film

3
Types of Projective Techniques
  • Thematic-
  • Blacky, Roberts, Michigan Picture Test, CAST,
  • Rorschach
  • Drawings-
  • HTP, DAP, KFD, etc.
  • Sentence and Story Completion-
  • Rotter, High School Form, Madeline Thomas,
    Desperate Fables, Guess Why, etc.
  • Free Association
  • Dream Analysis

4
Projective Hypothesis
  • personal interpretations of ambiguous
  • stimuli must necessarily reflect the
  • unconscious needs, motives, and conflicts
  • of the examinee
  • (Gregory, 1996, p.511as cited in Merrell, 2003,
    p. 184 )

5
The Paradox of Projective Techniques
  • Approach has been criticized for over 40 years as
    being an unreliable and invalid approach
    (Anastasi, 1982 and others)
  • Recent studies (Wilson Reschly, 1996) indicate
    such techniques among most widely used
    assessment methods.
  • the rate of scientific progress in clinical
    psychology might well be measured by the speed
    and thoroughness with which it gets over the
    Rorschach (Jensen, 1965)

6
Popularity
7
The Case For and Against the Use of Projective
Techniques
  • For
  • Long history of use that clinicians cling to.
  • A tendency toward illusionary validation.
  • Against
  • Lack of empirical support for projective
    hypothesis.
  • Lack of technical adequacy.

8
Projective AssessmentTheoretical Foundation
  • Ego Psychology (Murray, Bellak, etc.)
  • Attempts to identify the conscious and
    unconscious factors which affect the
    psychological functioning of individuals.
  • Apperceptive Distortions
  • Apperception is an organisms meaningful
  • interpretation of perception. If there is
  • disagreement on the nature of the
  • apperception, then apperceptive distortions
  • must be occurring.

9
Forms of Apperceptive Distortions
  • Simple Projection-examples
  • The lawnmower
  • Late for work
  • Sensitization-more sensitive perception of
    existing stimuli
  • Late for work
  • Autistic Perception-compensatory fantasy of wish
    fulfillment
  • Hunger
  • Externalization-directly relates the perception
    to self
  • The violin

10
Projective Pictures1
11
2
12
3
13
4 Purple Suit
14
5
15
Projective Techniques
  • Based on the belief that the unconscious mind
    contains the roots of personality.
  • Based on a psychoanalytic view of personality
  • Basic approach-provide neutral and
    non-threatening stimuli to client and then ask
    him or her to interpret ambiguous pictures, fill
    in the blanks, make associations, tell stories,
    etc.

16
Evaluation of Projective Techniques
  • Results of research suggest extreme caution in
    interpreting results.
  • Such techniques can be useful, but the results
    from their use should be used to confirm other
    data, never used as sole assessment approach.

17
Projective Techniques
  • Main Feature Ambiguous stimuli.
  • Main Goal Assess unconscious processes.
  • Projective Hypothesis respondents project
    aspects of their personalities in the process of
    disambiguating unstructured test stimuli.

18
Sources
  • Bellak, L. (1993). The T.A.T., C.A.T., and S.A.T.
    Boston Allyn Bacon.
  • Knoff, H.M. (1986). The assessment of child and
    adolescent personality. New York Guilford.
  • Merrell, K. W. (2003). Behavioral, social, and
    emotional assessment of children and adolescents.
    Mahwah, NJ Lawrence Earlbaum.
  • Internet
  • http//.apa.org/ed/hssociperson.html,
    wysiwyg//23http//allpsych.com/personalitysynopsi
    s/rorschach.html, wysiwyg//20http//allpsych.com/
    personalitysynopsis/
  • projective.html
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