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Projective Tests

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Title: Projective Tests


1
Projective Tests
  • William P. Wattles, Ph.D.
  • Francis Marion University

2
Ambiguous Stimuli
  • When there is no correct answer the
    individuals response may be driven by internal
    conflicts, motives, needs and perceptual press.

3
The Projective Hypothesis
  • Freud originated the idea of projection in 1911
  • Classical projection
  • Defense mechanism to attribute negative
    personality traits to others.
  • Not fared well in research

4
Projective testing
  • Disciples of projective testing are heavily
    invested in psychoanalytic theory and its
    postulation of unconscious aspects of
    personality.
  • Gregory, R. J. (2004). Psychological Testing
    history, principles, and applications. Boston
    Allyn and Bacon

5
Need for projectives
  • Access to peoples attitudes and traits is blocked
  • response factors
  • introspective limits.

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Projection
  • Generalized or assimilative projection
  • Individuals personality characteristics, needs,
    and life experiences influence their
    interpretation (apperception) of ambiguous
    stimuli.

8
Principal Advantages
  • Projective techniques allow the clinician toa.
    bypass conscious defenses
  • b. obtain access to unconscious information,
    such as conflicts, impulses, of which clients are
    not aware

9
Projective Drawings
  • Projective drawings are expressive techniques in
    that they suggest aspects of the person while he
    or she is performing some activity.

10
Drawings
  • To obtain an accurate view of a persons inner
    world, one must somehow circumvent unconscious
    defenses and conscious resistances.

11
Rorschach
  • Stimuli from the environment are organized by a
    persons specific needs, motives, and conflicts.

12
Popularity Versus Validity
  • TATControversy regarding reliability and
    validity is ongoing.
  • Rorschach Despite initial (and continuing)
    popularity reviews have been quite critical
  • Drawings Their use declined in response to poor
    reviews regarding validityyet, drawing
    techniques are still ranked among the ten most
    frequently used tests.

13
Literature Review
  • Lilienfeld, S. O. , Wood, J. M. and Garb, H. N.
    (2000). The Scientific Status of Projective
    Techniques. Psychological Science in the Public
    Interest, 1, 27-66.

14
Anastasi
  • Projective techniques present a curious
    discrepancy between research and practice.
  • When evaluated as psychometric instruments, the
    majority make a poor showing.
  • Yet, their popularity in clinical use continues
    unabated

15
Aiken
  • Because of scoring problems, most projective
    techniques fail to meet conventional standards of
    reliability and validity.
  • Aiken, L. R. (2003). Psychological Testing and
    Measurement, 11th edition. Boston Allyn and
    Bacon.

16
Gregory
  • In general, attempts to validate the H-T-P as a
    personality measure have failed miserably
  • Indeed, the absence of standardized procedures
    is such that we should rightly regard the TAT as
    a method not a test.
  • the Rorschach has not yet gained the status of
    scientific respectability enjoyed by many other
    personality tests, and perhaps it never will.
  • Gregory, R. J. (2004). Psychological Testing
    history, principles, and applications. Boston
    Allyn and Bacon

17
The Projective Paradox
  • The evidence is quite clear that personality
    inferences drawn from projective tests are often
    wrong. In the face of negative validation
    findings, the enduring practitioner acceptance of
    the tests constitutes the projective paradox.
  • Gregory, R. J. (2004). Psychological Testing
    history, principles, and applications. Boston
    Allyn and Bacon

18
The Projective Paradox
  • Illusory Validation
  • Clinicians may notice confirming instances and
    ignore contradictions

19
The Projective Paradox
  • Often may be used only for hypothesis generation.

20
Most frequently used tests
  • WAIS
  • MMPI
  • Sentence completion
  • TAT
  • Rorschach
  • Bender-Gestalt
  • Projective Drawings

21
Current Training
  • 49 of directors of clinical psychology graduate
    programs and 65 of the directors of clinical
    internships believe that formal training in
    projectives is important.

22
Current Practitioners
  • 82 of clinical psychologists administer the
    Rorschach at least occasionally and 43 report
    frequently or always using it.
  • A recent estimate place the number of Rorschachs
    administered each year at 6 million.

23
Projective techniques
  • Present respondents with an ambiguous stimulus
    and ask them to disambiguate it.

24
Rorschach
  • Has the distinction of being the most cherished
    and the most reviled of all psychological
    assessment instruments.

25
Interpretive Systems
  • Developed in the 20s
  • Content
  • Location
  • Determinents
  • Color
  • Movement
  • shading
  • Exner System released in 1974 suggested a
    scientific basis for the Rorschach.

26
Exner
  • Exner norms are unrepresentative of the U. S.
    population and tend to make normal adults and
    children appear maladjusted.

27
File Drawer Problem
  • Studies with negative results less likely to be
    accepted for publication (publication bias)
  • Also less like to be submitted.

28
Low base rate
  • Studies tend to be based on differentiating two
    equally sized groups.
  • In real life base rates may be very low.

29
Popularity of Rorschach
  • Part of the allure is its mystery
  • How could something as simple as 10 inkblots
    reveal inner personality
  • X rays of the mind
  • A deep well with rich and valuable information.
  • Intuition and clinical lore.

30
Face Validity and Test Utility
  • Can a test high in face validity be useful in a
    psychological evaluation?
  • What does it add to the interview data?

31
Criticisms of Projectives
  • Overly complex scoring systems
  • Questionable norms
  • Subjectivity of scoring
  • Poor predictive validity
  • Inadequate validity
  • Extensive time required to learn
  • Heavy reliance on psychoanalytic theory
  • Objective tests more time and cost effective

32
TAT
  • TAT produces personal data that theoretically
    bypass a subjects conscious resistances.

33
Thematic Apperception Test (TAT)
  • Morgan Murray 1935.Elicit fantasy material
    from patients in psychoanalysis.31 cards

34
TAT administration
  • A set of 20 cards is recommended but the number
    may vary based on length of stories
  • Some cards are suggested for use with adult
    males, adult females, or both.
  • Some are best used with children however, all
    cards may be administered to any subject.

35
IAT
  • Kim (2001) showed that even participants who were
    fully informed about the functioning of the IAT
    were not able to fake positive implicit attitudes
    toward Blacks.

36
IAT
  • It is further assumed that implicit measures are
    not subject to conscious control, and, thus,
    response factors and introspective limits
    (Greenwald et al., 2002) do not diminish their
    validity.

37
  • Proponents of projective techniques maintain that
    inventories and other self-report instruments
    fail to get at deeper layers of personality
    because people either are not aware of their
    characteristics and problems or will not reveal
    them.

38
Humility
  • How good a job of understanding psychological
    functioning do we do?

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The End
45
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46
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