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Assessment Approaches

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Title: Assessment Approaches


1
Assessment Approaches
  • Steve Del Chiaro, PsyD.
  • San José State University 
  • PSYC 160

2
Assessment vs. Classification
  • Classification categorizes
  • Assessment may lead to
  • Determining a diagnosis
  • Determining a specific treatment
  • Determining impact of a treatment during course
    of therapy
  • Determining outcome of treatment
  • This all depends on our theory of pathology of
    course

3
Remember Assumptions Matter
  • Assumptions cover everything!
  • Assumption of causality dictate our
  • Assumptions of pathology
  • what counts as sick or problematic?
  • Assumptions of etiology
  • where does it come from?
  • Assumptions of assessment
  • how do we know what it is?
  • how do we measure it?
  • Assumptions of curative factors
  • how do we fix it?

4
Approaches to Assessment
  • Testing
  • One assessment
  • Variety of assessment devices (battery)
  • Interview
  • Structured, semi-structured, and unstructured
  • Observational Methods

5
When to Assess
  • Beginning of treatment
  • Determine choice of intervention or intervention
    strategy
  • End of Treatment
  • Determine whether intervention was effective
  • THROUGHOUT treatment
  • Determine if intervention is having impact

6
General Considerations
  • Assessment approaches
  • Should be consistent across the treatment
  • Should have impact on what is done
  • e.g. have bearing on intervention
  • Should attempt to measure variables of interest
  • Try to answer the Paul question
  • What treatment by whom, for what problem, etc.

7
Psychological Tests
  • Structured assessment process
  • Nomothetic tests
  • Large groups used to develop test
  • Normed tests
  • Some of these have been normed statistically
  • Normed standardized across population or
    populations
  • Assessed for psychometric properties
  • Look at individual with respect to group scores

8
Nomothetic Tests
  • Rapid Assessment Instruments (RAIs)
  • BDI, BAI, SCL, DAS, etc
  • Purpose get meaningful data quickly
  • Good for research
  • May miss key clinical issues
  • Not especially geared to client problems

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10
Projective Tests
  • Psychoanalytic tradition
  • Look for evidence of hidden unconscious problems
  • Cannot directly access unconscious
  • Allow patient/client/analysand to project own
    issues onto ambiguous stimulus materials

11
Rorschach (ink blot test)
  • Give unstructured or ambiguous stimuli to which
    the patient or client responds
  • This allows access to unconscious material
    attitudes, motivations behavior styles
  • Major problems with reliability and validity
  • Remember reliability and validity types
  • Typically used by psychoanalytic or psychodynamic
    therapists

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13
Rorschach inkblot
14
Thematic Apperception Test (TAT)
  • Show a story card
  • Ask the client what's going on in this picture?
  • Allows access to unconscious material

15
Thematic Apperception Test
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19
Drawing Tests
  • House Tree Person (John Buck)
  • Given to children
  • "Here I want you to draw as good a house as you
    can."
  • Do this for tree and person, too
  • House interpretations
  • Loosely based on research and on the symbolic
    meaning of the aspects of the house.
  • Exercise

20
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21
Critical Thinking Moment
  • What are the challenges with projective tests?
  • Why would we used them?
  • Are there arguments for using them?
  • What if they are not consistent with your
    paradigm/theory?

22
Objective Tests
  • Roots in empirical tradition
  • Objective measures utilize highly structured
    response formats
  • Consist of unambiguous stimulus items
  • Forced choice (e.g., true/false)
  • Likert scale ratings
  • Result in a quantitative score that can be
    compared with normative score data
  • Require minimal inference in scoring and
    interpretation

23
Objective Tests
  • Disadvantages
  • Items can clue to what is being measured
  • social desirability biases
  • faking
  • Forced-choice responses
  • Misinterpretation of items
  • Especially double negative phrases
  • Also with double barreled questions

24
Objective Tests
  • Minnesota Multiphasic Personality Inventory II
    (MMPI-II)
  • Most widely used objective test
  • Designed to screen patients for various
    psychological disorders
  • Most widely used in research
  • MMPI-II was re-normed
  • MMP-I was considered out dated

25
MMPI
  • Over 500 items
  • True/False responses
  • 2 parts of MMPI
  • Validity scales
  • Tell whether profile is accurate measure of taker
    whether taker answered honestly
  • 3 validity scales
  • Clinical scales
  • What test tells about how taker is doing
    clinically
  • 10 scales
  • Pattern is interpreted not one scale (1-0)

26
MMPI
  • Empirically derived test
  • AKA empirically keyed test
  • Developed by Hathaway and McKinley in 1942
  • Gave test to find out what responses match
    personality styles

27
Empirically Keyed test
  • Step 1 Generate items
  • Need a lot of items
  • Response format will be True/False
  • Step 2 Have two samples respond to items
  • A sample of depressed people
  • A sample of people that are not depressed

28
Empirically Keyed test
  • Step 3 Compare each groups responses to each
    item
  • Example
  • Building a measure of depression (MMPI Subscale)
  • Self-Assessment of Depression (SAD)

29
Empirically Keyed test
I am a happy person. 4 52 F
I often feel blue. 75 30 T
My eyes are too far apart. 8 10 --
Sometimes my hair hurts. 60 15 T
I sunburn easily. 25 31 --
I like the color green. 27 85 F
30
Empirically Keyed test
  • Step 4 Cross-Validate
  • Give the measure to two new samples of depressed
    and non-depressed people
  • Evaluate how well the scale differentiates the
    samples

31
Empirical Keying Approach
  • Advantages
  • No assumptions about capability to self-report
    behavior
  • Researchers can assess poorly defined constructs
  • Explicitly built to differentiate groups
  • Disadvantages
  • Test takers often dont like it
  • Tends to be long
  • Will make very general statements (may not be
    accurate)

32
MMPI
  • Look at pattern of responding
  • Look at clinical scales in context of validity
    scales
  • Look at each clinical scale in context of the
    rest of the scales
  • This is complex and requires very specific
    training

33
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35
Diagram Profile
  • 65
  • L F K 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0

36
MMPI
  • Advantages
  • No assumptions about capability to self-report
    behavior
  • Great for teasing out fakers and other invalid
    profiles
  • Enormous data base to compare results
  • Disadvantages
  • Historically overpathologized certain groups
  • Will make very general statements (may not apply)
  • Some clinicians find better use of that time used
    to take test

37
Psychological Tests
  • Idiographic assessment approaches
  • Examine changes for specific individual on
    assessment based on that person
  • Want to look at data for each individual
  • Remember single-case designs
  • example, Functional Analysis (Ch 9)

38
Idiographic Assessment
  • Want to know when, where, what it buys
  • Look at variables of interest (frequency,
    strength, duration)
  • Examine in different situations of interest
    (home, school, work, institution)
  • Self-report data (Self-Monitoring)
  • Subject to reactivity
  • Increases desirable and decreases undesirable

39
Clinical or Behavioral Interviewing
  • Assessment Interviews
  • Different contexts
  • Legal
  • Therapeutic
  • Others?

40
Clinical or Behavioral Interviewing
  • Attempt to get as much information from client as
    possible
  • Again, depends on what the question is, the
    purpose of the interview
  • Arrange this material in way that allows one to
    take action with client
  • Different theories yield different strategies

41
Interviewing
  • Key is to be able to do some intervention with
    the client
  • Need to look at variables such as ethnicity and
    gender
  • Important to enlist the clients help to do this

42
Interviewing
  • Rapport building
  • Make sure client understands the importance of
    the questions
  • Convey difference between assessment and actual
    treatment
  • Using open ended questions
  • Using silence

43
Interviewing
  • Essential questions that affect treatment
    considerations
  • Suicidal?
  • Homicidal?
  • Psychotic?

44
Interviewing Issues
  • How important is it to match the clients
    theoretical orientation with the therapists?
  • Data say not important, but it may be better if
  • Cant possibly match all clients to all
    orientations (too many cells for research)

45
Assessment Interview
  • Typically called intake
  • Assessment measures (gathering objective data)
  • What are they coming in for?
  • What attempts have they made in the past to deal
    with problems?

46
Assessment Interview
  • What are their strengths/weaknesses?
  • Harm to self or others?
  • Alcohol, drug, medication, medical conditions,
    health, nutrition, etc
  • Social support available
  • History/family history

47
Clinical Judgment Subjective and Objective
Approaches
  • Different opinions
  • Use statistics (particularly Bayesian Statistics)
    to determine course of treatment OR
  • Use judgment and experience to determine course

48
Actuarial, Quantitative, or Statistical Approach
  • Emphasizes objectivity and involves assigning
    scores to the various characteristics of patients
    and determining correlations between
    characteristics
  • e.g., In 85 of people with a broken arm, surgery
    is not needed, a cast will assist in the mending
    of the broken bone
  • e.g., Those depressed clients treated with CBT
    vs. nothing, 65 will improve depressed behaviors

49
Subjective, Clinical Approach and Heuristics
  • Emphasizes the application of judgment to the
    individual case
  • More subjective, experiential, and intuitive
  • e.g., This particular person, with this broken
    arm, should receive surgery because some other
    factor participates in the decision
  • This particular depressed client will not respond
    to CBT for these reasons

50
Clinical Judgment Subjective and Objective
  • Each side has advantages and disadvantages
  • Subjective, clinical approach valuable
  • Information is needed about areas or events for
    which no adequate tests are available and/or no
    statistical equations have been developed
  • Rare, unusual events of a highly individualized
    nature are to be predicted or judged
  • Clinical approach problems
  • Use heuristics that bias what we attend to
    (salience, recency, familiarity)

51
Clinical Judgment Subjective and Objective
  • Actuarial approach is valuable when
  • Outcome to be predicted is objective and specific
  • Outcomes for large, heterogeneous samples are
    involved, interest in the individual case is
    minimal
  • Reason to be particularly concerned about human
    judgmental error or bias
  • Actuarial approach problems
  • Lose individual in assessment or decision process

52
Clinical Judgment Subjective and Objective
  • Bottom line is can do both
  • Need to be very aware when choosing the strategy
  • Need to know that clinical, subjective approach
    has many problems
  • Need to keep in mind that statistical data may be
    very useful
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