Title: Personality Assessment
1Personality Assessment
2Goals
- Understand the roles of personality assessment
- Understand the main ways of assessing personality
that have been proposed/developed, with strengths
and weaknesses - Understand unique challenges to personality
assessment - Understand how to evaluate the quality of a
personality assessment - Insight into two or three of the most popular
personality tests strengths/weaknesses
3Role of Personality Assessment
- Where is personality assessment done?
- Discuss
- HR
- I/O Consultants
- Testing companies (e.g., PAR, Pearson)
- Clinical practice
- Dating
4Role of Personality Assessment
- Where is personality assessment done?
- Formal/Professional Venues
- Empirical Research
- Everyday life
5Types of Personality Assessment
- What types of personality assessment are you
familiar with? - If we wanted to know if one person is more
extraverted than another, how could we find out? - Discuss
6Types of Personality Assessment
- Clues to Personality (Kinds of data)
- Why clue?
- Each method has advantages disadvantages
- Self-report data
- Examples?
- Pros/cons?
7BFI
Neuroticism
Note Images borrowed from http//mgto.org/persona
lity-in-class-discussing-traits-through-examples/
8BFI
Trait Mean SD 68 range
Neuroticism 2.8 .8 2.0 - 3.6
Extraversion 3.5 .7 2.8 4.2
Openness 3.3 .7 2.6 4.0
Agreeableness 4.0 .6 3.4 4.6
Conscientiousness 3.7 .7 3.0 4.4
Neuroticism
Note Normative data are from 255 in Fall 2009, N
38
9Personality Research MethodsPersonality
Assessment - Methods
- 2. Informant data
- Examples
- Pros/cons
10(Nearly) First impression ratingsof row-mates
- Neuroticism (sensitive/nervous vs. secure/confide
nt). The tendency to experience unpleasant
emotions easily, such as anger, anxiety,
depression, and vulnerability. Neuroticism also
refers to the degree of emotional liveliness. - Extraversion (outgoing/energetic vs. solitary/res
erved). Energy, positive emotions, surgency,
assertiveness, sociability and the tendency to
seek stimulation in the company of others, and
talkativeness. - Openness to experience (inventive/curious vs. con
sistent/cautious). Appreciation for art, emotion,
adventure, unusual ideas, curiosity, and variety
of experience. Openness reflects the degree of
intellectual curiosity, creativity and a
preference for novelty and variety a person has.
It is also described as the extent to which a
person is imaginative or independent, and depicts
a personal preference for a variety of activities
over a strict routine. - Agreeableness (friendly/compassionate vs. analyti
cal/detached). A tendency to be compassionate and
cooperative rather than suspicious and antagonisti
c towards others. It is also a measure of one's
trusting and helpful nature, and whether a person
is generally well tempered or not. - Conscientiousness (efficient/organized vs. easy-g
oing/careless). A tendency to be organized and
dependable, show self-discipline, act dutifully,
aim for achievement, and prefer planned rather
than spontaneous behavior.
11Personality Research MethodsPersonality
Assessment - Methods
- 4. Life Outcomes
- Examples
- Pros/cons
12Personality Research MethodsPersonality
Assessment - Methods
- 3. Behavioral data
- Natural B data (eg, ESM, EAR, ARRB)
- Laboratory B data (in-lab obs, exp, pro, pro)
- Pros/cons
13Challenges to Personality Assessment
- What are some of the fundamental challenges that
complicate personality assessment? - Discuss
- Examples
- Social desirability
- Self-insight
- Hypothetical constructs
- No direct access to the qualities of the objects
14Personality AssessmentWhat is being measured?
- Many personality variables are theoretical
constructs or latent variables - Unseen characteristics that we assume exist
somewhere inside the person.
15Personality Research MethodsPersonality
Assessment
Subjects Extraversion
Subjects Talkativeness
of friends in social network
Subjects self-report Score on BFI Extraversion
Scale
Friends rating of subjects Extraversion
16Personality AssessmentWhat is being measured?
- Many personality variables are theoretical
constructs or latent variables - Unseen characteristics that we assume exist
somewhere inside the person. - Is this unique to personality psych?
- Memory, attention, hunger
- Gravity
17Personality AssessmentDirect Access to qualities
of objects?
- Unique to personality?
- How to measure talkativeness?
- How to measure existence of a planet?
-
- How to measure length of a piece of lumber?
18Personality Assessment - Quality
- Quality of measurement
- How do we know if a personality assessment
technique or tool is good? - Two facets of measurement quality
- Reliability
- Construct Validity
19Personality Assessment - Quality
- Reliability
- Is the observed score a precise reflection of
the true characteristic (whatever that
characteristic might be) - If we do the measurement over and over, do we get
the same score each time? Do we consistently get
the same score? - 2 Kinds of reliability
- Test-retest reliability
- Internal Consistency reliability
20Personality Assessment - Quality
- Construct Validity
- What is the characteristics thats reflected by
the test score? - Does the test measure what its supposed to
measure? - E.g., if we have a questionnaire that supposedly
measures depression does it really measure
depression? - Depression is the construct, is our test a
valid measure of that construct?
21Personality Assessment - Quality
- Mikes Brief Neuroticism Questionnaire (MBNQ)
- Circle yes or no for each statement
- 1. I often get worried NO YES
- 2. I often hear strange voices NO YES
- 3. I have a fear of heights NO YES
- 4. I often get stressed out NO YES
- 5. I like animals NO YES
- 6. My favorite color is blue NO YES
22Personality Assessment - Quality
- How can we empirically evaluate a scales
construct validity? - Content validity
- Convergent validity
- Discriminant validity
23Personality Assessment
- Every time you hear about or go through a
personality assessment, you should wonder about
measurement - How were the variables measured?
- Are there potential disadvantages to the
measurement technique? - Was the measure (eg, questionnaire) reliable and
valid?
24Goals
- Understand the roles of personality assessment
- Understand the main ways of assessing personality
that have been proposed/developed, with strengths
and weaknesses - Understand unique challenges to personality
assessment - Understand how to evaluate the quality of a
personality assessment - Insight into two or three of the most popular
personality tests strengths/weaknesses
25Some well-known (if not particularly useful or
valid) personality assessment tools
- Rorshach
- MBTI Meyers Briggs Type Indicator (e.g., used
by WFU career services) - NEO-PI-R NEO- Personality Inventory
- HEXACO
- MMPI Minnesota Multiphasic Personality Inv