Psychodiagnostiek
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Psychological testing and assessment (9th edition)
Cohen & Swerdlik (2018)
Chapter 11
Personality assessment: An overview
For laypeople: personality refers to components of an individual’s makeup that can elicit positive or negative reactions from others.
Personality
Dozens of different definitions of personality exist in the psychology literature.
Personality: an individual’s unique constellation of psychological traits that is relatively stable over time.
Personality assessment
Personality assessment: the measurement and evaluation of psychological traits, values, interests, attitudes, worldview, acculturation, sense of humour, cognitive and behavioural styles, and/or related individual characteristics.
Traits, types and states
Personality traits
There is no consensus regarding the definition of trait.
This book views psychological traits as attributions made in an effort to identify threads of consistency in behavioural patterns.
Personality trait: any distinguishable, relatively enduring way in which one individual varies from another.
The context is important in applying trait terms to behaviour.
A measure of behaviour in a particular context may be obtained using varied tools of psychological assessment.
Exactly how a particular trait manifests itself is, at least to some extent, dependent on the situation.
Personality types
Personality type: a constellation of traits that is similar in pattern to one identified category of personality within a taxonomy of personalities.
Whereas traits are frequently discussed as if they were characteristics possessed by an individual, types are more clearly descriptions of people.
It is more far-reaching.
The personality typology that has attracted the most attention from researchers and practitioners is associated with scores on a test called the MMPI.
Data from the administration of these tests are frequently discussed in terms of the patterns of scores that emerge on the sub-tests.
This pattern is referred to as a profile.
Profile: a narrative description, graph, table or other representation of the extent to which a person has demonstrated certain targeted characteristics as a result of the administration or application of tools of assessement.
Personality profile: profile of which the typical the targeted characteristics are traits, states, or types.
Personality states
The word state has been used in at least two distinctly different ways in the personality assessment literature
Measuring personality states amounts, in essence, to a search for and an assessment of the strenght of traits that are relatively transitory or fairly situation specific.
In the most general sense, basic research involving personality assessment helps to validate or invalidate theories of behaviour and to generate new hypotheses.
Who
Who is being assessed and who is doing the assessing?
Some methods of personality assessment rely on the assessee’s own self-report.
Other methods of personality assessment rely on informants other than the person being assessed to provide personality-related information.
The self as the primary referent
People typically undergo personality assessment so that they, as well as the assessor, can learn something about who they are.
In many instances, the assessment requires self-report.
Self-report methods are very commonly used to explore an assessee’s self-concept.
Self-concept: one’s attitudes, beliefs, opinions, and related thoughts about oneself.
Inferences about an assessee’s self-concept may be derived form many tools of assessment.
Self-concept measure: an instrument designed to yield information relevant to how an individual sees him- or herself with regard to selected psychological variables.
Data from such and instrument are usually interpreted in the context of how others may see themselves on the same or similar variables.
Some measures of self-concept are based on the notion that states and traits related to self-concept are to a large degree context-dependent.
Self-concept differentiation: the degree to which a person has different self-concepts in different roles.
People who are highly differentiated are likely to perceive themselves quite differently in various roles.
Assuming that assessees have reasonably accurate insight into their own thinking an behaviour and assuming that they are motivated to respond to test items honestly, self-report measures can be extremely valuable.
Unfortunately, some assessees may intentionally or unintentionally paint distorted pictures of themselves in self-report measures.
Some testtakers truly may be impaired with regard to their ability to respond accurately to self-report questions.
Another person as the referent
In some situations, the best available method for the assessment of personality, behaviour, or both involves reporting by a third party.
In general, there are many cautions to consider when one person undertakes to evaluate another.
These cautions are by no means limited to the area of personality assessment.
Many factors may contribute to bias in rater’s ratings.
When another person is the referent, an important factor to consider with regard to ratings is the context of the evaluation.
Different raters may have different perspectives on the individual they are rating because of the context in which they typically view that person.
Regardless whether the self or another person is the subject of the study, one element any evaluation that must be kept in mind by the assessor is the cultural context.
The cultural background of assessees
Test developers and users have shown increased sensitivity to issues of cultural diversity.
What?
What is assessed when a personality assessment is conducted?
Primary content area sampled
Personality measures are tools used to gain insight into a wide array of thoughts, feelings, and behaviours associated with all aspects of the human experience.
Many contemporary personality tests, especially tests that can be scored and interpreted by computer, are designed to measure not only some targeted trait or other personality variable but also some aspect of the testtaker’s response style.
Testtaker response styles
Response style: a tendency to respond to a test item or interview question in some characteristic manner regardless of the content of the item or question.
Impression management: a term used to describe the attempt to manipulate others’ impressions through the ‘selective exposure of some information coupled with suppression of (other) information’.
In the process of personality assessment, assessees might employ any number of impression management strategies for any number of reasons.
Testtakers who engage in impression management are exhibiting, in the broadest sense, a response style.
Some personality tests contain items designed to detect different types of response styles.
Because a response style can affect the validity of the outcome, one particular type of response style measure is the validity scale.
Validity scale: a subscale of a test designed to assist in judgments regarding how honestly the testtaker responded and whether observed responses were products of response style, carelessness, deliberate efforts to deceive, or unintentional misunderstanding.
Some test contain multiple validity scales.
Where
Where are personality assessments conducted?
Can be everywhere
How?
How are personality assessments structured and conducted?
Scope and theory
One dimension of the how of personality assessment concerns its scope.
To what extent is a personality test theory based or relatively atheoretical?
Instruments used in personality testing and assessment very in the extent to which they are based on a theory of personality.
Procedures and item formats
Personality may be assessed by many different methods.
The equipment required for assessment varies greatly, depending upon the method employed.
Measures of personality vary in terms of the degree of structure built into them.
The same personality trait or construct can be measured with different instruments in different ways.
Of course, criteria for what constitutes the trait measured would have to be rigorously defined in advance.
In personality assessment, information may be gathered and questions answered in a variety of ways.
Frame of reference
Frame of reference: aspects of the focus of exploration such as the time frame as well as other contextual issues that involve people, place and events.
Perhaps for most measures of personality, the frame of reference for the assessee may be described in phrases such as ‘what is’ or ‘how I am right now’.
Obtaining self-reported information from different frames of reference is, in itself, a way of developing information related to states and traits.
Q-sort technique: an assessment technique in the task is to sort a group of statements.
Two other item presentation formats
Scoring and interpretation
Personality measures differ with respect to the way conclusions are drawn from the data they provide.
Nomothetic vs idiographic
Intra- vs inter-indiviudal
Issues in personality test development and use
Many of the issues inherent in the test development process mirror the basic questions just discussed about personality assessment in general.
Personality assessment that relies exclusively on self-report is a two-edged sword
Building validity scales into self-report tests is one of way that test developers have attempted to deal with the potential problems.
Another way is by consulting external sources such as peer raters.
Sometimes differences in the meaning of individual items, the traits measured by personality tests sometimes have different meanings as well.
Tools such as logic, theory and data reduction methods are frequently used in the process of developing personality tests.
Most personality tests employ two or more of these tools in the course of their development.
Logic and reason
Logic and reason may dictate what content is covered by the items.
The use of logic and reason in the development of test items is sometimes referred to as the ‘content’ or ‘content-oriented’ approach to test development.
Efforts to develop content-oriented, face-valid items can be traced at least as far back as an instrument used to screen WWI recruits for personality and adjustment problems.
A great deal of clinically actionable information can be collected in relatively little time using such self-report instruments, provided that the testtaker has the requisite insight and responds with candor.
A highly trained professional is not required for the administration of the test.
Clinical experience can be helpful in item creation. Or experts on the subject matter.
Theory
Personality measures differ in the extent to which they rely on a particular theory of personality in their development as well as their interpretation.
Data reduction methods
Data reduction methods include several types of statistical techniques collectively known as factor analysis or cluster analysis.
- One use of data reduction methods in the design of personality measures is to aid in the identification of the minimum number of variables or factors that account for the intercorrelations in observed phenomena.
The big five
The Revised NEO Personality Inventory (NEO PI-R) is widely used in both clinical applications and a wide range of research that involves personality assessment.
Based on a five-dimension model of personality, the NEO PI-R is a measure of five major dimensions of personality and a total of 3-0 elements or facets that define each domain.
Criterion groups
A criterion: a standard on which a judgment or decision can be made.
Criterion group: a reference group of testtakers who share specific characteristics and whose responses to test items serve as a standard according to which items will be included in or discarded from the final version of a scale.
Empirical criterion keying: the process of using criterion groups to develop test items.
The shared characteristic of the criterion group to be reached will vary as a function of the nature and scope of the test.
Development of a test by means of empirical criterion keying may be summed as follows
The initial pool of items is created by inspiration from reviews of journals and books, interviews with patients, or consultations with colleagues or known experts.
Or the test developer may have relied on logic or reason alone or imagination to write the items.
The MMPI-2-RF
A true-false questionnaire to seek psychiatric problems.
MMPI-A
The same but for adolescents.
Many cultures have been under-represented in the development, standardization, and interpretation protocols of the measures used in personality assessment.
Especially with members of culturally and linguistically diverse populations, a routine and business-as-usual approach to psychological testing and assessment is inappropriate, if not irresponsible.
What is required is a professionally trained assessor capable of conducting a meaningful assessment, with sensitivity to how culture relates to the behaviours and cognitions being measured.
Acculturation and related considerations
Acculturation: an ongoing process by which an individual’s thoughts, behaviours, values, world-view, and identity develop in relation to the general thinking, behaviour, customs, and values of a particular group.
Through the process of acculturation, one develops culturally accepted ways of thinking, feeling, and behaving.
A number of tests and questionnaires have been developed to yield insights regarding assessees’ level of acculturation to their native culture or the dominant culture.
Intimately entwined with acculturation is the learning of values.
Values: that which an individual prizes or the ideas an individual believes in.
Also intimately tied to the concept of acculturation is the concept of personal identity.
Identity: a set of cognitive and behavioural characteristics by which individuals define themselves as members of a particular group. The sense of oneself.
Identification: a process by which an individual assumes a pattern of behaviour characteristic of other people, and referred to it as one of the ‘central issues that ethnic minority groups must deal with’.
Worldview: the unique way people interpret and make sense of their perceptions as a consequence of their learning experiences, cultural background, and related variables.
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Deze bundel is voor het vak psychodiagnostiek voor het tweede jaar van de studie psychologie aan de uva. De bundel bestaat uit hoofdstukken uit verschillende boeken die geslecteerd zijn door de uva. Besproken wordt hoe diagnostiek plaatsvind en hoe het het beste kan worden
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