|
|||||
Forensic
Psychology (PSY -
513)
VU
Lesson
26
ASSESSMENT
OF PERSONALITY DISORDERS
Objectives:
To
understand the use of personality
inventories for the
assessment of risk and
personality
disorders
in forensic settings.
To
understand the use of projective
tests for the assessment of
risk and personality
disorders
in forensic settings.
To
get an insight about the draw
backs of using personality inventories
and projective
tests
from legal and psychological
point of view.
To
understand the use of benefits
and draw backs of the
use of check lists for
assessment.
Assessment
of personality disorders is another task
for which court can
ask a Forensic psychologist
to
provide expertise. How a Forensic Psychologists do
assesses personality disorder? How do
they
assess
the risk that a mentally retarded/
learning disabled will
commit a crime in a specific
situation.
Reasons
for referral
While
assessing Reason for
referral is usually the most
crucial clue. for instance
if the source is
claiming
that the person is very
violent and have no regard for other's
right a forensic
psychologist
is
more likely to administer psychological
tests measuring ASPD.
But
if the source is saying that
individual is suicidal then
psychological tests measuring
Borderline
Personality
Disorder will be
used.
And
if source states that person
is very troublesome and thinks he/she is
the president of Pakistan
and
mistrustful about the meals.
More likely assessment would
be using psychological
tests
targeting
paranoid personality
disorder.
Personality
Inventories
Personality
Inventories are quite often
used to make assessments and
usually found in booklets
with
hundreds
of questions. An individual taking that
test is required to answer
all those questions in
order
to make judgments. But for
making assessments one essential
thing is that the person
endorse
all
items with honesty and tell truths.
When working with
pathological liars we can
not assume that
they
will tell truth. So,
results do not depict the
real and desired picture. Few
tests can tell
whether
the
test taker is telling lie or
not but that is not
enough because then we would
not be able to
diagnose
the personality disorder.
1.
Minnesota Multiphase Personality Inventory
(MMPI)
2.
MCMI ( Millon Clinical Multiaxial
Inventory)
3.
PAI (Personal Assessment
Inventory)
4.
CPI (California Personality
Inventory)
MMPI
The
Minnesota Multiphasic Personality Inventory
(MMPI) is one of the
most frequently used
personality
tests personality assessment
but it is very long and
has some very old
scales, Although it
can
measure
whether the person is telling
lie or not.
MCMI
( Millon Clinical Multiaxial
Inventory)
The
Millon
Clinical Multiaxial Inventory
is
relatively new instrument
that is a self-report
instrument
designed
to help the clinician assess
DSM-IV-related personality
disorders.
93
Forensic
Psychology (PSY -
513)
VU
PAI
(Personal Assessment
Inventory)
It
assesses a broad range of psychological
conditions, including personality
disorders, anxiety,
depression,
mania and schizophrenia. It encompasses 344 items
although while compared to the
MMPI
however,
it is about 40%
shorter.
CPI
(California Personality
Inventory)
It
was created in a similar
manner to the Minnesota Multiphasic
Personality Inventory (MMPI),
but
unlike
the MMPI, it is not concerned with
maladjustment or clinical diagnosis, but
concerned itself with
more
"normal" aspects of
personality.
Personality
inventory may not be suitable
though these are still
widely used
All
these tests are self
report inventories, even though
widely used but a person
who is involved in
multiple
tedious crimes; we can not expect
truth from him. So in my
opinion personality inventories
are
absolutely
unreliable in crime settings. If
Personality Inventories are
not suitable then how to
assess.
In
selecting psychological tests, the
forensic evaluator should
seek tests that are
appropriate for legal
decision
making, thereby avoiding
tests that are unreliable.
Similarly, an evaluator should
use only tests
for
which the evaluator has
adequate training in administration and
interpretation. Because
psychological
tests are best used as a
source of potential hypotheses,
they are best administered
early in
the
assessment. Tests can then be
scored and used to provide
direction for the assessment
process. This
practice
necessitates either seeing the
plaintiff on multiple days
and/or having the ability to
score the
tests
quickly. Actuarially constructed tests
like the MMPI should be given in
this way, as they
provide
only
possible hypothesis and cannot be purported as proof
of anything.
Projective
tests
As
compared to Personality inventories, a
projective
test is a better option. A
personality test let
a
person
respond to ambiguous stimuli, presumably
revealing hidden emotions and internal
conflicts, So
unconscious
motives and desires are
uncovered. This is different
from a "Personality inventories"
in
which
responses are analyzed according to a
universal standard (for
example, a multiple choice exam)
rather
than an individual's
judgment.
Few
best known Projective tests
are:
Rorschach
inkblot test
Thematic
Apperception Test
House
Tree Person
Rorschach
inkblot test
Rorschach
inkblot test, in which a
patient is shown irregular spot of
ink, and asked to explain
what they
see;
the response is then analyzed in various
ways, noting not only what
the test taker said, but the
time
taken
to respond, what aspect of the drawing
was focused on, and how the
response compared to
other
responses
for the same drawing. For
example, if someone consistently
sees the images as
threatening
and
frightening, the psychiatrist may
infer that he or she may
suffer from paranoia.
Thematic
Apperception Test
Another
popular projective test is the
Thematic Apperception Test
(TAT) in which a test taker
views
ambiguous
images of people, and is asked to
describe various aspects of the
scene and write a story;
for
example,
the patient may be asked to
describe what led up to this
scene, the emotions of the
characters,
and
what might happen afterwards. The
forensic psychologist then evaluates
these descriptions
Psychologists
attempting to discover conflicts and
hidden emotions. Stories can be
interpreted in
flexible
way, in this way experts
work toward a successful
judgment and assessment of
personality.
94
Forensic
Psychology (PSY -
513)
VU
The
House-Tree-Person Test
The
house-tree-person test (HTP) is a
projective personality test, in
which individual is asked to
draw a
house,
tree and person. In the HTP, the test
taker is asked to draw
houses, tree, and persons, and
these
drawings
provide a measure of self-perceptions and
attitudes. As with other
projective tests, it
has
flexible
and subjective administration and
interpretation.
Usually
house
refers
to the family factors
Tree
depicts
ego strength, growth possibilities and
therapeutic relationship.
Person
shows
self image, self esteem and
ego strength.
Projective
Tests suitable but
problematic from a legal
point of view
Analysis
of HTP and other projective
test can give valuable
judgments but have problems from
legal
point
of view. Two psychologists can
interpret the same drawing or
test differently. The
psychologist`s
report
presented by defense lawyer
presents a person innocent and the
report from prosecution
lawyer
portrays
a person guilty and responsible
for the crime.
So
projective tests are good
from psychological perspective and reveal
more valuable information
but
has
legal problems. On the contrary hand
Personality inventories are
frequently used but
from
psychological
point of view the integrity of
those results is
questionable.
Personality
Checklists
Nowadays
use of Personality Checklists is considered
suitable. Such check lists
allow to make
judgments
on the basis of multiple sources
like:
Observations
Multiple
sources like interview from
family, warden or prison guard
etc.
They
are filled using a variety of
sources.
Information
from staff is also typically
obtained
One
imminent benefit of check
lists is the legal
validity. The
court or jury feels more comfortable
and
confident
if psychologist states that he
has garner information from
variety of sources.
Personality
Checklists requires
that the results of psychological
tests should not be used in
isolation
from
history, medical findings,
and observations of behavior made by others.
When using
psychological
tests,
it is important to recognize that most
were developed from traditional
psychotherapeutic needs
rather
than for forensic evaluation
of specific
traumatic effects. While check
list can be used
according
to
the requirements of each unique
case.
In
addition to psychological tests, the
forensic evaluator needs to
obtain a full history, both
of the
plaintiff's
life and of the specific
employment situation. Various structured
information forms and
interviews
may be of use in this
process. When multiple
plaintiffs are involved in a
single legal action,
it
is
advisable to use the same
protocol, including a structured
interview, with all
plaintiffs. To the fullest
extent
possible, all issues being
evaluated should be assessed
through multiple methods.
This process
conforms
to the best standards of obtaining
information and developing conclusions.
Although the
potential
for error of each method of
assessment may be high, the
probability of error decreases
greatly
when
the same information is obtained
and corroborated through
multiple independent
means.
The
Problem with
Checklists
1.
These are typically problem
specific
If
a person comes with the
referral source illustrating
him as psychopath, this does
not give a clear
picture.
Psychologist may use
checklist measuring psychopathy and
after administering that
check list
come
to know that the individual
does not have psychopathy,
may have Asperger's syndrome. But
all
range
of psychological tests is neither
possible nor practical. Because
check lists are specific to
one
specific
personality disorder
like
95
Forensic
Psychology (PSY -
513)
VU
Personality
Disorders (PD) specific
Anti
Social Personality Disorder (ASPD) specific
Borderline
Personality Disorder (BPD) specific
Autism
specific
2.
File information could be unreliable
and based on non-verifiable
sources
File
information some times become a
myth. For instance, a person
when first time was
locked in jail at
the
age of 18 years, had a quarrel
with prison officer in the
first week of his entry in
jail. He punched
and
broke his teeth; as a result
prison officer wrote a
biased report portraying him
as a very violent
aggressive
criminal, who has no regard
authorities and fire fascinate
him etc. (although it was a
lie)
Before
interviewing that boy,
psychologist visited prison
officer who told him
all negative things
about
him
and told that fire fascinate
him. But when during
interview he was asked "are
you found of lighting
fire".
Boy condemned that. But
psychologist assumed that he is
lying too. And a similar
report was
submitted
from the psychologist.
3.
Broad categories
Unlike
personality inventories, check
lists have broad categories
like for assessing depression;
a
personality
inventory may require a
person to answer 20 questions. But in
check list only one item
is
specified
for this purpose (looked
depressed). So, meticulous
details are missing.
4.
Subjective labels
Many
times subjective labels are assigned to
individuals with out
reaching the real reason
like, a person
is
lying to you because wants
to get freedom from jail and
a subjective label of "pathological
liar" is
tagged.
5.
Express value judgments
Many
times social factors are also
need crucial consideration
but value judgments can
hinder this. Like
a
person is has inconsistent job
pattern, not because of any
personality disorder but the
all of jobs really
had
problems like rude attitude of
boss, nature of work or unsatisfactory
environment.
96
Table of Contents:
|
|||||