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Personality
Psychology PSY 405
VU
Lesson
44
PERSONALITY
APPRAISAL
Personality
Assessment
·
Sources
of Personality Data
·
Self
Report Data (S-Data)
·
Observer
Report Data (O-Data)
·
Test
Data (T-Data)
·
Life
Outcome Data (L- Data)
Issues
in Personality Assessment
1-Personality
Assessment
Sources
of Personality Data
Our
first concern is that we get as
much information about
personality as possible. There are a
number of
sources
of data that are available.
Self Report Data (S-Data), Observer
Report Data (O-Data), Test Data
(T-
Data),
Life Outcome Data (L-
Data)
1-Personality
Assessment
1-Self
Report Data (S-Data)
It
is the most obvious and common source of
data about the person is
Self Report Data (S-Data).
The
information
that a person reveals or reports is based
on a procedure such as a questionnaire or
interview.
The
Questionnaire Method can be structured or
unstructured they pose a series of
questions to the person.
The
person's periodic reports to record the events as
they happen , the respondent has
tell his feelings
,emotions,
desires, beliefs, fears, phobias, and
fantasies. How the relate to others,
about their long term
goals,
about their self concept,
about their self
esteem.
The
self report can take a
variety of forms such as
Unstructured (open ended questions) the
items require an
a
subjective or open answer there is no
right or wrong
response
Structured
(closed ended questions) the items have a binding or
they bound you to a
response.
Examples
Unstructured
(open ended questions)
Tell
me about yourself?
Tell
me about the food you most
prefer to eat?
The
psychologist must devise a way
how to score, interpret and
make sense out of the
participant's
responses.
Examples
Structured
(closed ended questions)
All
the items have to be responded with yes
no or undecided.
I
like fast food.
I
am an introvert.
I
believe in equal rights for
women.
There
are advantages as well as
limitations of the self report
methods but the limitations
are more such as
participants
may not be honest or they
may not be having accurate
knowledge about
themselves
Examples
of self report inventories
are:
Neo
Personality Inventory
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California
Personality Inventory
The
latest increase in personality self
report data research is
called experience sampling (Hormuth,
1986;
Larsen,
1989)
People
answer questions about the moods or
physical symptoms every day
for several weeks or
longer
electronically.
1-Personality
Assessment
2-Observer
Report Data (O-Data)
We
usually form impressions and
make evaluations of others
with whom we come into
contact so for each
individual
there are at least dozens and
dozens of observers who form
impressions.
All
the potential sources of information
about our personalities form
impressions including our
family,
relatives,
neighbors, employers, teachers, friends,
acquaintances--virtually each and every
person you
come
across.
So
Observer Report Data capitalize on all
these resources and provide
tools for gathering
information about
the
person's personality.
Example
I
am a teacher and I form impressions
about my student similarly my students
form variety of
impressions
about
me by closely observing me in different
situations.
Observer
report data has both
advantages as well as disadvantages as
sources of personality
data.
One
advantage is that observers can have
access to information not
attainable through other
resources
For
example what sort of impression an
individual makes on others, his or her
social reputation, whether
interactions
with others are smooth or
turbulent and what position an
individual holds in group
hierarchy.
Another
advantage of observer report method is that
multiple observers can be
used to assess each
individual
where as in self report method only one
person provides
information.
Inter-Rater
Reliability
The
use of multiple observers
allows the investigators to evaluate the
degree of consensus in the among
the
observers.
There
are many dimensions along
which the O-data differ and the
personality psychologists should
take
them
into account
1-
The use of professional
personality or intimate personality
assessors
2-
To use naturalistic or artificial
setting for the observation to be
made
Now
both are very important
decisions to be taken.
1-
The use of professional
personality assessors or intimate
observers
So
we can use professional
personality assessors who do
not know the participant in
advance
A
second method is to gather observational
data from people who
actually know the participant
such as
close
friends, spouse, mothers and
room mates.
The
advantages of intimate personality
assessors are
following
They
are in a better position to
observe the target's natural
behavior as compared to the
professional
personality
assessors
Multiple
social personalities can be assessed
now each of us displays a
different side of ourselves to
different
people.
Example
of Multiple social personalities
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I
am kind to my friends, loving towards my
students but very rude and inconsiderate
towards my
subordinates.
My
student is very respectful toward me
but has sharp conflicts
with parents.
The
disadvantage of using intimate assessors
is that they have intimate
relationships with the target
person
and
that they may act in a
biased way
They
may overlook the negative
aspects and emphasize the
positive aspects.
2-
To use naturalistic or artificial
setting for the observation to be
made
In
the naturalistic observation the
observers witness and record the events
that occur in the normal
course
of
the lives of the participants
We
can observe a student for the
entire day at school or at home, in the
bus, in canteen.
The
advantages are that we can
have first hand and natural piece of
observation of the person but
the
limitation
is that we do not have any
control the whole event that
is taking place
Artificial
Settings
A
student along with the whole
class is asked to come to the
laboratory and observations are
made.
We
can initiate and generate an
artificial piece of behavior
We
have control the sequence of events
that will take place.
1-Personality
Assessment
3-Test
Data (T-Data)
The
individuals are placed in standardized
testing situations.
The
idea is to see if different
people react differently to an
identical situation.
The
situation is so designed to elicit
behaviors that serve as
indicators of personality variables
(Block,
1977)
The
individuals are placed in frustrating
situations and different reactions are
noted.
The
individuals are placed in situations
and their leadership qualities
are noted.
Children
were placed in designed situations and their
responses were noted.
All
the above tests are called
situational tests.
An
interesting example is given by
Murray in his book
Assessment of Men
(1948).
In
the bridge building test
over a small river, the
person assessed is given two
assistants and a collection
of
wood,
rope, tools.
The
person being assessed does
not know that the two
assistants are role playing,
one as dumb or having
low
intelligence or unable to follow
instructions
The
other assistant as one who
knows every thing and he
opposes the instructions being
given to him, the
concerned
person may think that he is
being assessed for
leadership qualities while
actually he is being
evaluated
on tolerance of frustration and performance on
adversity.
Megargee's
Study (1969)
The
study is on manifestations of dominance and he wanted
to study the effect of dominance on
leadership.
To
all the potential participants
California Personality Inventory
(CPI) was administered and
only those
people
were included in the study that
scored very high or very
low on dominance scale of
California
Personality
Inventory (CPI)
He
took pairs of participants and in each
pair one high in dominance was
paired with one low in
dominance
The
participants were exposed to four
conditions:
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A
high dominant man with a
low dominant man
A
high dominant woman with a
low dominant woman
A
high dominant man with a
low dominant woman
A
high dominant woman with a
low dominant man
Then
the experimenter presented each
pair with a large box
containing many red, yellow and green
colored
nuts
bolts levers
The
participants were told that the
purpose of the study was to
explore the relationship between
personality
and
leadership under stress.
Each
pair of participants was to
work as a team of trouble
shooters to repair the box as fast as
they can by
removing
the nuts and bolts with
certain colors and replacing them with
other colors.
The
participants were told that one
person from each team
had to a leader, providing
all the relevant
instructions
and the other person had to be a follower
to abide by the instructions as fully as
possible. The
follower
had to get inside the box and do all
menial tasks as given by the
leader. The experimenter
then told
that
it was up to the team to decide who
would be the leader and who would be the
follower.
The
key variable of interest was
who would become the
follower and who would lead
so he simply
recorded
the percentage of high-dominant
participant in each condition
who became leaders.
Megargee
found that 75 % of high
dominant men and 70 % high
dominant women took the
leadership roles
in
same sex pairs
When
high dominant men were
paired with low dominant
women 90% of men became
leaders.
But
most startling result was in
high dominant women and low
dominant men condition when
only 20% of
high
dominant women assumed the leadership
role.
The
findings of this experiment
point to the fact
that
1-
It is possible to set up conditions in
such a manner that key
indicators of personality can be
observed.
2-
Laboratory experiments should be sensitive to
manifestations of personality that occur in
incidental parts
of
the experiment, such as discussions
between participants.
Limitations
of the Test Data
The
participants might try to
guess what trait is being
measured and might try to
create an impression.
The
real difficulty is in verifying
how the research participants
are defining the situation and
failure to
confirm
the similarity and correspondence between the
researcher and the participant may
lead to error.
Another
problem is that in most T-
data experiments the situations are
inherently interpersonal and the
researcher
and experimenter may
influence the participants when an
experimenter is very friendly he
may
elicit
more cooperation from participants
then another experimenter who is
cold or aloof.
Mechanical
Recording Devices
Personality
psychologists have adapted the technological
innovations in study of
personality
The
use of Actometer (it is a
modified self winding watch
which is usually strapped to
arms or legs) to
assess
the personality differences in activity
level or energy levels. This
actometer device is usually
used
with
children who are highly
active to have a clear idea of the
hyperactivity level. The
actometer based
activity
scores are linked to other
personality characteristics, traits. At
times the actometer scores
are
correlated
with the teacher rating of the
same behavior
pattern.
Physiological
Data
Physiological
measures provide an excellent
source of data related to the
person
They
refer to person's reaction to stimuli and
the speed at which the person
takes the new
information.
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Sensors
can be placed on different parts of the
body to measure activity of sympathetic
nervous system,
blood
pressure, heart beat, muscle
contraction activity.
Physiological
measures can act as
important sources for
collecting information about the
personality.
Psychologist
Christopher Patrick
(1994)
Has
studied the psychopaths particularly
men who have committed
serious crimes against
people
particularly
violent crimes. Things that
make most people anxious
may not make psychopaths
anxious in
order
to test this idea a
technique called the eye-blink startle
reflex. Patrick noted that the
psychopaths who
were
in prison for violent crimes
did not exhibit the faster
eye-blink response while
viewing the anxiety
producing
photographs suggesting that they were not
feeling the same level of fearfulness or
as normal
participants
viewing these objects. Perhaps
psychopaths commit their
crimes because they don't
have the
normal
level of anxiety or guilt
that prevents most of us from
doing anything wrong.
Functional
Magnetic Resonance Imaging
(fMRI)
A
recent physiological data
source comes from functional
magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI), a
technique
used
to identify the areas of the brain
that light up when
performing certain tasks
such as verbal problems
or
spatial navigation.
When
certain pars of the brain
are activated, it draws
large amount of blood.
The
oxygen carried by blood
accumulates in that region of the
brain and
fMRI
is able to detect concentrations of iron
carried by oxygen contained in the red
blood cells and thus
determine
the part of the brain that is
used in performing certain
tasks.
Projective
Personality Tests
Psychoanalytic
personality theorists have developed several
assessment measures known as
projective
tests.
They include a variety of
methods in which ambiguous stimuli,
such as pictures of people, or
things
are
presented to a person who is
asked to describe what he or
she sees. The theory
here is that people
`project'
their own personality, their
needs, their wishes, their
desires and their
unconscious fears on
other
people
and things such as ink
blots, pictures, sometimes vague and
sometimes structure.
Projective
tests are based on
psychoanalytic theory. They have
been and they still remain,
controversial.
Some
of the most widely used
projective tests are
Rorschach Ink Blot Test, the
Thematic Apperception
Test
(TAT), House Tree Person
(HTP) and the Rotter's
Incomplete Sentence Blank
(RISB).
In
projective tests, the person is
presented with a series of ambiguous
stimuli. The known
projective test,
introduced
in 1921 by Hermann Rorschach, a
Swiss psychiatrist, is based on the
use of inkblots.
Projective
techniques
such as the Rorschach test were
originally based on psychodynamic
assumptions about the
nature
of personality and
psychopathology.
Considerable
emphasis was placed on the importance of
unconscious motivations --conflicts and
impulses
of
which the person is largely
unaware.
More
recent approaches to the use of
projective tests view the person's
descriptions of the cards as a
sample
of his or her perceptual and cognitive styles.
This test consists of ten standardized
ink blot cards.
That
serves as ambiguous stimuli. The
examiner presents the inkblots
cards one by one to the person
being
examined,
who responds by telling what
he or she sees.
The
therapists may encourage the subject to
give more detailed answers and
you may get different
responses
on the same inkblot. Exner's
system of administering and scoring the
Rorschach inkblot
test
specifies
how the card should be
presented, what should the
examiner say and how the
responses should be
recorded.
The
Thematic Apperception Test
(TAT) consists of a series of
drawings that depict human
figures in
various
ambiguous situations. The person is
asked to describe the
identities of the people in the cards
and
to
make up a story about what
is happening. Morgan and Murray at the
Harvard Psychological
Clinic
developed
the TAT. It consists of 31 cards, 30 with
pictures on them and one blank card. The
picture card
is
shown to the subject and the therapist asks the
subject to tell a dramatic story
about the picture.
The
instructions
of the test begin `this is a
test of imagination, one form of
intelligence. Let your
imaginations
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have
its way as in a fairy story
and tell what the people in the
picture card are doing.'
The story should have
a
title, a beginning, a middle
part and an end. The basic
assumption is that most of the subjects
will reveal
their
unconscious mental processes,
their needs, desires on the
characters of their stories
about the pictures.
Their
have been several variations of the TAT
for different groups e.g. CAT- Children
Apperception Test
and
SAT Senior Apperception
Technique.
Rotter's
Incomplete Sentence Blank
Test
This
test consists of a series
unfinished sentences that
people are asked to complete,
usually it is considered
a
good spring board to explore
and pinpoint areas of an individual's
life that are problematic or
conflicting.
The
sentences are usually, I
wish _____. My father is
______. Girls are _____.
Home is a place ________.
This
test explores an individual's
social, familial and general attitudes
towards life. This test has
40 items
which
are in form of incomplete
sentences. This test has
qualitative and quantitative scoring
procedures.
House
Tree and Person
(HTP)
This
is a test which tells us
about the evaluations of the drawings
based on the quality and
shape of the
drawing,
solidity of a pencil line,
location of the drawing on the paper, the
size of the figure, features of
the
figures,
use of the background and comments
made by the respondent during the drawing
task. The house
reflects
individual's interpersonal relationships,
the tree reflects ego development and function and
the
Person
reflects the individual self perception
and perception of the other
gender.
Advantages
of Projective Tests
Some
people may feel more
comfortable talking in an unstructured
situation than they would if
they were
required
to participate in a structured interview or to
complete the lengthy MMPI.
Projective
tests can provide an
interesting source of information
regarding the person's unique view of
the
world,
and they can be a useful supplement to
information obtained with
other assessment
tools.
To
whatever extent a person's relationships
with other people are
governed by unconscious cognitive
and
emotional
events, projective tests may
provide information that cannot be
obtained through
direct
interviewing
methods or observational
procedures.
Limitations
of Projective Tests
Lack
of standardization in administration and scoring is a
serious problem.
Little
information is available on which to
base comparisons to normal adults or
children.
Some
projective procedures, such as the
Rorschach, can be very
time-consuming.
The
reliability of scoring and interpretation
tends to be low.
1-Personality
Assessment
4-Life
Outcome Data (L- Data)
The
L-Data serve as an important
source of information about the
personality
Personality
characteristics measured early in
life are often linked to
important life outcomes
several
decades
later.
You
can say that work, marriage,
separation, divorce, and termination from
job are manifestations of
personality
2-
Issues in Personality
Assessment
There
are two issues in the area
of Personality Assessment
The
issue of Links among various
data sources.
The
issue of Fallibility of Personality
Measurement.
The
issue of Links among various
data sources.
The
interpretation of links among the sources
of personality data depends
heavily on the research
question
being
posed.
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A
strong agreement between two sources of
data leads the researchers to be
confident that their
alternative
measures
are tapping into the same
personality phenomenon while lack of
strong commitment on the other
hand
may mean that different
sources are assessing
different personality phenomenon.
The
Issue of Fallibility of Personality
Measurement.
The
exercise to overcome each data
source problems or pitfalls that
limits its utility is called
Triangulation.
It
means that if a particular
effect is found, does the
effect occur when measured
with self report as well
as
with
the observer reports.
Example
Suppose
you are measuring the effect of
Dominance on Leadership.
Now
does the effect occur when
the trait of dominance is measured with
Self report as well as with
another
method
of Observer- reports?
Evaluation
of Personality Measures
Once
the different personality measures
are selected and chosen
for the research the next
important step is
to
evaluate them usually three standards or
norms or measures are used
which are following:
Validity
Reliability
Generalization
Validity
Validity
refers to the extend to which a test
measures what it claims to measure
(Cronbach & Meehl, 1955;
Wiggins,
2003)
Types
of Validity
·
Face
validity
·
Content
validity
·
Predictive
validity
·
Criterion
validity
·
Convergent
validity
·
Divergent
validity
·
Discriminant
validity
·
Construct
validity
Reliability
It
refers to the degree to which an obtained
measure represents the true
level of the trait being
measured.
Suppose
that an individual has some
true amount of trait that
you wish to measure and you
can know this
true
level if you have a reliable
measure (then it will correlate
with the true level) so
actually you are
looking
for consistency in the scores of
measurements.
Kinds
of Reliability Includes
·
Test
Retest Reliability or Repeated
Measures
·
Alternate
Forms or Parallel
Forms
·
Split
Half
·
Other
important things
·
Inter
Rater Reliability
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A
personality measure is considered to be
reliable when demonstrated
through Test Retest
Reliability, Split
Half
or Internal Consistency or Inter Rater
Reliability.
Generalizability
The
third important norm of
evaluating a personality measure is
generalizability.
It
is the degree to which the measure
retains its validity across
various contexts.
Is
a measure equally good
across various age groups,
genders, cultures or different
conditions?
Research
designs in personality
There
are three basic research
designs used in personality
psychology which are
following:
·
Experimental
design
·
Correlational
design
·
Case
study
Each
design has its advantages and
limitations.
Experimental
methods
They
are typically used in
determining causality.
Variable
A causes variable B
So
in order to establish the influence of one
variable on another, the key requirements
of a sound
experimental
design must be met which are
following
Manipulation
of one or more variables
Ensuring
that the participants in each
experimental condition (experimental or
control group) are
equivalent
at
the beginning of the study.
Random
assignment of the subjects to ensure
that the two groups have same
characteristics as in the
population.
Correlational
Studies
The
correlational studies as the name
says measures the
relationship between two or more
variables.
The
three things that are
important in Correlational Studies
1-Magnitude
of relationship
2-Direction
of relationship
3-Correlations
can never prove the
causality
Case
Studies
Case
studies give in detail
information related to the
person
In
case study design a number of tools
can be used such
as:
1-
Coding Systems to be applied to
written text.
2-
Interview can be used with
target person.
3-
Audio and video recording of
the person.
Case
study can be viewed as
valuable source of personality
information.
It
is most often used as a
source of hypotheses and as
means of bringing these
hypotheses to life.
Example
Quaid-e-azam,
Matin Luther King.
When
to use Experimental, Correlational and
Case Studies
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The
experimental design is ideally suited for
establishing casual relationships among
variables, but poor
at
identifying
the relationships among variables as they
occur naturally in everyday
life.
Correlational
studies are ideally suited
for establishing the relationships
between two or more variables s
they
occur in every day
life.
They
are poor in establishing
causality.
Case
studies are suited for
generating hypotheses that
can be tested using the
experimental and correlational
designs.
Summary
We
have talked about sources of
data collection in personality
psychology.
Different
research designs in personality
psychology.
Evaluation
1-
There are no perfect methods
of personality assessment or
measurement.
2-
Neither there are perfect /
fool proof research
designs.
3-
Different investigators use
different data sources and
research designs because
they have
different
goals and purposes in conducting
research.
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