Showing posts with label Minnesota Multiphasic Personality Inventory. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Minnesota Multiphasic Personality Inventory. Show all posts

Wednesday, June 25, 2014

Infographics - Personality Tests

Personality Tests
Source: Online-Psychology-Degree.com

Thanks LelyaS for this.

Behind Personality Tests

A major component to modern psychology is personality testing and typing. With applications across a huge number of industries (education, counseling, business, sports and more), understanding the major schools of thought when it comes to personality types is important for psychology students (and amateur therapists).

The History of Personality Testing

Ancient times (1)
Hippocrates suggests that our personas are based on four distinct temperaments. Galen takes that a step further by pairing a body fluid to each temperament (blood, mucus, black bile and yellow bile). He suggests that whatever fluid was dominant in the person determined their “humor.” This theory persists for about a thousand years after Galen’s death.
18th century (1)
Medical science supplants the humors theory in treating the body, but the theory remains integral to determining personalities.
19th century (1)
Physiologist Wilhelm Wundt in 1879 becomes the first person to draw a clear distinction between the human body and one’s personality. His research leads him to believe that not only are the four temperaments aspects of the human personality (and not the body), people display a combination of two or more temperaments.
20th century (1)
The psychological boom in the early 1900s leads to a jump in interest regarding personality testing and typing. Several prominent theorists emerge, including Carl Jung, Sigmund Freud and Eduard Spranger.
1919 (2)
The first modern personality test, the Woodworth Personal data sheet, is first used to help the United States Army distinguish which recruits might be susceptible to “shellshock.”
1921 (2)
The famous Rorschach inkblot test is introduced.
1962
The Myers-Briggs Type Indicator is introduced, based on Carl Jung’s personality theories. The test remains the most widely taken today, with an estimated 4 million people taking it every year. (2, 3)
Today
$4 billion
Estimated size of personality testing industry (4)

The Personality of Your Personality Test

There are probably as many common personality tests as there are people in the world. Well, maybe not, but there are a whole lot of personality tests, and they all measure different things. Let’s take a closer look at the three most prominent tests in use today.
Myers-Briggs Type Indicator (3)
What: Based on the psychological types identified by Carl Jung in his theories that what appears to be random variation in behavior is actually orderly and consistent and can be traced to basic differences in people’s perception and judgment.
Developed: Based on decades of research that started in the 1940s; test first introduced in 1962.
Types: 16 distinct personality types
Length of test: 93 yes-or-no questions
Minnesota Multiphasic Personality Inventory (5)
What: Used in clinical settings to evaluate a patient’s psychological problems.
Developed: In the late 1930s to help diagnose mental illness. Often applied in legal cases, and only administered in clinical settings.
Types: 10 clinical subscales; 4 validity scales
Clinical subscales
  • Hypochondriasis (Hs)
  • Depression (D)
  • Hysteria (Hy)
  • Psychopathic Deviate (Pd)
  • Masculinity/Femininity (Mf)
  • Paranoia (Pa)
  • Psychasthenia (Pt)
  • Schizophrenia (Sc)
  • Hypomania (Ma)
  • Social Introversion (Si)
Length of test: 567 true-or-false questions
Five Factor Model (Big Five) (6)
What: Attempts to identify the five basic aspects that make up human personality: openness, conscientiousness, extroversion, agreeableness and neuroticism.
Developed: Initially developed in the 1970s, it’s been reaffirmed several times via independent research over the years.
Types: 5 fundamental factors on which an individual is rated so that their personality is made up of a mix of each trait. Could look something like this:
  • Openness: High, indicating impatience with the way things are.
  • Conscientiousness: Above average, indicating a balanced approach between sticking to plans and deadlines and being flexible.
  • Extroversion: Low, indicating someone who prefers calm environments to large social gatherings.
  • Agreeableness: Above average, indicating switching between being tenderhearted and tough-minded.
  • Neuroticism: Above average, indicating being quick to respond to changes in your environment.
Length of test: Variable, but some versions are as short as 45 questions on a 1-5 scale

What Do the Tests Reveal?

As we’ve seen, there are lots of different ways to describe someone’s personality. How do you compare with notable people (and a few fictional characters)? Using the most common personality test in the world, the Myers-Briggs Type Indicator, which of these traits are most familiar? (7)
Protectors (ESTJ, ESFJ, ISTJ, ISFJ)
Lucy Van Pelt
Tony Soprano
David Copperfield
George Washington
Evander Holyfield
Queen Elizabeth II
Creators (ESTP, ESFP, ISTP, ISFP)
James Bond
Bart Simpson
Boba Fett
Ronald Reagan
Magic Johnson
Ernest Hemingway
Intellectuals (ENTJ, ENTP, INTJ, INTP)
Jordi LaForge
Cosmo Kramer
Hannibal Lecter
Abraham Lincoln
Charles Darwin
Carl Jung
Visionaries (ENFJ, ENFP, INFJ, INFP)
Tin Man
E.T.
Steve Urkel
King David
William Shakespeare
Peter Jackson
Sources:

Sunday, May 11, 2014

Minnesota Multiphasic Personality Inventory - MMPI




From Wikipedia

The Minnesota Multiphasic Personality Inventory (MMPI) is the most widely used and researched standardizedcpsychometric test of adult  personality  and  psychopathology.[1]   Psychologists and other mental health professionals use various versions of the MMPI to develop treatment plans; assist with differential diagnosis; help answer legal questions (forensic psychology); screen job candidates during the personnel selection process; or as part of a therapeutic assessment procedure.[2]
 The original MMPI, first published by the University of Minnesota Press in 1943, was replaced by an updated version, the MMPI-2, in 1989. A version for adolescents, the MMPI-A, was published in 1992. An alternative version of the test, the MMPI-2 Restructured Form (MMPI-2-RF), published in 2008, retains some aspects of the traditional MMPI assessment strategy, but adopts a different theoretical approach to personality test development.


Clinical scales[edit]

Scale 1 (AKA the Hypochondriasis Scale) : Measures a person's perception and preoccupation with their health and health issues., 
Scale 2 (AKA the Depression Scale) : Measures a person's depressive symptoms level., 
Scale 3 (AKA the Hysteria Scale) : Measures the emotionality of a person., 
Scale 4 (AKA the PsychopathicDeviate Scale) : Measures a person's need for control or their rebellion against control., 
Scale 5 (AKA the Femininity/Masculinity Scale) : Measures a stereotype of a person and how they compare. For men it would be the Marlboro man, for women it would be June Cleaver or Donna Reed., 
Scale 6 (AKA the Paranoia Scale) : Measures a person's inability to trust., 
Scale 7 (AKA the Psychasthenia Scale) : Measures a person's anxiety levels and tendencies., 
Scale 8 (AKA the SchizophreniaScale) : Measures a person's unusual/odd cognitive, perceptual, and emotional experiences, 
Scale 9 (AKA the Mania Scale) : Measures a person's energy., 
Scale 0 (AKA the Social Introversion Scale) : Measures whether people enjoy and are comfortable being around other people.
The original clinical scales were designed to measure common diagnoses of the era.
NumberAbbreviationDescriptionWhat is measuredNo. of items
1HsHypochondriasisConcern with bodily symptoms32
2DDepressionDepressive Symptoms57
3HyHysteriaAwareness of problems and vulnerabilities60
4PdPsychopathic DeviateConflict, struggle, anger, respect for society's rules50
5MFMasculinity/FemininityStereotypical masculine or feminine interests/behaviors56
6PaParanoiaLevel of trust, suspiciousness, sensitivity40
7PtPsychastheniaWorry, Anxiety, tension, doubts, obsessiveness48
8ScSchizophreniaOdd thinking and social alienation78
9MaHypomaniaLevel of excitability46
0SiSocial IntroversionPeople orientation69
Codetypes are a combination of the one, two or three (and according to a few authors even four), highest-scoring clinical scales (ex. 4, 8, 2, = 482). Codetypes are interpreted as a single, wider ranged elevation, rather than interpreting each scale individually.





Source:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Minnesota_Multiphasic_Personality_Inventory

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The Minnesota Multiphasic Personality Inventory-2 (MMPI-2), a revision of the original MMPI (1943) was published by the University of Minnesota Press in 1989 and revised in 2001.  Updates were introduced in 2003 (The Restructured Clinical [RC] Scales) and 2006 (The Symptom Validity [FBS] Scale) documented in a test monograph in 2009.   The MMPI-2 is a self–report instrument designed to aid in the assessment of a wide range of clinical conditions. It is used in nonclinical settings to assess persons who are candidates for high-risk public safety positions (police officers, nuclear power plant personnel, firefighters, pilots, and air-traffic controllers), and in criminal and civil forensic settings. 



Age Range: 18 years and older
Reading Level: 5th grade (Lexile average), 4.6 grade (Flesch-Kincaid)
Administration: Online, Computer, CD or Paper and pencil 
Completion Time: 60-90 minutes
Forms: 567 True-False items
Norms: A nationally representative community sample of adult men and women (1,138 males and 1,462 females between the ages of 18 and 80 from several regions and diverse communities within the U.S.)
Scoring Options: Q-global Scoring and Reporting, Q Local Software, Mail-in Scoring Service, Hand Scoring
Report Option: Extended Score Reports, Adult Clinical Interpretive Reports, Forensic Settings Reports, Personnel Interp. and Adjustment Ratings Reports
Publication Date: 1989, 2001 (revised), updated 2003 and 2009
Publisher: University of Minnesota Press




Other references:

MMPI by JANE FRAMINGHAM, PH.D.
http://psychcentral.com/lib/minnesota-multiphasic-personality-inventory-mmpi/0005959


What Is the Minnesota Multiphasic Personality Inventory?
A Look at the History and Use of the MMPI  by Kendra Cherry
http://psychology.about.com/od/psychologicaltesting/a/mmpi.htm