Projective Personality Assessment
Projective Personality Assessment
Projective Personality Assessment
Submitted to:
Madam Ghazala
Submitted by:
Areeda Tahir
Mahrukh Baber
Hira Zafar
Amara Arif
Maimoonah Saghir
Sahar Syed Bukhari
Date of Submission:
6th May,2015
Projective Tests
Non-Projective Tests
Projective Tests
In psychology, a projective test is a personality test designed to let a person respond to
ambiguous stimuli, presumably revealing hidden emotions and internal conflicts projected by
the person into the test. This is sometimes contrasted with a so-called "objective test" or "selfreport test" in which responses are analyzed according to a presumed universal standard (for
example, a multiple choice exam), and are limited to the content of the test. The responses to
projective tests are content analyzed for meaning rather than being based on presuppositions
about meaning, as is the case with objective tests. Projective tests have their origins in
psychoanalytic psychology, which argues that humans have conscious and unconscious
attitudes and motivations that are beyond or hidden from conscious awareness.
Theory for Projective Tests
The general theoretical position behind projective tests is that whenever a specific question is
asked, the response will be consciously-formulated and socially determined. These responses
do not reflect the respondent's unconscious or implicit attitudes or motivations. The
respondent's deep-seated motivations may not be consciously recognized by the respondent
or the respondent may not be able to verbally express them in the form demanded by the
questioner. Advocates of projective tests stress that the ambiguity of the stimuli presented
within the tests allow subjects to express thoughts that originate on a deeper level than tapped
by explicit questions, and provide content that may not be captured by responsive tools that
may lack appropriate items. After some decrease in interest in the 1980s and 1990s, newer
research suggesting that implicit motivation is best captured in this way has increased the
research and use of these tools.
Hypothesis
This holds that an individual puts structure on an ambiguous situation in a way that is
consistent with their own conscious and unconscious needs. It is an indirect method- testee is
talking about something that comes spontaneously from the self without conscious awareness
or editing.
place with the Rorschach cards has produced a standardized protocol, eliminating the biggest
criticism of projective tests.
Method
The tester and subject typically sit next to each other at a table, with the tester slightly behind
the subject. This is to facilitate a "relaxed but controlled atmosphere". There are ten official
inkblots, each printed on a separate white card, approximately 18x24 cm in size. Each of the
blots has near perfect bilateral symmetry. Five inkblots are of black ink, two are of black and
red ink and three are multicolored, on a white background. After the test subject has seen and
responded to all of the inkblots (free association phase), the tester then presents them again
one at a time in a set sequence for the subject to study: the subject is asked to note where he
sees what he originally saw and what makes it look like that (inquiry phase). The subject is
usually asked to hold the cards and may rotate them. Whether the cards are rotated and other
related factors such as whether permission to rotate them is asked, may expose personality
traits and normally contributes to the assessment. As the subject is examining the inkblots, the
psychologist writes down everything the subject says or does, no matter how trivial. Analysis
of responses is recorded by the test administrator using tabulation and scoring sheet and, if
required, a separate location chart.
would be a silhouette of a man looking off into the distance. While there is obvious
emotional and intellectual activity, the details are not revealed.
Second, they correspond to the major themes of psychoanalytic thought, such as the oedipal
complex, where the son develops an attraction for the mother and then identifies with the
father. There are relationship cards and several that portray both sexual and aggressive
undertones without depicted actual violence, aggression, or sexual activity.
The TAT probably comes in second after the Rorschach in terms of its use and research as a
projective test. Individuals being tested are asked to tell a story about each card, including
what led up to the picture, what is happening in the present, and how the story will end. The
basic premise is that unconscious themes will begin to develop relating to specific types of
cards or to the test in general. These themes can then be interpreted and used for further
exploration
3- House-Tree-Person
The House-Tree-Person test (H-T-P) requires no specific materials and is not standardized at
all. The assessor tells the
individual to draw a
picture of a house, a tree,
and a person.
Once
completed, he may ask
the individual to tell a
story related to each
picture, including who,
what, where, how, and
why's of each.
Examples of follow up
questions:
After the House: Who lives here? Is the occupant happy? What goes on inside the house?
What's it like at night? Do people visit the house? What else do the people in the house want
to add to the drawing?
After the Tree: What kind of tree is this? How old is the tree? What season is it? Has anyone
tried to cut it down? What else grows nearby? Who waters this tree? Trees need sunshine to
live so does it get enough sunshine?
After the Person is drawn: who is the person? How old is the person? What do they like and
dislike doing? Has anyone tried to hurt them? Who looks out for them?
HTP is given to persons above the age of three and takes approximately 150 minutes to
complete based on the subject's level of mental functioning. During the first phase, the testtaker is asked to draw the house, tree, and person and the test-giver asks questions about each
picture. There are 60 questions originally designed by Buck but art therapists and trained test
givers can also design their own questions, or ask follow up questions. This phase is done
with a crayon. During the second phase of HTP, the
test-taker draws the same pictures with a pencil or pen.
Again the test-giver asks similar questions about the
drawings. Note: some mental health professionals only
administer phase one or two and may change the
writing instrument as desired. Variations of the test may
ask the person to draw one person of each sex, or put
all drawings on the same page.
Different methods of interpretation are utilized, and
depending on the assessor's training and theoretical
approach, different interpretations can arise. Like most
projective techniques, its strength lies in weakening the
defenses and getting a clearer picture of the
unconscious.
6-
6- Word Association
Word association testing is a technique developed by Carl Jung to explore complexes in the
personal unconscious. Jung came to recognize the existence of groups of thoughts, feelings,
memories, and perceptions, organized around a central theme, that he termed psychological
complexes. This discovery was related to his research into word association, a technique
whereby words presented to patients elicit other word responses that reflect related concepts
in the patients psyche, thus providing clues to their unique psychological make-up.
Word Association tests can take many forms as there is no single accepted list of words.
Simply put, when using this type of test, the assessor would read a list of words, asking the
participant to write down the very first thing that comes to mind after each. The object is to
bypass defense mechanisms that are at play and get to the unconscious before these defenses
have a chance to work.
7- Sentence completion:
Sentence Completion Test, was first developed by Herman Ebbinghaus in 1897. Sentence
completions tests typically provide respondents with beginnings of sentences referred to as
stems, and respondents then complete the sentences in ways that are meaningful to them.
The responses are believed to provide indications of attitudes, beliefs, motivations, or other
mental states. There is debate over whether or not sentence completion tests elicit responses
from conscious thought rather than unconscious states. This debate would affect whether
sentence completion tests can be strictly categorized as projective tests.
A sentence completion test form may be relatively short, such as those used to assess
responses to advertisements, or much longer, such as those used to assess personality. A long
sentence completion test is the Forer Sentence Completion Test, which has 100 stems. The
tests are usually administered in booklet form where respondents complete the stems by
writing words on paper.
The structures of sentence completion tests vary according to the length and relative
generality and wording of the sentence stems. Structured tests have longer stems that lead
respondents to more specific types of responses; less structured tests provide shorter stems,
which produce a wider variety of responses. There are many sentence completion tests
available for use by researchers. Some of the most widely used sentence completion tests
include:
Rotter Incomplete Sentence Blank was developed by Julian Rotter and Rafferty in
1950. It comes in three forms i.e. school form, college form, adult form for different
age groups, and comprises 40 incomplete sentences
Miner Sentence Completion Test The MSCS includes a 40 item multiple choice
scale. Among the 40 items are seven subscales. It measure managerial motivation
Washington University Sentence Completion Test (WUSCT) is pencil-and-paper
test which consists of 36 items and measures ego development.
Thompson version,
CAT (animals) and CAT-H, (humans)
Senior AT,
Blacky pictures test - dogs
Picture Story Test - adolescents
Education Apperception Test -attitudes towards learning
Michigan Picture Test - children 8-14
TEMAS - Hispanic children
Make-A-Picture Story- make own pictures from figures 6yrs & up.
8- Graphology
Graphology is the analysis of the physical characteristics and patterns of handwriting
purporting to be able to identify the writer, indicating psychological state at the time of
writing, or evaluating personality characteristics. It is generally considered a pseudoscience
(false). The term is sometimes incorrectly used to refer to forensic document examination.
Clinicians who assess handwriting to derive tentative information about the writer's
personality attend to and analyze the writing's organization on the page, movement style and
use of distinct letterforms.
9- Free Association
A psychoanalytic technique first developed by Sigmund Freud and still used by some
therapists today, free association invites patients to relate whatever thoughts come to mind,
without censorship or embarrassment, in order for the therapist and patient to learn more
about how the
patient thinks and
feels.
Freud would sit in
his chair behind the
patient so as not to
allow
any
projection to occur.
He would then
allow the patient to
talk,
without
10-
Dream Analysis
where the person flew, how fast, how high, etc. The latent content consists of bits and pieces
of the unconscious that seep out while we are asleep and our defense mechanisms are their
weakest. The dream of flying may represent a deeper unconscious need for freedom, a fear
becoming too grounded or stuck, or perhaps even an expression of one's sexual impulses.
The interpretation afforded a specific dream can vary dramatically and most agree that using
this technique in conjunction with other information is its only ethical use.
The more unstructured the stimuli, the more examinees reveal about their personality.
Projection is greater to stimulus material that is similar to the examinee
Every response provides meaning for personality analysis.
There is an "unconscious."
Subjects are unaware of what they disclose
Situation Variables
Age of examiner
Specific instructions
Subtle reinforcement cues
Setting-privacy
References
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Projective_test
http://allpsych.com/personalitysynopsis/rorschach.html
https://medium.com/@gtweedy/the-animal-metaphor-test-d7845fd168a1
http://jungcurrents.com/jung-dreams-symbollically-magritte/
http://psychology.about.com/od/psychologicaltesting/f/projective-tests.htm
http://www.sparknotes.com/psychology/psych101/personality/section7.rhtml
http://homepages.neiu.edu/~mecondon/proj-lec.htm