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Title: Objective Personality Assessment


1
Objective Personality Assessment
  • Tony Donofrio, Ph.D., P.C.

2
Defining Personality
  • How would you define personality
  • Definitions of Personality
  • A unique composite of inborn and acquired mental
    abilities, temperaments, attitudes, and other
    individual differences in thoughts, feelings, and
    actions. This collection of cognitive and
    affective characteristics, as it exists in a
    particular person, is associated with a fairly
    consistent, predictable pattern of behavior
    (Aiken, 1999).
  • The dynamic organization within the individual
    of those psychophysical systems that determine
    his characteristic behavior and thought
    (Allport, 1937, p. 48, as cited in Feist, 1994).
  • An individuals unique constellation of
    consistent behavioral traits (Weiten, 1999)

3
Defining Personality
  • Definitions of Personality
  • That which permits a prediction of what a person
    will do in a given situation (Cattell, as cited
    in Feist, 1994)
  • The intrinsic organization of an individuals
    mental world that is stable over time and
    consistent over situations (Piedmont, 1998, p.
    2)

4
Brief History of Personality Assessment
  • Biblical allusions to personality dimensions
  • Numbers 123 Now Moses was a very humble man,
    more humble than anyone else on the face of the
    earth.
  • 1Chronicles 49 Jabez was more honorable than
    his brothers. His mother had named him Jabez,
    saying, "I gave birth to him in pain."
  • 2 Chronicles 2934 The priests, however, were too
    few to skin all the burnt offerings so their
    kinsmen the Levites helped them until the task
    was finished and until other priests had been
    consecrated, for the Levites had been more
    conscientious in consecrating themselves than the
    priests had been.
  • 12 But you have behaved more wickedly than your
    fathers. See how each of you is following the
    stubbornness of his evil heart instead of obeying
    me.

5
Brief History of Personality Assessment
  • Biblical allusions to personality dimensions
  • Luke 168 "The master commended the dishonest
    manager because he had acted shrewdly. For the
    people of this world are more shrewd in dealing
    with their own kind than are the people of the
    light.
  • Acts 1711 Now the Bereans were of more noble
    character than the Thessalonians, for they
    received the message with great eagerness and
    examined the Scriptures every day to see if what
    Paul said was true.
  • 1 Corinthians 1533 Do not be misled "Bad
    company corrupts good character." 34Come back to
    your senses as you ought, and stop sinning for
    there are some who are ignorant of God--I say
    this to your shame.

6
  • Judges 72-7 2The LORD said to Gideon, You have
    too many men for me to deliver Midian into their
    hands. In order that Israel may not boast
    against me that her own strength has saved her,
    3announce to the people Anyone who trembles with
    fear may turn back and leave Mount Gilead So
    twenty-two thousand men left, while ten thousand
    remained.
  • 4But the LORD said to Gideon, There are still
    too many men. Take them down to the water, and I
    will sift them for you there. If I say This one
    shall go with you, he shall go but if I say
    This one shall not go with you, he shall not
    go.
  • 5So Gideon took the men down to the water.
    There the LORD told him Separate those who lap
    the water with their tongues like a dog from
    those who kneel down to drink. 6Three hundred
    men lapped with their hands to their mouths. All
    the rest got down on their knees to drink.
  • 7The LORD said to Gideon With the three
    hundred men that lapped I will save you and give
    the Midianites into your hands. Let all the
    other men go, each to his own place.

7
  • What are the important dimensions to consider in
    studying (understanding) personality
  • Continuums

8
Brief History of Personality Assessment
  • Hippocrates (460-377 B.C.)
  • Described the four humors
  • (1) Phlegm, (2) Yellow bile, (3) Black bile, and
    (4) Blood
  • Galen (c. 200 A.D.)
  • Subscribed to the humoral theory introduced by
    Hippocrates
  • Proposed that ones temperament was associated
    with an overabundance of the humors
  • Blood Sanguine personality (forceful, direct,
    and courageous)
  • Black bile Melancholic personality (moody,
    brooding, and withdrawing)
  • Yellow bile Choleric personality (irritable,
    bitter, resentful)
  • Phlegm Phlegmatic personality ( weak, fragile,
    and indecisive)

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10
Brief History of Personality Assessment
  • Gall Spurzheim
  • Propagated the pseudoscience of phrenology (study
    of the mind)
  • Contended that proturbances and indentations on
    the human skull reflected the size of the
    underlying brain areas and hence an abundance or
    deficit of the faculty thought to be associated
    with that region.
  • Derived from Galls
  • Childhood experiences and
  • subsequent work in anatomy

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Theories of Personality
  • Type Theories
  • Assign individuals to categories or static
    classifications
  • Phsiognomy attempted to identify personality
    characteristics based upon various body features,
    particularly of the face
  • Sheldons Somatotypes
  • Endomorphy (viscerotonia) connected with jolly,
    sociable, comfort-seeking characteristics these
    individuals enjoy eating
  • Mesomorphy (somatotonia) associated with
    qualities of assertiveness, noisiness,
    callousness, dominance, a youthful orientation,
    and love of physical exercise
  • Ectomorphy (cerebrotonia) affiliated with
    emotional restraint, introspection,
    fast-reacting, hypersensitivity to pain, and
    sleep problems

13
  • Endomorphic Body Type
  • soft body
  • underdeveloped muscles
  • round shaped
  • over-developed digestive system
  • Associated personality traits
  • love of food
  • tolerant
  • evenness of emotions
  • love of comfort
  • sociable
  • good humored
  • relaxed
  • need for affection
  • Mesomorphic Body Type
  • hard, muscular body
  • overly mature appearance
  • rectangular shaped
  • thick skin
  • upright posture
  • Associated personality traits
  • adventurous
  • desire for power and dominance
  • courageous
  • indifference to what others think or want
  • assertive, bold
  • zest for physical activity
  • competitive
  • love of risk and chance
  • Ectomorphic Body Type
  • thin., flat chest
  • delicate build
  • young appearance
  • tall
  • lightly muscled
  • stoop-shouldered
  • large brain
  • Associated personality traits
  • self-conscious
  • preference for privacy
  • Introverted, inhibited
  • socially anxious
  • artistic
  • mentally intense
  • emotionally restrained

http//www.kheper.net/topics/typology/somatotypes.
html
14
Theories of Personality
  • Trait Theories
  • Gordon Allport
  • Trait a predisposition to respond in a
    particular way to persons, things, or situations
  • Allport Odbert (1936) were forerunners of the
    lexical approach
  • Allport assumes that traits vary in terms of
    their pervasiveness and generality
  • Generality
  • Common traits shared across a population
    permits interindividual comparisons (e.g., kind,
    sociable)
  • Personal dispositions (5 or 10 to hundreds)
    unique, individual traits, that stylistically
    guide behavior by rendering diverse stimuli
    functionally equivalent (e.g. quixotic,
    narcissistic, etc.)
  • All PDs are motivational (dynamic)
  • Pervasiveness
  • Cardinal trait - a dominant trait that
    characterizes nearly all of a persons behavior
  • Central traits (5-10) - prominent general
    dispositions found in anyone
  • Secondary traits - dispositions that surface in
    some situations but not in others
  • Proprium

15
Theories of Personality
Continuum of Personal Dispositions
16
Theories of Personality
  • Trait Theories
  • Raymond Cattell
  • Adopted an inductive approach to the study of
    personality traits
  • Distinguished between source traits and surface
    traits
  • Surface traits situationally exhibited ways of
    responding
  • Source traits the underlying or deeper-level
    trait that serves as a better predictor of
    behavior and is more consistent across situations
    (these traits account for the intercorrelations
    among surface traits).
  • Utilized the work of Allport and Odbert (1936) to
    conduct factor analysis on personality traits
  • Factor analysis predominately a data-reduction
    technique used to identify latent (underlying)
    constructs from a larger array of variables.
  • Example unselfish, helpful, altruistic, gentle,
    tender-minded
  • Example talkative, confident, gregarious,
    optimistic, energetic, assertive
  • Identified 35 Personality Traits to describe
    individuals
  • 23 considered normal
  • 12 considered abnormal
  • The level of each traits possessed by a person
    differs

Q, L, T data
17
  • Factor Analysis

Factor 1 Factor
2 Gregariousness 0.514
0.103 Assertiveness 0.622
0.087 Energy 0.583
0.216 Organization 0.143
0.397 Aspirations 0.092 0.499
18
  • Jesus Factor Analysis ?!?

19
Theories of Personality
  • Trait Theories
  • Raymond Cattell
  • Third traits dimension
  • Temperament traits concerned with how a person
    behaves
  • Motivation (dynamic) traits concerned with why
    an individual behaves in a certain manner
  • Ability traits refer to how far or how fast
    someone can respond
  • Pathology defined as exaggerated normal traits of
    presence of abnormal traits
  • Hans Eysenck
  • Organized personality along a four-tiered
    hierarchy
  • Specific acts or cognitions may or may not be
    characteristic of a person (e.g., completing an
    assignment)
  • Habitual acts or cognitions response that recur
    under similar circumstances with reasonable
    consistency (consistently completing assignments
    in various classes)
  • Traits semi-permanent personality dispositions
    represented by several related habitual responses
    (e.g., completing assignments and finishing
    chores persistence)
  • Types several interrelated traits (e.g.,
    extraversion)

20
Methods of Assessing Personality
Warmth (Temperament)
Intelligence (Ability)
Emotional Stability (Temperament)
Dominance
Impulsivity
Conformity
Boldness
Sensitivity
Suspiciousness
Imagination
Shrewdness
Insecurity
Radicalism
Self-sufficiency
Self-discipline
Tension
21
Theories of Personality
  • Trait Theories
  • Eysenck relied more on deductive methods he
    identified three, bipolar, superfactors, or types
  • Extraversion (vs. introversion) Eysenck
    considered extraversion a trait with substantial
    biological roots (variations in cortical arousal)
  • Neuroticism (vs. stability)
  • Psychoticism (vs. superego)
  • All three factors have biological/genetic
    foundations

22
Theories of Personality
  • Psychoanalytic Theories
  • Sigmund Freud
  • Focus is on unconscious mental forces and the
    impact of psychosexual development on personality
    formation and behavior
  • Freud believed personality solidified early in
    ones life (usually by age 6) and emerged from
    the dynamic interplay between ones environment
    and intrapsychic forces
  • Structure of the Mind
  • Id - Seeks immediate gratification operates
    according to the Pleasure principle
  • Superego Represents social standards of right
    and wrong (sense of morality) derived largely
    from parental interactions
  • Ego - Mediates between the urges of the Id and
    Superego operates according to the Reality
    principle
  • Personality is largely determined by the unique
    distribution of ones id, ego, and superego.

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24
Theories of Personality
  • Sigmund Freud
  • Behavior is driven by unconscious forces
    (dynamics of personality)
  • Instincts
  • Sex
  • Aggression
  • Anxiety
  • Defense mechanisms represent the various ways
    individuals seek to manage their unconscious
    anxiety and may become fixed manifestations of
    ones personality
  • Exodus 37-416 Moses resistance to Gods call
    on his life implementation of defense mechanisms
    until he finally laments to God please send
    someone else.
  • Arrested development (i.e., fixation) at any
    phase of psychosexual development will produce
    specific personality features

25
  • Freuds Psychosexual Development

26
Theories of Personality
  • Psychoanalytic Theories
  • Alfred Adler
  • Adler believed that all psychological phenomenon
    were unified with the individual in a self
    consistent manner (i.e., Style of Life)
  • Ones Style of Life included an individuals
    singular, unifying life goal as well as a
    persons manner of self-expression and
    self-understanding
  • Striving for Superiority - universal drive to
    adapt, improve oneself, and master lifes
    challenges (the dynamic force of personality).
  • Compensation - efforts to overcome a sense of
    inferiority by developing ones abilities.
  • Inferiority complex - exaggerated feelings of
    weakness and inadequacy

27
Theories of Personality
  • Psychoanalytic Theories
  • Erik Erikson
  • Proponent of ego psychology focused less on
    unconscious forces and more on the unifying and
    synthesizing function of the ego
  • The ego is composed of three facets
  • Body ego how one views him/herself physically
  • Ego ideal ones self image in comparison to
    some standard or ideal
  • Ego identity how one perceives him/herself in a
    variety of social roles
  • According to Erikson the ego develops through a
    series of eight psychosocial developmental stages
    that follow an epigenetic principle
  • Personality emerges from the unique way an
    individual navigates and integrates each
    developmental stage and its accompanying
    psychosocial task

28
Stages of Psychosocial Development
29
Theories of Personality
  • Linear Biometric Theory (Poppins, 1970)
  • Extremely brief administration and scoring
    protocols
  • Sensitive to gender differences
  • Readily interpretable trait-based constructs
  • Caution regarding client reaction to
    characterizations
  • Sensitive to change across the lifespan

30
Assessing Personality
  • How would you assess personality
  • Objective techniques
  • Cattell
  • 16PF (16 Personality Factors), CAQ (Clinical
    Analysis Questionnaire)
  • Eysenck
  • MPI (Maudsley Personality Inventory) or EPI
    Eysenck Personality Inventory)
  • MMPI-2, NEO PI-R, CPI (California Personality
    Inventory), PAI (Personality Assessment
    Inventory), MCMI-III (Millon Clinical Multiaxial
    Inventory), etc.
  • Projective Techniques (Projective hypothesis)
  • Rorschach, TAT (Thematic Apperception Test), Hand
    Test, Projective Drawings (e.g.,
    house-tree-person)

31
  • Consider the shape you find most appealing
    consider both form and color

32
You love a free and spontaneous life. And you
strive to enjoy every moment, in accordance with
the motto "You only live once." You are very
curious and open about everything new. You thrive
on change. Nothing is worse than when you feel
tied down. You experience your environment as
being versatile and always good for a surprise.
You demand a free and unattached life for
yourself that allows you to determine your own
course. You have an artistic bent in your work or
leisure activities. Your urge for freedom
sometimes causes you to do exactly the opposite
of what is expected of you. Your lifestyle is
highly individualistic. You would never follow
trends. On the contrary, you seek to live
according to your own ideas and convictions, even
if this means swimming against the tide.
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36
  • How accurate was the test
  • Projective techniques (Rorshach, TAT, CAT)
  • Objective techniques (MMPI-2, NEO PI-R, MCMI-III)

37
Ethical Legal Issues in Assessment
  • Ethical Codes
  • Ethical codes serve to
  • Educate members about sound ethical conduct and
    guide the fields standard of care
  • American Counseling Association (ACA)
  • American Association of Christian Counselors
    (AACC)
  • Provide a mechanism for professional
    accountability
  • Catalyze the refinement and improvement of
    clinical practice
  • Laws
  • Ohio Revised Code (ORC)
  • Ohio Administrative Code (OAC)
  • Divine Accountability
  • Love the Lord your God with all your heart and
    with all your soul and with all your mind. This
    is the first and greatest commandment. And the
    second is like it Love your neighbor as
    yourself. All the Law and the Prophets hang on
    these two commandments.
  • Matthew 2237-40, NIV

38
Ethical Legal Issues in Assessment
  • American Counseling Association
  • Section E Evaluation, Assessment, and
    Interpretation
  • General
  • Appraisal Techniques
  • Assessment is to be objective and interpretable
    in either comparative or absolute terms
  • Applies to test and non-test data
  • Client Welfare
  • Promotion of client welfare in all aspects of
    testing
  • Do not misuse or allow others to misuse results
  • Respect the clients right to access the results,
    interpretations, and bases for conclusions
  • Competence to Use and Interpret Tests
  • Limits of Competence
  • Counselors recognize their limits and practice
    within their scope of training
  • Counselors are familiar with reliability,
    validity, standardization, standard error of
    measure, and proper application of any technique
  • Appropriate Use
  • Counselors are responsible for application,
    scoring, interpretation, and use of testing
  • Decisions Based on Results
  • Counselors involved in client related
    decision-making have a thorough understanding of
    measurement, validation criteria, test research,
    development, and guidelines for use
  • Accurate Information

39
Ethical Legal Issues in Assessment
  • American Counseling Association
  • Section E Evaluation, Assessment, and
    Interpretation
  • Informed Consent
  • Explanation to clients
  • Prior to assessment, counselors explain the
    nature and purpose of testing and use of results
    in language understandable to client (or
    guardian)
  • Recipients of Results
  • The examinees welfare, explicit understanding,
    and prior agreement determine the recipients of
    test results. Counselors include accurate and
    appropriate interpretations with any release of
    individual or group test results.
  • Release of Information to Competent Professionals
  • Misuse of Results
  • Counselors do not misuse results and seek to
    prevent others from doing so
  • Release of Raw Data
  • Client consent must be obtained
  • Only release to persons qualified to
    interpret/apply the information
  • Proper Diagnosis of Mental Disorder
  • Proper Diagnosis
  • Assessment techniques (including interviews) used
    to make client care decisions are carefully
    selected and appropriately used
  • Cultural Sensitivity
  • Counselors understand the role culture plays in
    defining and diagnosing a disorder

40
Ethical Legal Issues in Assessment
  • American Counseling Association
  • Section E Evaluation, Assessment, and
    Interpretation
  • Test Selection
  • Appropriateness of Instruments
  • Consideration of validity, reliability,
    psychometric limitations, and appropriateness
  • Culturally Diverse Populations
  • Counselors avoid tests incompatible with clients
    culture (socialization, cognitive patterns)
  • Conditions of Test Administration
  • Administration Conditions
  • Tests are administered under standard conditions
    departures from this are noted
  • Computer Administration
  • Counselors remain responsible for results even
    when computers are employed
  • Unsupervised Test-Taking
  • Counselor provides adequate supervision of
    testing (unless test does not require)
  • Disclosure of Favorable Conditions
  • Inform client of optimal test conditions
  • Diversity in Testing
  • Standardization Sample
  • Counselors are cautious about making
    interpretations for persons of diverse groups not
    represented in the standardization sample (age,
    color, culture, disability, ethnic group, gender,
    race, religion, sexual orientation, and SES)

41
Ethical Legal Issues in Assessment
  • American Counseling Association
  • Section E Evaluation, Assessment, and
    Interpretation
  • Test Scoring and Interpretation
  • Reporting Reservations
  • Counselors note concerns about validity or
    reliability of outcomes due to administration
    oddities or inappropriateness of norms
  • Research Instruments
  • Counselors exercise caution when interpreting
    psychometrically questionable tests
  • Testing Services
  • Counselors are ultimately responsible for results
    obtained from testing services
  • Automated test services are considered
    professional-to-professional consultation
  • Test Security
  • Maintenance of Test Integrity
  • Counselors do not inappropriately reproduce,
    modify, or release test materials
  • Obsolete Tests and Outdated Items
  • Obsolete Data and Results
  • Counselors do not use and attempt to prevent the
    use of outdated testing or results
  • Test Construction
  • Test Development
  • Counselors use contemporary psychometric
    standards when developing new instruments

42
Ethical Legal Issues in Assessment
  • Is this ethical behavior
  • A private practitioner administers a personality
    test to all of his clients. He carefully explains
    the purpose of the test and how the results will
    be used in the therapeutic process. His
    technical training and years of experience with
    the test enhance his ability to interpret it.
  • A school counselor tells the parents of a third
    grader that their child's high achievement in the
    classroom coupled with superior scores on the
    Wechsler Intelligence Scale for Children-Revised
    (WISC-R) predicts success if the child is
    advanced a grade above his age level, offering
    more stimulation. When the parents asked
    follow-up questions regarding the recommendation
    it became apparent the counselor only vaguely
    understood how WISC-R scores were derived and the
    specific abilities they represent.

43
Ethical Legal Issues in Assessment
  • Is this ethical behavior
  • The manager of an employment agency asks her
    counseling staff for advice on the purchase of a
    new test of manual dexterity currently being used
    by numerous other agencies in their clinical
    assessments. The counselors evaluate the test
    manual and advise against purchasing the test
    because there is limited evidence supporting the
    tests predictive validity.
  • A counselor administers a newly developed ability
    test to a prospective college student. The test's
    predictive validity has not been established. In
    interpreting the scores, the counselor does not
    inform the student about the test's limitations
    and proceeds to draw inferences from the test
    results about the student's chances for success
    in college.

44
Ethical Legal Issues in Assessment
  • Is this ethical behavior
  • A student completed a battery of tests at a
    university placement office. Approximately two
    weeks later he was mailed a report outlining the
    tests he had completed and gave percentile scores
    for each. The materials provided very basic
    descriptions of what each scale meant and
    included the therapists placement
    recommendations based on the observed results.
    The student disagreed with the findings and
    followed up with his academic advisor.

45
Ethical Legal Issues in Assessment
  • Is this ethical behavior
  • A therapist trained in the administration and
    interpretation of MMPI-2s was asked by a local
    police department to screen incoming applicants
    and provide recommendations about their capacity
    to function on the force. Although the clinician
    found that, based on MMPI-2 scale elevations, a
    disproportionate number of minority clients were
    unfit for the demands of law enforcement she
    remained committed to treating all applicants
    (minority and majority clients) equally and
    refused to adjust her interpretations based upon
    an individuals racial/ethnic status she
    considered doing so a breech of the tests
    integrity that would render all profiles
    essentially equal and jeopardize the instruments
    ability to objectively evaluate someones
    capacity.

46
Ethical Legal Issues in Assessment
  • Is this ethical behavior
  • A counselor was approached by a denomination to
    evaluate a candidate readiness for ordination.
    The clinician was given latitude by
    denominational leadership to select instruments
    she though best for assessing potential moral,
    occupational, and/or personal qualities that
    might hinder the individuals ability to minister
    effectively (they were interested in the
    candidates readiness to enter ministry.) The
    counselor administered a battery of personality
    and psychopathology measures and was surprised to
    find how many aspiring pastors obtained
    significant elevations on certain measures of
    pathology. Although surprised by this finding,
    she interpreted the tests according to their
    appropriate protocols and, after reviewing the
    results with each candidate, released (with a
    signed release of information) her report and the
    corresponding test profiles to the denomination
    for review and retention.

47
Ethical Legal Issues in Assessment
  • Ohio Administrative Code
  • 4757-5-01 Code of Ethics
  • (F) Use of Assessment
  • Exact duplication of ACA code of ethics
  • 4757-6-01 Reports prepared for court review
  • (C)
  • Counselors should remain current in their
    knowledge of data collection methods
  • (E)
  • Counselors must be aware diversity issues impact
    on objective evaluations
  • (G)
  • Counselors may be asked to critique the
    assumptions and methodologies about another
    mental health professionals methods
  • (J)
  • Will use multiple methods, if necessary, to
    gather data

48
Ethical Legal Issues in Assessment
  • Ohio Administrative Code
  • 4757-13-01 Educational requirements for admission
    to the examination for professional counselor
  • 11 core competency areas are defined by the state
  • (A) (1) (d) (ix) Appraisal of the individual
    through testing individual and group
    psychological and educational testing and the
    study of individual differences with
    consideration of ethnic, cultural, and gender
    factors
  • 4757-11-01 Denial, suspension, revocation, of
    license Disciplinary action
  • (B) Violated any provision of the code of
    ethical practice or professional conduct or
    committed any other violation of professional
    behaviour contained in the rules
  • (C) (18) failure to report any alleged
    violations of this act or rules adopted under it.

49
Ethical Legal Issues in Assessment
  • American Association of Christian Counselors
  • 1-530 Ethics in Testing, Assessment, and Clinical
    Evaluation
  • General
  • Therapists conduct evaluations commensurate with
    their level of training
  • Clinicians avoid (1) incompetent/inaccurate
    evaluations, (2) unnecessary or excessive
    (financial) testing, and (3) unauthorized
    practice of testing
  • 1-531 Use of Appropriate Assessment
  • Counselor use appropriate assessments, administer
    them properly, and have an adequate knowledge of
    the instruments psychometrics
  • 1-532 Reporting and Interpreting Results
  • Findings are reported in a comprehendible and
    objective manner
  • Potential bias in the results and recommendations
    are duly considered
  • Cultural factors (broadly defined) are weighed
  • Uncertain findings will be communicated in
    tentative language
  • James 512 Above all, my brothers, do not swear
    not by heaven or by earth or by anything else.
    Let your Yes be yes, and your No, no, or you
    will be condemned

50
Switching Gears
Image taken from http//www.ignorancia.org/img_p
age.php?image76
51
Statistical Considerations
  • Categories of Statistics
  • Descriptive
  • Measures of Central Tendency
  • Mean
  • The average score in a data set sometimes
    referred to as the arithmetic mean
  • Median
  • The score falling exactly in the middle of a
    distribution
  • Easier to identify when there is an odd number of
    scores must interpolate when there are an even
    number of scores
  • Mode
  • The most frequently occurring score in a data set
  • Measures of Variability
  • Range
  • Standard deviation
  • Conceptually, the standard deviation (SD)
    represents the average amount each individual
    score differs from the mean of the group
  • Inferential

52
Descriptive Statistics
  • Calculations
  • Mean
  • 20, 21, 28, 24, 25, 27, 25, 22, 24, 26, 24
  • 20, 21, 28, 24, 25, 27, 25, 22, 24, 26, 24
  • Median
  • 20, 21, 28, 24, 25, 27, 25, 22, 24, 26, 24 (Odd
    number of scores)
  • 20 21 22 24 24 24 25 25 26 27
    28
  • 20, 21, 28, 24, 25, 27, 25, 22, 24, 26, 24, 31
    (Even number of scores)
  • 20 21 22 24 24 24 25 25 26 27
    28 31
  • Mode
  • 20 21 22 24 24 24 25 25 26 27
    28

, 114, 121
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Shapes of Distributions
Normal Distribution
  • Mean Median Mode
  • Symmetrical about midpoint
  • Tails approach X axis, but do not touch

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Normal Distribution
  • The normal curve is symmetrical
  • One SD to either side of the mean contains 34 of
    area under curve
  • 68 of scores lie within 1 standard deviation
    of mean

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Normal Distribution
www.hawcc.hawaii.edu/.../ Notes/Lesson431.htm
56
Normal Distributions
www.southalabama.edu/.../ lectures/lec15.htm
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58
Shapes of Distributions
  • The tail tells the tale

www.southalabama.edu/.../ lectures/lec15.htm
59
  • Correlation coefficient

r 0.5 r2 0.25
25
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61
Statistical Considerations
  • Reliability
  • Reliability is a property of the scores obtained
    when the test is administered to a particular
    group of people on a specific occasion and under
    certain conditions.
  • All types of measurement (instrumentation)
    involve some level of error
  • Unreliability is the result of measurement errors
    that may be reflective of temporary changes in an
    individuals internal states or properties of the
    instrument itself.

62
Statistical Considerations
  • Reliability
  • Potential Sources of Error in Psychological
    Instrumentation/Measurement
  • Method Error
  • Errors related to researchers design or
    execution flaws
  • Examples nonstandardization, scoring problems,
    calculation errors, differential conditions,
    sample irregularities, etc.
  • Trait Error
  • Errors introduced by participant differences that
    substantively impact research outcomes
  • Examples Participant bias, participant health,
    self-selection errors (e.g., personality), IQ,
    etc.
  • Random Error (McBurney, 2001)
  • Errors related to the influence of unpredictable
    factors or some unknown independent variable
  • Examples seating arrangement (participant
    placement), disruption to testing, ordering
    effects, etc.
  • Systematic Error (McBurney, 2001)
  • Errors associated with the presence of some
    systematic bias (most serious when associated
    with the manipulation of the independent
    variable)
  • Examples typographical error on assessment, use
    of a faulty scoring program, nonstandardized
    procedure employed by researcher, etc.

63
Statistical Considerations
  • Classic Reliability Theory
  • Observed test scores are assumed to be composed
    of true scores and unsystematic error scores
  • (S2obs S2tru S2err).
  • Reliability is the ratio of true score variance
    to observed score variance this can be
    algebraically expressed as
  • Reliability estimates range from 1.00 (perfectly
    reliable) to .00 (total unreliability)

64
Statistical Considerations
  • Reliability Coefficients
  • Test-Retest Reliability
  • The test-retest coefficient (coefficient of
    stability) measures reliability by correlating
    scores obtained by the same group of people on
    the same test at two points in time.
  • The time interval between test and retest greatly
    affects the test-retest coefficient ( time h r
    difference in conditions
  • h time r h difference in conditions)
  • Parallel Forms Reliability (Alternate Forms
    Reliability)
  • A parallel forms coefficient (coefficient of
    equivalence coefficient of stability and
    equivalence) is determined by correlating scores
    from equivalent test forms and is able to control
    for both error due to differing administration
    times and error do to different forms.

65
Statistical Considerations
  • Reliability Coefficients
  • Internal Consistency Coefficients
  • Internal consistency measures do not control for
    variations in testing conditions or times of
    administration, therefore, they are fundamentally
    different than test-retest and parallel forms
    coefficients.
  • Split-half Method test items are divided into
    two sets and the separate scores are correlated.
  • Kuder-Richardson Method estimates r from all
    possible split-half possibilities. (KR20 used for
    heterogenous instruments KR21 used for
    homogenous instruments)
  • Coefficient Alpha this general formula is
    capable of producing r values when test items are
    scored other than 0 and 1 (therefore it can
    accommodate weighting).
  • Interscorer Reliability
  • Interscorer reliability (interrater reliability)
    is used when subjective evaluations are made in a
    scoring process scores between judges are
    correlated to determine reliability.

66
Statistical Considerations
  • Variability and Reliability
  • Adding questions of similar content and
    difficulty can increase test reliability.
  • Reliability will increase when a heterogeneous
    group is used as the sample.
  • Standard error of measurement (SEM) is an
    estimate of the average error in the
    approximation of a score.
  • The standard deviation of a hypothetical infinite
    number of administrations of a test
  • Serr S 1 r11

67
Statistical Considerations
  • Validity
  • Validity is the extent to which a test measures
    what it was designed to measure.
  • A test can have multiple validities at the same
    time.
  • Construct Validity refers to how accurately an
    instrument measure the theoretical construct (or
    concept) it purports to assess
  • Convergent Validity
  • Discriminate Validity
  • Evidence for Construct Validity
  • Expert judge
  • Internal consistency analysis
  • Studies
  • Correlation with similar and different criterion
    measures
  • Indepth questioning of respondents

An instrument should have high correlations with
tests or measures assessing the same/similar
construct (convergent validity) and low
correlations with measures assessing
opposite/different constructs (discriminate
validity).
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Statistical Considerations
  • Validity
  • Content Validity refers to how accurately the
    content of a test (through its responses)
    represents the total domain of the construct
    under examination
  • Most often used in conjunction with measures of
    achievement
  • Criterion Validity test scores from a group are
    compared with that same groups performance in
    some criterion-specific area (e.g. GPA, mental
    capacity, productivity)
  • Concurrent Validity
  • Predictive Validity
  • Standard Error of Estimate
  • Face Validity

69
Statistical Considerations
  • Factors Affecting Criterion-related Validity
  • Group Differences
  • Validity coefficients tend to be smaller in
    homogeneous groups.
  • Cross-validation will lead to a more accurate,
    but typically smaller validity coefficient.
  • Test Length
  • Within limits, longer tests with heterogeneous
    groups tend to increase validity coefficients.
  • Criterion Contamination
  • Improper methodologies can lead to contamination
    (invalidation) of the criterion (e.g. failing to
    utilize blind or double-blind procedures).
  • Incremental Validity
  • Refers to how much a particular test can add to
    predictive validity.
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