Theories of Personality 537
Practice Quiz How much do you remember?
Pick the best answer.
- Which of the following is an example of a halo effect?
a. Terrance unknowingly tends to rate his new client’s behavior
slightly higher during testing after noticing the client is wearing a
class ring from his own alma mater.
b. James tends to distrust all instructors, regardless if they are new
or if he has had them for multiple classes.
c. Madeline always seems to like the last person she interviews for
a job because she remembers the most about them.
d. Aileen provided her diagnosis only after conducting her own
assessment and compiling information from two of her profes-
sional colleagues. - Frequency counts and rating scales are especially helpful in assessing
a. internal thought processes.
b. observable behaviors.
c. self-efficacy.
d. personal values.
3. Which of the following personality assessments might be best
suited for objectively identifying abnormal patterns of behavior or
thinking?
a. Personal interview
b. MBTI
c. MMPI-2-RF
d. TAT
4. What is the function of a validity scale?
a. to determine if a person is giving an accurate response
b. to determine how a subject really feels
c. to help better explain the results of a personality test
d. to offer a diagnosis of abnormal behavior plus a positive
therapeutic treatmen
Applying Psychology to Everyday Life
Biological Bases of Personality
- 16 Identify some biological bases of personality.
In 1796, Dr. Franz Joseph Gall, a German physician, developed a theory of personality
traits based on the shape of a person’s skull. This theory became very popular in the nine-
teenth century and was known as phrenology. Gall believed that certain areas of the brain
were responsible for certain aspects of personality and that the skull itself would bulge out
according to which of these traits were dominant (Finger, 1994; Simpson, 2005). As psy-
chology became a scientific area of its own, nonscience-based ideas such as phrenology
were soon relegated to the realm of pseudoscience.
interview: largely self-report through unstructured or semistructured interview;
problems—people can lie or interviewer can be biased (halo effect)
behavioral assessments: direct observation is used to quantify behavior through
rating scales and frequency counts; problems—observer bias
and lack of environmental control
personality inventories: standard list of questions, often
with “yes/true” or “no/false” answers, typically more objective and reliable, many
have validity and reliability scales built in; problems—still able to provide false
answers and, although difficult, can “fake bad” or “fake good”
see Table 13.3
Assessment of Personality
(can be assessed through various methods, based on perspective endorsed)
NEO-PI-R
MMPI-2-RF
projective tests: ambiguous visual stimuli are used and clients are asked to
describe what they see, unconscious concerns or fears are
“projected” onto stimulus (e.g., Rorschach Inkblot Test and TAT);
problems—nature of tests result in possible subjectivity in
interpretation; reliability is suspect
Concept Map L.O. 13.14, 13.15
Interactive
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