1 / 8

Morphological assessments: From the head to the body

Morphological assessments: From the head to the body. Phrenology (Gall, early 1800s) – skull shape = personality Sheldon’s body types (1950) Based on photographs of all incoming freshmen at Ivy league schools in the 1930s Endomorph – jolly/happy, lazy Mesomorph – dominant, athletic

jag
Télécharger la présentation

Morphological assessments: From the head to the body

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Morphological assessments: From the head to the body • Phrenology (Gall, early 1800s) – skull shape = personality • Sheldon’s body types (1950) • Based on photographs of all incoming freshmen at Ivy league schools in the 1930s • Endomorph – jolly/happy, lazy • Mesomorph – dominant, athletic • Ectomorph – smart, shy • Body type and criminality (Lombroso)

  2. Current Assessment Clinical settings: • Psychodynamic methods: word association, TAT, Rorschach, etc. • MMPI - developed in 1940 using an empirical approach, revised in 1989 (MMPI-2) and has 567 T/F items • Most widely used inventory in clinical settings • items generally lack face validity (not obvious) • validity scales (lie, defensiveness, infrequency) • Assesses m/f, Si, Hs, Pa, etc. (psychopathology= personality)

  3. Assessment - continued Non-clinical settings • NEO-PI – developed for use in the non-clinical population • Neuroticism, Extraversion, Openness to new experience, Agreeableness, & Conscientiousness • What does it mean to be neurotic? • Consequences of having internal control beliefs on health and happiness (old age home studies)

  4. Intelligence - what is it? • Cognitive abilities such as memory, vocabulary, reasoning, general knowledge, speed of responding, etc. • Wechsler Adult Intelligence Scale (WAIS-III) • Verbal and Performance IQ • Mean IQ = 100, SD = 15 • Like all IQ measures, it is considered to be culturally biased (no such thing as a culture free test)

  5. Alternatives to traditional intelligence • Gould: Intelligence does not = IQ; does not reflect innate skills, nor is intelligence unchangeable (video) • Broader definitions of intelligence: Gardner’s multiple intelligences (e.g.., abilities in music, art, language, social skills, coordination, etc.) • Creativity - a way to assess alternative forms of intelligence (flexibility in how one thinks about a problem- allows for novel responses and divergent thinking – example items for the consequences test)

  6. Stunted intellectual development Associated with several developmental disorders including • Autism: extremely low IQ, minimal verbalizations, isolative, repetitious (rocking) and sometimes self-damaging (head banging) behavior (Overall: 1 in 10,000) • More common in males, but females are more severe cases Savant syndrome • Very rare (only 1% of all autistic individuals: Overall: 1 in a million) • An extraordinary ability (either in absolute or relative to daily functioning), severe cognitive deficits, over attention Stimulus over-selectivity – over attention to only one aspect of a stimulus (can explain both autism and savant syndrome)

  7. Biases and heuristics in judgment • General rules we apply in reasoning to be efficient (can result in erroneous conclusions when improperly applied) • What percentage of crimes are considered violent crimes? • The availability heuristic • Who is most likely to be a quiet individual who likes classical music and cognac? The chair of the UNC music dept or a taxi driver? • The representative heuristic (ignores base rates) • What is your chance of getting AIDS in the next two years? What is the chance of someone of the same age/gender as you getting AIDS in the next 2 years? • Overconfidence bias

  8. Biases and heuristics in judgment – cont. • What are the next three numbers (2,4,6, _,_,_)? • Confirmation bias • The odds of winning at black jack are 50%. Assuming you have just lost 10 hands in a row, what are your odds of winning the next one? • Gambler’s fallacy (luck will change) – in reality, these are random and unrelated events. Luck doesn’t change. • All-star team vs. a regular team, who should win? • Fallacy of composition (the whole is = sum of its parts) • Buying beef with 25% fat or 75% fat free? • Framing effects – context provides information that results in different conclusions

More Related