Evaluation of
the structure, functioning, and pathology of personality has traditionally been
an essential and challenging psychological assessment component. Various
assessment methods have been used for the realization of this aim, such as
subjective, objective, and projective. Each of these methods has some strengths
and weaknesses (Blais and Baity, 2008). There has been controversy regarding
the projective methods’ nomenclature, whether these should be labelled as a
projective tests or projective techniques. Many scholars preferred to call
these devices as projective techniques because most of the projective
instruments lack the psychometric properties possessed by an objective test.
Projective techniques compared to the subjective and objective assessment
methods in which assessment is made either in terms of given by others
information (case history, interview) or based on the direct description of themselves (inventories), are
based on fundamentally different assumptions; people can project their
personality dispositions if presented with unstructured ambiguous stimuli and
provided the liberty to respond.
Projective techniques have a long and rich history, William
Shakespeare wrote about the projective usefulness of clouds, and William Stern
used cloud images as test stimuli before Rorschach's use of inkblots. Galton
suggested the use of word Association Methods, and Kraepelin used these methods
for clinical diagnosis and categorization. Binet and Henry (1896) initially
used pictures and inkblots as the projective indices of intelligence and other
mental abilities, i.e., Creativity and Imagination. Adler also used the Recall The method as a kind of projective approach in which the subject was asked to
recall his first memory. Even in ancient epics like Upnishads, Bible, and
stories in Sufism, there are references of the importance of interpreting
narratives information (Groth-Marnat, 1992). Utterances of Greek oracles like
inkblots were open to varying interpretations. Interpretations of artistic
works have also been considered to reveal something about the artist and his or
her subject (Hammer, 1958).
However, the original impetus for projective techniques
can be attributed to Herman Rorschach's classical monograph entitled
Psycho-diagnostic in 1921, in which he stated the use of inkblots as an important
and effective method of psychopathology. In the later 1920s, David Levy started
using inkblot testing in the USA, which led to the start of teaching Rorschach
courses by Beck, Klopfer, and Hertz. In 1935 Morgan and Murray introduced TAT
and subsequently in 1938, Murray conceptually described the projection process.
The term projective became popular after Frank (1939) coined and discussed in a
paper on projective methods. Frank conceptualized projective methods/techniques
as psychological assessment procedures in which the subjects attribute their
inner needs and feelings to ambiguous stimulus situations. The assessment
stimuli in projective techniques are relatively unstructured material or tasks,
which the subject is required to describe,
tell a story about, complete or respond to in some or other way.
Compared to other personality assessment methods,
particularly objective tests, i.e., inventories and rating scales, projective
techniques are usually less evident in intent, making them less vulnerable to
faking, motivated distortions, and response sets. As the test material in
projective techniques are relatively unstructured in content and open-ended in
terms of responses yielded, it is assumed that the test material's mental structure reflects the projection of the subject's personal perception of things.
It is also assumed that the more the test material unstructured, the greater the
probability of revealing important implicit facets of personality. A Group of
these assumptions is called ‘projective
hypothesis’.
The Freudian psychoanalytic framework has strongly influenced
the early conceptualization of projective assessment. The projective techniques
were defined in terms of the Freudian notion of unconscious processes and ego
defence mechanisms, particularly projection. It is reflected in that the most
excellent development and reliance on projective tests occurred between 1930 to
1960, when Psychoanalysis was the most dominating force in Psychology. Some
expert does not intend to stick Freudian definition of projective techniques
with the assertion that a relationship between projection as conceptualized by
Freud and projective techniques cannot be ascertained in all cases. So, the
projective techniques are called so for another reason: because these are
constructed so that the subject can project into his responses a significant component of his personality. The responses to the stimuli of projective
techniques are determined not only by the stimuli to which he is responding but
by his personality.
Many definitions of projective tests/ techniques have
been offered over the years (Anderson and Anderson, 1951; Landzey, 1961;
Murstein 1963; Semenoff, 1976; Freeman, 1962). Perhaps, the pragmatic one can
from a Psychological Dictionary (English and English 1958) which defines
projective techniques as a procedure for discovering a person’s characteristic
modes of behaviour by observing his behaviour in responses to a situation that
does not elicit or compel a particular response.
In general, it is considered that projective techniques
are based on projection. An unconscious process in which (1) attribution of
thoughts, attitudes, emotions, and other characteristics are made by the
individual to other persons or specific characteristics of objects in his
environment; (2) attributions of his own needs, derives, and motives are made
to others in his environment; or (3) individual draws inferences based on his
past experience, on the basis of which test stimuli are meaningfully organized.
Projection is not considered as being of personal origin as the content of
projection is experienced as an external perception and of external origin. In this light, a projective test technique is one in which a subject is presented
a stimulus situation, providing him with an opportunity to impose upon it his
personal needs and his specific perceptions and interpretations.
कोई टिप्पणी नहीं:
एक टिप्पणी भेजें