CENTURY PERSONALITY ASSESSMENT Robert F. Bornstein, PhD Adelphi University Psychoanalysis represents a valuable unifying framework for 21st century personality assessment, with the potential to enhance both research and clinical practice. After reviewing recent trends in psychological testing I discuss how psychoanalytic principles can be used to conceptualize and integrate personality assessment data. Research from three domainsthe role of projection in shap- ing Rorschach responses, contrasting patterns of gender differences in self- report and free-response dependency measures, and the use of process dissoci- ation procedures to illuminate test score convergences and divergences illustrates how psychoanalytic concepts may be combined with ideas and ndings from other areas of psychology to offer unique insights regarding assessment-based personality dynamics. Keywords: psychoanalysis, psychoanalytic, personality assessment, Rorschach, self-report Although most people associate clinical psychology primarily with psychotherapy, per- sonality assessments history is at least as long as that of psychological treatment. The rst formal use of the term mental test (Cattell, 1890) occurred just before Freud published his initial psychoanalytic writings (Breuer & Freud, 1896/1955); a century later personality assessment continues to play a major role in structuring treatment and guiding research. Moreover, unlike many clinical activities, personality assessment is a uniquely psycho- logical endeavor. As Groth-Marnat (1999) pointed out, there are at least 35 different categories of mental health professionals who treat mental disorders, but only psycholo- gists are trained and qualied to conduct personality assessments. Clinicians often use the terms diagnosis and assessment interchangeably, but in fact these terms mean very different things. Diagnosis involves identifying and documenting Robert F. Bornstein, PhD, Derner Institute of Advanced Psychological Studies, Adelphi University. Portions of this paper were presented at the annual meeting of the Rapaport-Klein Study Group, Stockbridge, MA; June 14, 2008. Correspondence concerning this article should be addressed to Robert F. Bornstein, PhD, Derner Institute of Advanced Psychological Studies, 212 Blodgett Hall, Adelphi University, Garden City, NY, 11530. E-mail: bornstein@adelphi.edu Psychoanalytic Psychology 2010 American Psychological Association 2010, Vol. 27, No. 2, 133152 0736-9735/10/$12.00 DOI: 10.1037/a0015486 133 a patients symptoms to classify that patient into one or more categories whose labels represent shorthand descriptors of psychological syndromes (e.g., bulimia nervosa, schiz- oid personality disorder). Assessment, in contrast, involves administering one or more personality tests (and sometimes intellectual and neuropsychological tests as well) to disentangle the complex array of dispositional and situational factors that combine to determine a patients subjective experiences, core beliefs, emotional patterns, motives, traits, defenses, and coping strategies. Put another way, diagnosis is key to understanding a patients pathology; assessment is key to understanding the person with this pathology. Framed in this manner, it becomes clear that personality assessment isor should bea task strongly inuenced by psychodynamic principles. After all, personality as- sessment not only involves describing a patients surface presentation, but also requires the assessor to draw conclusions regarding underlying dynamics that shape this presen- tation. Moreover, in addition to documenting convergences between patterns obtained on different psychological assessment tools, personality assessment identies divergences as wellinstances wherein the patient produces contrasting patterns (or discontinuities) on measures that tap different domains of experience (e.g., self-report vs. free-response tests; see Bornstein, 2002; Meyer et al., 2001). 1 During the middle decades of the 20th century, personality assessment was in fact shaped primarily by psychoanalytic concepts (see Holt, 1966; Klopfer, 1960; Mayman, 1959; Rapaport, Gill & Schafer, 1945, 1968; Schafer, 1954), with the understanding that patients often had limited insight into underlying motives and conicts, so administration of an array of measures using diverse methods to tap different levels of functioning was critical. That era has ended. In most inpatient and outpatient settings today personality assessment consists primarily of the administration and interpretation of self-report tests whose theoretical underpinnings are decidedly unanalytic (e.g., the Beck Depression Inventory [Beck & Steer, 1993], the Personality Assessment Inventory [Morey, 2003]). When free-response tests such as the Rorschach Inkblot Method (RIM) are employed, they are typically scored and interpreted using systems that emphasize actuarial scoring of structural features (e.g., Exners, 1991, Comprehensive System) in lieu of the traditional psychodynamic emphasis on content. Even in psychoanalytic training institutes interest in psychological assessment has declined, and few analytic candidates now receive system- atic training in the administration and interpretation of personality tests. Most analytic practitioners do little or no formal psychological assessment as part of their clinical practice (cf., Gabbard, 2000; Huprich, 2009). Despite these challenges, in recent years clinicians and researchers have attempted to strengthen connections between psychodynamic principles and personality assessment. For example, Handler and Hilsenroth (1998) reviewed the myriad ways in which psy- choanalytic ideas can be used to interpret the results of psychological tests from a variety of domains (e.g., intellectual tests, self-report questionnaires, free-response measures, gure drawings, neuropsychological screens). Sugarman and Kanner (2000) described four functions that psychoanalytic theory brings to psychological testing: (a) an organizing function; (b) an integrative function; (c) a clarifying function; and (d) a predictive function 1 Because the degree to which projection plays a role in shaping responses to ambiguous stimuli like Rorschach inkblots and Thematic Apperception Test (TAT) cards remains controversial, I use the term free-response test rather than projective test to describe these instruments (see Meyer & Kurtz, 2006, for a detailed discussion of this issue). Although Bornstein (2007c) recently proposed that the term free-response test be replaced with the more precise label stimulus attribution test, this new terminology has not yet been widely adopted. 134 BORNSTEIN (see also Sugarman, 1991, 1992). Most recently Bornstein and Masling (2005) identied seven well-validated, clinically useful RIM scoring and interpretation systems, each of which is based, in whole or in part, on psychodynamic principles. The purpose of this article is to contribute to the ongoing dialogue regarding the value of psychoanalytic theory in psychological testing. I argue that psychoanalysis represents a valuable unifying framework for 21st century personality assessment, with the potential to enhance both research and clinical practice. I begin by reviewing recent trends in personality assessment, then discuss how psychoanalytic constructs can be used to help conceptualize personality assessment data. Drawing upon research using self-report and free-response measures of interpersonal dependency, I offer examples from three do- mainsthe role of projection in shaping RIM responses, contrasting patterns of gender differences in self-report and free-response dependency measures, and the use of process dissociation procedures to illuminate test score convergences and divergencesto show how psychoanalytic principles may be combined with ideas and ndings from other areas of psychology to offer unique insights regarding personality dynamics. Recent Trends in Personality Assessment Contemporary personality assessment is characterized by a number of features that simultaneously reduce the quality of empirical research in this area and undermine the appropriate use of assessment data in clinical settings. Four stand out. A Near-exclusive Focus on Self-report Several decades ago, psychological assessment almost invariably included a comprehensive test battery consisting of measures designed to tap different domains of adaptation (e.g., trait scales and intellectual tests), and different levels of functioning and experience (e.g., ques- tionnaires and free-response measures; see Allison, Blatt, & Zimet, 1968; Rapaport et al., 1945, 1968). Attributable in part to the demands of managed care (Sperling, Sack, & Field, 2000), and in part to the dominance of atheoretical, descriptive approaches to personality such as the ve-factor model (McCrae & Costa, 1997), assessment now consists primarily of the administration, scoring, and interpretation of questionnaires. Equating Self-report of a Construct With the Underlying Construct Exclusive reliance on self-reports, in and of itself, limits the inferences that may be drawn from personality test data; this situation is exacerbated by the fact that in both research and clinical settings, self-reports of traits and symptoms are often conceptualized as veridical indices of these traits and symptoms. The equating of self-report with actual behavior occurs even for those domains wherein lack of insight is regarded as a hallmark of the construct being assessed (e.g., personality pathology). When Bornstein (2003) conducted a systematic survey of personality disorder research published in ve major journals between 1991 and 2000, he found that over 80% of published studies relied exclusively on self-report data (only 4% assessed oberservable behavior). 2 2 Personality researchers are not alone in their overreliance on self-reports. In fact, a systematic survey of articles published in psychologys seven most widely subscribed journals indicated that questionnaire outcome measures were used in 65% of all published studies, ranging from a low of 37% in Developmental Psychology to a high of 93% in the Journal of Personality and Social Psychology (Bornstein, 2001a). Overreliance on self-report data is a pervasive problem in contemporary psychology. 135 PSYCHOANALYSIS AND PERSONALITY ASSESSMENT Overemphasis on Test Score Convergence Following the tradition established by Campbell and Fiske (1959), personality assessment research has focused primarily on documenting the convergence of scores on different measures of the same construct, even when the measures use very different methods to quantify these constructs (see Messick, 1995). However, as several researchers have noted, scales that employ markedly different formats should show only modest test score intercorrelation (Archer & Krishnamurthy, 1993a, 1993b; Meyer, 1996, 1997). Moreover, test score divergence for measures that use different methods to measure similar con- structs can be as informative and meaningful as test score convergence, sometimes more so (Bornstein, 2002; Meyer et al., 2001). Shifts in Personality Assessment Training Given these trends, it is not surprising that the attention given to nontraditional personality assessment methods in graduate-level assessment courses has declined in recent years, with a concomitant increase in time devoted to self-report tests (Stedman, Hatch, & Schoenfeld, 2001). When Childs and Eyde (2002) surveyed the curricula of 84 clinical doctoral programs, they found that only 44% included a required course in personality assessment, with most of these courses emphasizing self-report instruments. When Pi- otrowski and Belter (1999) surveyed directors of 84 American Psychological Association- approved predoctoral internship programs, the only area of assessment that had dimin- ished in emphasis during the preceding ve years was free-response (e.g., Rorschach) testing. Psychoanalytic Theory as a Unifying Framework for 21st Century Personality Assessment Pedagogical and economic (e.g., managed care) issues notwithstanding, a key factor in the shift from integrative, multimodal personality assessment to assessment based primarily on self-report test data has been the absence of a unifying framework within which psychologists may conceptualize and integrate information from different personality assessment instruments. Psychoanalytic theory represents the most useful overarching framework, for three reasons. A Focus on Process To a greater extent than other theoretical models, psychoanalysis focuses on the psycho- logical processes that occur as individuals respond to internal stimuli (e.g., memories, thoughts, emotions) and external events (e.g., novel experiences, familiar and unfamiliar people, personality test items). In part these processes are shaped by the individuals coping and defense style (Cramer, 2000, 2006; Lerner, 2005), but psychoanalytic theorists and researchers have also examined how the processing of informationeven neutral, conict-free informationis shaped by individual traits, motives, and need states (see Erdelyi, 1985; Weinberger & McClelland, 1990). Many of these analyses are derived from Hartmanns classic concept of conict-free spheres of the ego (see Hartmann, 1964), but in recent years relational psychoanalysts have explored the ways in which language affords shared meaning and consensus between analyst and analysand, revealing aspects of underlying psychological process that would otherwise remain hidden (see Laplanche & Pontalis, 1974, and Stern, 2004, for discussions of intersubjectivity in relational psychoanalysis). 136 BORNSTEIN Psychodynamic models are also unique in articulating the role that underlying psychic structures play in personality development and dynamics. For example, psychoanalytic theorists have described the ways in which mental representations of self and signicant others (sometimes referred to as introjects or schemas) inuence motives, thought pat- terns, and emotional reactions (Greenberg & Mitchell, 1983). Theorists and researchers have also explored the impact of variations in infant-caregiver mirroring on personality development and emotion regulation (Kohut, 1971; see also Beebe & Lachmann, 2002). Most recently psychodynamic principles have been integrated with ndings from neuro- imagery (e.g., functional magnetic resonance imaging) studies to delineate links between cortical activity patterns and psychological processes such as memory distortion, confab- ulation, and the retrieval of formerly inaccessible memories (see Gallo, Kensinger, & Schacter, 2006). Multiple Levels of Awareness Psychoanalytic theory is unique in the degree to which it has developed formal models describing the ways in which individuals process information on multiple levels, and with contrasting degrees of awareness. The most inuential such perspective is derived from Freuds (1900/1953) topographic model, which conceptualizes human information pro- cessing in terms of three broad domains (conscious, preconscious, and unconscious), but the topographic model is not the only framework used by psychoanalysts to conceptualize the interplay of conscious and unconscious mental processes. In recent years other complementary and competing psychodynamic conceptualizations of levels of awareness in information storage and processing have emerged (e.g., Epstein, 1998; Erdelyi, 2006; Westen, 1998). These alternative conceptualizations help illuminate the ways in which cognitive and affective information is transformed as it emerges into consciousness (Bucci, 1997, 2000), and the unique inuence of material that is neither fully conscious nor completely unconscious, but exists on the fringes of consciousness (see Pyszczyn- ski, Greenberg, & Solomon, 2000). Psychodynamic researchers have examined the role of the self-representation in distinguishing memories accessible to conscious awareness from those that are not, and the manner in which information may be processed on multiple levels simultaneously (Bargh & Morsella, 2008). With respect to this latter issue, Erdelyi (2004, 2006) has articulated in detail the psychological processes and situational variables that underly temporal shifts in awareness as stimuli move among different levels of consciousness. Introspection Versus Experience From its inception, a core tenet of psychoanalytic theory has been that individuals have limited introspective access, so it is important to distinguish the persons private, subjec- tive experience from his or her ability to turn attention inward and describe that experience (Bornstein, 1993, 1999; Stern, 2004). Many techniques in psychodynamic therapy are directed toward increasing introspective access and making unconscious material con- scious. These include Freuds traditional free association method, dream analysis, and other strategies for inducing hypermnesia for previously inaccessible memories (Erdelyi, 1985; Sperling et al., 2000). In this context psychodynamic theorists have discussed the value of deconstructing core conictual relationship themes as a method for increasing introspective awareness (Luborsky & Crits-Christoph, 1990); other clinicians emphasize the value of transference (and countertransference) analysis to uncover aspects of private experience that would otherwise remain hidden (see Weiner & Bornstein, 2009). 137 PSYCHOANALYSIS AND PERSONALITY ASSESSMENT As Bornstein (2002) and others (e.g., Huprich, 2009; Meyer et al., 2001) have pointed out, exploration of divergences between information that is accessible via introspection and information that shapes behavior reexively and mindlessly can yield important information regarding underlying personality structure, coping, and defense (see also McClelland, Koestner, & Weinberger, 1989). Because certain personality tests (e.g., self-report scales) are designed to tap the end-products of testees introspective efforts whereas others (e.g., free-response measures) tap experience more than introspection, a psychodynamic perspective is particularly useful in contrasting and combining the results of self-report and free-response test data. Toward a More Unied Unifying Framework: Integrating Psychoanalysis With Other Areas of Psychology As several researchers have noted (e.g., Bornstein, 2005; Bucci, 2000; Masling, 1990), a central challenge confronting psychoanalytic theorists and practitioners today involves integrating into their ideas and therapeutic techniques ndings from other areas of psychology. For example, psychodynamic models of memory and information processing are enhanced when they incorporate concepts from cognitive science (e.g., Bargh & Morsella, 2008; Campanella & Belin, 2007). Psychoanalytic writings on the perception of self and others benet from attention to social psychological research on this topic (Kammrath, Mendoza-Denton, & Mischel, 2005; Newman, Duff, & Baumeister, 1997). The psychoanalytic literature is replete with examples of constructs that conict with well-established empirical ndings in neighboring elds (Bornstein, 2001b), and analysts tendency to ignore nonanalytic writings has led to the wholesale co-opting and reinvention of some seminal psychoanalytic concepts by researchers in other areas (Bornstein, 2005). Thus, a truly unied unifying framework must not only draw upon psychoanalytic principles, but should also embed these principles in a nomological network of nomothetic research ndings from outside psychoanalysis. In the following sections, I combine an overarching psychoanalytic perspective with ideas and ndings from social, developmen- tal, and cognitive psychology to illustrate the ways in which psychoanalytic theory can be used to conceptualize and integrate personality assessment data. Integrating Psychodynamic and Social Perspectives: Projection in the Rorschach Although most psychologists (analysts included) conceptualize projection primarily as a means by which people disavow and externalize undesired feelings and impulses, Freud (1913/1955) made clear that projection is both a defensive strategy and a method for structuring external perceptions and inferences. Thus, Freud (1913/1955, p. 64) wrote: Projection . . . . also occurs where there is no conict. Under conditions whose nature has not been sufciently established internal perceptions of emotional and thought processes can be employed for building up the external world, though they should by rights remain part of the internal world. There have been surprisingly few attempts to document empirically the role that projection may play in shaping Rorschach responses (Exner, 1989; Murstein, 1956; Murstein & Wolf, 1970; Porcelli & Meyer, 2002), and each of these studies produced inconclusive results. These ambiguous ndings did not stem from faulty empirical 138 BORNSTEIN methods, but from an exclusive focus on outcome, assessed using correlational designs (i.e., an exclusive emphasis on quantifying RIM score-external criterion links). By combining psychoanalytic principles with models of social projection (e.g., Newman et al., 1997) it is possible to understand more completely the mental operations that occur as people disavow undesired traits and use internal perceptions and predispositions to structure external stimuli. Figure 1 illustrates the sequence of psychological processes that leads to projection of an undesired trait. As this gure suggests, when people are faced with evidence they might possess a trait they would rather not see in themselves (e.g., hostility, dependency, narcissism), they try to avoid thinking about this trait. When trait-relevant thoughts emerge into consciousness, the person attempts to suppress these thoughts, and push them out of awareness (Newman et al., 1997; Schimel, Greenberg, & Martens, 2003). Over time, this ongoing avoidance/suppression process leads to two results: one intended, one unintended. On the positive side, vigilant avoidance of thoughts related to an undesired trait enables people to maintain the (conscious) belief that they do not possess this trait. On the negative side, however, frequent suppression of thoughts regarding an undesired trait renders this trait chronically accessible (Wegner & Erber, 1992). Research has shown that chronically accessible traits are easily primed (i.e., brought into working memory) when the suppressor perceives behavior in others that resembleseven remotelythe undesired trait (see Bargh, 1994; Higgins & King, 1981). In considering the implications of this avoidance/suppression dynamic for personality assessment, it is important to note that suppression-based misperceptions are not limited to social contexts. Although we are predisposed to overperceive undesired traits and motives in other people, in part because we devote considerable cognitive resources to inferring others intentions and motives (Maner et al., 2005; Schimel et al., 2003), we may Conscious Perception Of Self as Not Evidence of Avoidance and Possessing Undesired Undesired Suppression of Trait Trait in Trait-Related Oneself Thoughts Chronic Accessibility Of Undesired Trait
Overperception of Undesired Trait in Others (people, animals, abstract entities) Figure 1. Projection from a socialcognitive perspective. According to this view, avoidance and suppression of thoughts related to an undesired trait will lead to chronic accessibility of trait-related concepts and a tendency to misattribute the unwanted trait to others. Originally published as Figure 1 in Might the Rorschach be a Projective Test After All? Social Projection of an Undesired Trait Alters Rorschach Oral Dependency Scores by Robert F. Bornstein (Journal of Personality Assessment, Volume 88, pages 354367). Copyright 2007 by Lawrence Erlbaum Associates, Inc. 139 PSYCHOANALYSIS AND PERSONALITY ASSESSMENT also misattribute undesired traits (e.g., hostility) to nonhuman organisms (e.g., shy cats, stray dogs), or even abstract entities (e.g., the government). A suppressed trait concept, once primed, nds expression in myriad ways. Using this framework, Bornstein (2007a) explored the effects of undesired trait feedback on Rorschach Oral Dependency (ROD) scores (see Bornstein & Masling, 2005, for a review of evidence on the validity of ROD scores as an index of implicit dependency strivings). To begin, a large sample of introductory psychology students completed the ROD scale, along with the Interpersonal Dependency Inventory (IDI), a widely used self-report measure of dependency (Hirschfeld et al., 1977). Students who obtained very low or very high IDI scores were then called back for a follow up session by an experimenter unaware of these students ROD scores. When these high-IDI and low- IDI students arrived at the laboratory they were told they were taking part in a study of personality and self-perception. Then came the key manipulation: Half the high-IDI participants and half the low-IDI participantsthose in the dependent feedback condi- tionwere told that they had in fact obtained very high dependency scores during the earlier prescreening. They were shown a printout illustrating their dependent personality prole, and while they viewed this printout they received verbal feedback from the experimenter (see Bornstein, 2007a, p. 359), who said: These are your percentile scoreshow high you scored on each scale relative to other college students. Your highest score was on the insecurity scale. Your other high scores are on the vulnerability and low self-condence scales, and you also scored somewhat high on the reliance on others scale. These scores indicate that youre a dependent person, and insecure in social situations. The other half of the participants received control feedback, where they were shown a low dependent printout and told: These are your percentile scoreshow high you scored on each scale relative to other college students. You didnt score high on any of the scales, which indicates that youre basically an independent person, and condent in social situations. As you can see your scores on these subscales are right in line with the norms. After receiving either dependent or control feedback each participant completed the ROD scale again, so their post-feedback scores could be compared with their scores from the initial screening. The central results of this experiment are summarized in Figure 2, and as this gure shows, the only participants who showed a signicant increase in dependent Rorschach imagery from Time 1 to Time 2 were those who: (1) initially described themselves as autonomous and independent on the IDI; then (2) received feedback that indicated that they were actually insecure and highly dependent. Participants who received control (irrelevant) feedback showed no ROD increase (regardless of their IDI scores), nor did participants in the dependent feedback condition who initially had elevated IDI scores (having described themselves at Time 1 as being highly dependent). Apparently being told we possess a trait wed rather not see in ourselves really does cause us to overperceive this trait in things around useven in inkblots. Thus, combining psychodynamic principles with ideas and methods from social psychology helped generate the rst direct evidence that a projection-like dynamic shapes Rorschach responses, at least under certain condi- tions. Additional studies are needed to determine the generalizability of these patterns to other Rorschach scoring dimensions. 140 BORNSTEIN Integrating Psychodynamic and Developmental Perspectives: Gender and Gender Role Who shows higher overall levels of interpersonal dependency, women or men? When asked, psychologists (e.g., Cadbury, 1991) and laypersons (Bornstein, Rossner, Hill, & Stepanian, 1994) respond similarly, believing that in general, women are more dependent. A meta-analysis of research on gender differences in self-report depen- dency tests (Bornstein, 1995) produced results consistent with the widespread per- ception that women show higher levels of expressed dependency: Women scored higher than men on every self-report measure wherein gender differences have been assessed (N of comparisons 94), and when these gender differences were combined statistically women obtained self-report dependency scores that exceeded those of men by .41 standard deviations (d .41, combined z 19.22, p .000001). These results are summarized in the top portion of Table 1. A very different pattern emerged for free-response dependency scales. In most individual studies women and men produced comparable free-response dependency scores, but when these data were combined using meta-analytic techniques (N of comparisons 26), men actually showed higher levels of underlying dependency than 1 2 3 4 5 6 2 E M I T 1 E M I T TIME OF TESTING R O D
S C O R E High IDI, Dependent Feedback Low IDI, Dependent Feedback High IDI, Irrelevant Feedback Low IDI, Irrelevant Feedback Figure 2. Effects of Interpersonal Dependency Inventory (IDI) score (high vs. low), feedback condition (dependent vs. irrelevant), and time of testing (Time 1 vs. Time 2) on ROD scale scores. Adapted from Table 2 in Might the Rorschach be a Projective Test After All? Social Projection of an Undesired Trait Alters Rorschach Oral Dependency Scores by Robert F. Bornstein (Journal of Personality Assessment, Volume 88, pages 354367). Copyright 2007 by Lawrence Erlbaum Associates, Inc. 141 PSYCHOANALYSIS AND PERSONALITY ASSESSMENT did women (d .11, combined z 1.93, p .05). These patterns are summarized in the bottom portion of Table 1. A d of .11 (approximately one-ninth SD) might seem modest, and it is indeed considered a small effect size (Cohen, 1988). However, a d of this magnitude is not trivial, and exceeds the effect sizes associated with the impact of a daily aspirin regimen in reducing heart attack risk in men (d .02), and the effect of chemotherapy on enhanced likelihood of recovery from breast cancer in women (d .03). This d is also larger than that linking tobacco use with increased risk for developing lung cancer (d .08), and is identical to the effect size associated with combat exposure and PTSD risk in Vietnam veterans (see Meyer et al., 2001, for a listing of representative effect sizes in psychology and medicine). How can we understand these contrasting patterns of gender differences in self-report and free-response dependency tests? Consistent with psychodynamic mod- els of early childhood development (Beebe & Lachmann, 2002; Galatzer-Levy & Cohler, 1993; Russ, 1996; Silverstein, 2007), McClelland et al. (1989, pp. 698699) argued that free-response tests provide a more direct readout than do self- reports. . ..because implicit motives are built on early, prelinguistic affective experi- ences whereas self-attributed motives are built on explicit teaching by parents and others as to what values or goals it is important for a child to pursue. Supporting McClelland et al.s theoretical conceptualization, in a subsequent meta-analysis Table 1 Gender Differences in Dependency: Self-report Versus Free-response Measures Measure Number of effect sizes Combined effect size (d) Combined z p Self-report measures DEQ 18 .37 8.13 .00001 IDI 16 .42 6.20 .00001 Dy Scale 12 .50 10.91 .00001 MCMI 8 .46 5.29 .00001 DP Scale 7 .39 5.03 .00001 EPPS 5 .48 3.98 .0001 SAS 4 .60 4.42 .00001 LKDOS 3 .61 3.38 .0005 PDQ-R 2 .16 0.90 NS Other 20 .33 7.17 .00001 Free-response measures ROD 17 .17 2.08 .02 TAT 3 .09 0.74 NS HIT 2 .17 0.54 NS Other 4 .07 0.12 NS Note. DEQ Depressive Experiences Questionnaire Dependency Scale; IDI Interpersonal Dependency Inventory; Dy Scale MMPI Dependency Scale; MCMI Millon Clinical Multiaxial Inventory Dependency Scale; DP Scale Dependence Proneness Scale; EPPS Edwards Personal Preference Survey Succorance Scale; SAS Sociotropy-Autonomy Scale; LKODS Lazare-Klerman Oral Dependency Scale; PDQ-R Personality Disorder Questionnaire-Revised Dependency Scale; NS not signicant; ROD Rorschach Oral Dependency Scale; TAT Thematic Apperception Test Dependency Scale; HIT Holtzman Inkblot Test Dependency Scale. Adapted from Table 1 in Sex Differences in Objective and Projective Dependency Tests: A Meta-Analytic Review by Robert F. Bornstein (Assessment, Volume 2, pages 319331). Copyright 1995 by Psychological Assessment Resources, Inc. 142 BORNSTEIN Bornstein, Bowers, and Bonner (1996b) found signicant positive correlations be- tween self-reported dependency and femininity, and signicant negative correlations between self-reported dependency and masculinity, in both women and men. Free- response dependency scores were unrelated to gender role orientation regardless of participant gender. These patterns suggest that gender differences in self-reported dependency are, at least in part, the product of womens and mens efforts to present themselves in gender-consistent ways on psychological tests. 3 But what accounts for the higher levels of implicit dependency in men relative to women? Self-presentation cannot account for these results, and two possibilities seem plausible. First, it may be that men simply experience stronger underlying dependency strivings than do women, with certain masculine attitudes and behaviors representing a sort of reaction forma- tion against feelings of helplessness and vulnerability, a possibility that has been raised by both psychoanalytic (Coen, 1992; Fuerstein, 1989) and feminist (Gilbert, 1987; Lerner, 1983) theorists. Alternatively, it may be that mens efforts to conceal dependent urges and feelings cause these unexpressed urges to build up and reveal themselves indirectly on free-response tests. Such an interpretation would be consis- tent with Bornsteins (2007a) ndings regarding the impact of avoidance and sup- pression of self-relevant information on Rorschach responding (see also Wegner & Erber, 1992), but a denitive test of this interpretation of gender differences in dependency has not yet been conducted. Integrating Psychodynamic and Cognitive Perspectives: Process Dissociation Psychoanalytic theory provides a unique perspective on cross-method inconsistencies in psychological test data because, alone among theoretical models of personality, psycho- analysis explicitly links the degree of structure provided by different assessment tools with personality factors (e.g., impulse control, reality testing) that should lead to differential performance on more versus less structured tests. For example, psychoanalytic researchers have found that patients with borderline pathology often perform quite well on measures with a high degree of structure (e.g., intelligence tests) while performing poorly on unstructured instruments like the Rorschach (Carr & Goldstein, 1981). Along somewhat different lines, Bornstein (1998) demonstrated that individuals with dependent personality disorder traits and symptoms scored high on both self-report and free-response measures of interpersonal dependency whereas individuals with histrionic personality disorder traits and symptoms obtained high free-responsebut low self-reportdependency scores (see Bornstein, 1998, for a discussion of the implications of these ndings for the psychody- namics of dependent and histrionic personality pathology). To date, most investigations of test score inconsistency have contrasted performance across two or more instruments in a particular patient group (Carr & Goldstein, 1981), and/or contrasted the performance of two or more participant groups for a particular subset of assessment tools (Bornstein, 1998). By integrating into these studies experimental manipulations designed to alter one set of test scores but not the other, researchers can learn more about the psychological processes engaged by different assessment instru- ments, and draw rmer conclusions regarding the dispositional and situational factors that 3 See Goffman (1959) for the classic sociological analysis of strategic self-presentation, and Higgins and Pittman (2008) for a contemporary psychological discussion of this phenomenon. 143 PSYCHOANALYSIS AND PERSONALITY ASSESSMENT lead to test score discontinuities. The rst step involves understanding as fully as possible the phenomenology of self-report and free-response teststhe private, subjective expe- riences of test-takers as they respond to different types of test items. Consider the following two items from the IDI: I would rather be a follower than a leader, and I have a lot of trouble making decisions by myself. Both statements are rated by the testee on Likert-type scales anchored by the terms not at all true of me and very true of me. At least three psychological processes occur as people respond to these IDI items. First, testees engage in introspection, turning their attention inward to deter- mine whether the statement captures some aspect of their feelings, thoughts, motives, or behaviors. Second, a retrospective memory search occurs, as testees attempt to retrieve instances wherein they experienced or exhibited the response(s) described in the test item. Finally, testees may engage in deliberate self-presentation, deciding whether, given the context and setting in which they are being evaluated, it is better to answer honestly, or modify their response to depict themselves in a particular way. Typically these efforts are aimed at faking good (i.e., attempting to portray oneself as healthier than is actually the case) or faking bad (attempting to portray oneself as unhealthy and exaggerate pathol- ogy), depending upon the testees self-presentation goals. Contrast this set of psychological processes with those that occur as people complete the ROD scale. Here the testee is asked to provide responses to the 10 Rorschach inkblots; these responses are then scored to derive the overall proportion of oral and dependent imagery contained in the percepts (Bornstein & Masling, 2005). Unlike the IDI, the fundamental challenge for an individual completing the ROD scale is to create meaning in a stimulus that can be interpreted in multiple ways. To do this testees must direct their attention outward (rather than inward), and focus on the stimulus (not the self); they then attribute meaning to the stimulus based on properties of the inkblot and the associations primed by these stimulus properties. Once a series of potential percepts (or stimulus attributions) is formed testees typically sort through these possible responses, selecting some and rejecting others before providing their description (see Exner, 1991, and Weiner, 2004, for general overviews of stages in Rorschach responding, and Bornstein, 2007a, for stages involved in generating ROD scores). With this as context, Bornstein (2002) utilized ideas and ndings from cognitive psychologists who employ experimental manipulations to disentangle the psychological and neurological underpinnings of implicit versus explicit memory (e.g., Jacoby & Kelley, 1991; Schacter, 1987), combining these ideas with psychoanalytic principles to develop the process dissociation approach to personality assessment. The process dissociation strategy involves identifying naturally occurring inuences on test scores (e.g., testee motivation or mood state) then deliberately manipulating these inuences to illuminate underlying response processes. In the rst study using this approach, Bornstein et al. (1994) administered the IDI and ROD scale to a large, mixed-sex sample of college students under three different conditions. One-third of the participants completed the two measures under a negative set condition; prior to completing the IDI and ROD scale these participants were told that both were measures of interpersonal dependency, and that the study was part of a program of research examining the negative aspects of dependent personality traits (following which several negative consequences of high levels of dependency were described). One-third of the participants completed the two measures under a positive set condition; these participants were told that the study was part of a program of research examining the positive, adaptive aspects of dependency (following which several positive features of dependency were described). The remaining participants completed the two measures 144 BORNSTEIN under standard conditions, wherein no mention is made of the purpose of either scale, or the fact they assess dependency. Bornstein et al. (1994) found that relative to the baseline (control) condition, partic- ipants IDI scores increased signicantly in the positive set condition, and decreased signicantly in the negative set condition; ROD scores were unaffected by instructional set. These patterns reect the contrasting processes that occur as participants complete the IDI (introspection, retrospection, deliberate self-presentation) and the ROD scale (atten- tion directed outward, focus on stimulus rather than self, attribution of meaning to ambiguous inkblots), and illustrate the utility of the process dissociation approach in delineating the factors that lead to self-report/free-response test score discontinuities. In a follow-up investigation Bornstein, Bowers, and Bonner (1996a) examined the impact of induced mood state on IDI and ROD scores, asking participants to write essays regarding traumatic events, joyful events, or neutral events to induce a corresponding mood immediately prior to testing. Bornstein et al. (1996a) found that, as expected, induction of a negative mood prior to testing led to a signicant increase in RODbut not IDIscores (see Bornstein, 2002, and Cogswell, 2008, for descriptions of these and other process dissociation studies involving self-report and free-response dependency scales). Discussion The present review illustrates the utility of psychodynamic principles in illuminating the psychological processes that underlie free-response tests in elucidating the effects of naturally occurring variables (e.g., gender role) on personality test data, and in contrasting and integrating results from different personality assessment tools. Although these initial studies all involved the assessment of interpersonal dependency, the principles and strategies that guided these investigations should generalize to other traits as well (e.g., impulsivity, narcissism, need for achievement; see Craig, Koestner, & Zuroff, 1994, and Koestner, Weinberger, & McClelland, 1991, for examples). Studies conducted to date suggest that psychoanalysis can function as a unifying framework for integrative person- ality assessment, and because the results of these investigations help inform clinicians and researchers about the underlying dynamics that shape test responses, the reverse is also true: Just as psychoanalysis represents a potential unifying framework for personality assessment, integrative personality assessment represents a useful tool for studying psychodynamic processes (see Handler & Meyer, 1998, and Sugarman & Kanner, 2000, for discussions of this issue). Askeptic might argue that although psychodynamic principles can be used to explain these patterns, the present results may also be interpreted using alternative frameworks that do not draw upon psychoanalytic concepts. For example, certain ndings described in this review (e.g., gender differences in self-reportbut not free-responsedependency test scores) might be attributable in part to self-presentation effects, reecting womens willingness (and mens unwillingness) to acknowledge dependent attitudes, urges, and feelings. Similarly, the impact of mood on free-response test data might reect the well- documented priming effects of mood on affectively congruent memories. Although certain ndings described herein can indeed be explained using alternative frameworks, some cannot, and taken together these patterns are most parsimoniously conceptualized in psychodynamic terms. For example, the impact of feedback regarding disavowed traits on free-response test scores cannot be accommodated by a straightfor- ward self-presentation model, and can only be fully explained within a framework that 145 PSYCHOANALYSIS AND PERSONALITY ASSESSMENT explains why unwanted and disavowed personal characteristics are externalized and misattributed to objects in the environment. Other patterns (e.g., mens elevated score on measures of implicit dependency strivings) also lend themselves readily to a psychody- namic interpretation, and are not easily explained by competing models of personality and psychopathology (e.g., cognitive, behavioral, humanistic). As discussed, three qualities unique to psychoanalytic theoryits focus on process, on multiple levels of awareness, and on introspection versus experiencecombine to create a context within which personality test score convergences and divergences can be usefully interpreted, and within which different forms of personality test data can be integrated. No other extant model has these three qualities. Thus, although other theoretical frameworks (e.g., cognitive, behavioral, humanistic) can help explain specic personality test results and particular test score interrelationships, only the psychodynamic model offers the kind of overarching framework that allows the broad spectrum of ndings in this area to be integrated within a single theoretical perspective. As research on the utility of psychodynamic principles in conceptualizing and inte- grating personality test data continues to accumulate results from these investigations can begin to move from laboratory to clinic. Three guiding principles will help facilitate this transition. Principle 1: A Focus on Process Is Critical for Effective Interpretation of Personality Assessment Data As noted at the outset of this review, several distinguishing features of psychoanalytic theory make this theory particularly useful in conceptualizing personality assessment data (i.e., its focus on process, multiple levels of awareness, and introspection vs. experience). As Meyer and Kurtz (2006) noted, integrating test data from measures that employ different methods and formats has long been a compelling challenge for assessment psychologists (cf., Archer & Krishnamurthy, 1993a, 1993b), in part because most validity studies to date have focused on outcome (i.e., test score-criterion correlation) rather than underlying process. A process-focused approach can help resolve some longstanding questions in this area, and as Bornstein (2007c) noted, such an approach also allows clinicians to make ner distinctions among (and derive more accurate descriptive labels for) widely used personality assessment tools. For example, traditionally measures like the Draw-a-Person test and Kinetic Family Drawing have been grouped with the RIM and TAT under the broad heading of projective instruments, but scrutiny of the mental processes that occur as testees complete these measures suggests that what were formerly known as projective drawings are better described as constructive tests, while measures like the RIM and TAT may be more accurately described as stimulus attribution tests (see Bornstein, 2007c, Table 1, for a complete listing of personality tests by process-based category). Principle 2: Clinical and Laboratory Assessment Studies Provide Complementary and Synergistic Results A key assumption of the process dissociation approach is that subtle, naturally occurring inuences on test scores (e.g., testee motivation or mood state) can be used to illuminate underlying response processes. Thus, a process focused model reconceptualizes test score confounds (and threats to validity) as opportunities for insight into the psychological dynamics that shape peoples responses to personality test items and stimuli. Put another 146 BORNSTEIN way, the process dissociation strategy reverses the usual procedure for dealing with potential test score confounds: Rather than attempting to minimize or eliminate these confounds in the laboratory and in vivo (a difcult challenge as best; see Messick, 1995) the researcher leans into them, exploits them, and deliberately manipulates them to increase or decrease their impact and see how test results are affected. Although histor- ically experimental methods have not played a primary role in testing psychoanalytic hypotheses (Bornstein, 2007b), or in validating personality assessment tools (Bornstein, 2002), the process focused approach blends psychoanalytic concepts with nomothetic research methods to obtain unique insights into underlying personality dynamics. Principle 3: Personality Assessment Is Fundamentally Analytic, but Personality Testing Is Behavioral The present results suggest a fruitful convergence between psychodynamic and behavioral principles in personality assessment. As Handler and Meyer (1998, pp. 45) noted in contrasting psychological testing and psychological assessment: Testing is a relatively straightforward process wherein a particular test is administered to obtain a particular score or two. Subsequently, a descriptive meaning can be applied to the score based on normative, nomothetic ndings. . . . Psychological assessment, however, is a quite different enterprise. The focus here is not on obtaining a single score, or even a series of test scores. Rather, the focus is on taking a variety of test-derived pieces of information, obtained from multiple methods of assessment, and placing these data in the context of historical information, referral information, and behavioral observations to generate a cohe- sive and comprehensive understanding of the person being evaluated. Put another way, psychological testing requires precision, objectivity, and the kind of scientic detachment that facilitates accurate data-gathering. Psychological assessment involves integration, synthesis, and clarication of ambiguouseven conicting evidence obtained during the testing process. Thus, the competent tester must be (at least for that moment) a staunch behaviorist, understanding the contingencies that dene the testing situation and using this knowledge to maximize the validity and generalizability of test data. Once these data are gathered the behavioral tester must transform into a psychodynamically informed assessor, able to combine dynamic concepts with research ndings from other areas of psychology to interpret test results in the context of referral information, life history information, and behavioral observations made during testing. Wachtel (1977, 1997) discussed the ways that psychodynamic and behavioral principles can be combined to enhance the effective- ness of insight-oriented psychotherapy; the present analysis suggests that the same may be true of psychological assessment. Conclusion If a single theme cuts across the various issues taken up in this review, that theme is integration. Not only does effective psychological assessment combine behavioral and psychodynamic principles, but it also requires that the clinician integrate different types of test data (e.g., self-report and free response), integrate psychoanalytic concepts with ndings from other areas of psychology (e.g., social, cognitive), and integrate knowledge regarding test score outcome (i.e., convergent validity) with information regarding the psychological processes that occur as patients engage different tests. Ultimately person- 147 PSYCHOANALYSIS AND PERSONALITY ASSESSMENT ality test data must also be integrated with information that emerges over time during treatment, and as this occurs some heretofore unnoticed aspects of the assessment results may well turn out to be salienteven keypieces of evidence, enabling the clinician to maximize therapeutic efcacy and gain a deeper understanding of the patients underlying dynamics and surface presentation. 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