Article
Role-Playing Effects on Rorschach Scoring and Interpretation
Journal of Personality Assessment
(1972)
Abstract
Female Rorschach examinees role-played hostile, sexy, and neutral accompaniments to their own standard, abbreviated protocols. In response to these roles, male examiners made modest scoring errors of a magnitude consistent with experimenter-bias effects but were unaffected in their report writing. Ratings made by the examinees suggested that the examiners were perceived as reacting to the role-playing.
Keywords
- Rorschach Test,
- Role playing,
- Test bias
Disciplines
Publication Date
1972
Citation Information
Richard H. Dana, Jean M. Dana and Philip E. Comer. "Role-Playing Effects on Rorschach Scoring and Interpretation" Journal of Personality Assessment Vol. 36 Iss. 5 (1972) Available at: http://works.bepress.com/richard_dana/85/