Handbook of Psychodiagnostic Testing Fourth Edition Henry Kellerman Anthony Burry Handbook of Psychodiagnostic Testing Analysis of Personality in the Psychological Report Fourth Edition Henry Kellerman, PH.D. Anthony Burry, PH.D. Postgraduate Center for Mental Health, Private Practice, New York, NY, USA New York, NY, USA [email protected] [email protected] Library of Congress Control Number: 2007927171 ISBN-13: 978-0-387-71369-4 e-ISBN-13: 978-0-387-71370-0 ©1981, (First Edition) Grune & Stratton, New York, NY, USA. ©1991, (Second Edition), 1997 (Third Edition), Allyn & Bacon, MA, USA. ©2007, (Fourth Edition) Springer Science(cid:2)Business Media, LLC. All rights reserved. This work may not be translated or copied in whole or in part without the written permission of the publisher (Springer Science(cid:2)Business Media, LLC, 233 Spring Street, New York, NY 10013, USA), except for brief excerpts in connection with reviews or scholarly analysis. Use in connection with any form of information storage and retrieval, electronic adaptation, computer software, or by similar or dissimilar methodology now known or hereafter developed is forbidden. The use in this publication of trade names, trademarks, service marks, and similar terms, even if they are not identified as such, is not to be taken as an expression of opinion as to whether or not they are subject to proprietary rights. Printed on acid-free paper. 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 springer.com To Linda To Veena Preface This Handbookis designed to offer psychology students, as well as professional psychologists, a central resource for the construction and organization of psycho- logical test reports. Rather than using a workbook approach and presenting sam- ple reports for study, this text aims to help the reader conceptualize the theory of psychological report development by carefully examining the analysis of person- ality and the logic of effectively communicating such psychological phenomena in the report. The rationale of each section of an effective, well-aimed psycholog- ical and psychodiagnostic workup is analyzed in detail so that the writing of the report can be organized section-by-section to reflect a clear and synthesized view in the analysis of the patient’s personality. The psychodiagnostic report is a communication between the tester and the referring person and plays a vital role in the ultimate treatment or intervention plan for the patient. Because analysis of personality is vitally connected to report writing, the distinctiveness of each person tested is stressed. Use of this book, therefore, should help both students and psychologists formulate reports based on the particular needs and conflicts of the individuals under consideration—in sum, a guide to transforming the understanding of the person under study into a logi- cal, integrated written communication—an analysis of the personality. The array of data generated through testing can readily produce a sense of being overwhelmed in both experienced and student testers. For students, report writing requires an integration of virtually everything they have learned with respect to clinical material, creating a sense that each report represents a major task and requires a correspondingly intense effort. Understanding the proper con- struction of the write-up can help students transform this task from an enormous and sometimes overwhelming job into one of manageable proportions. The writ- ing then can become an opportunity to demonstrate one’s skill and talent in the interest of the patient. In the preface to the second edition of this book published in 1991, we stated that this Handbook of Psychodiagnostic Testing was originally designed to provide the reader with a model for constructing a psychodiagnostic report that integrates and synthesizes personality data derived largely from the standard pro- jective battery. In that edition, various aspects and vicissitudes of the personality vii viii Preface relevant to evaluation were expanded in several already existing chapters and new material was introduced as well. To this end, material was provided to amplify diagnostic considerations, the assessment of reality testing, the evolution of char- acter, and the construction of the psychological report for readers such as psychi- atrists, psychotherapists, counselors, teachers, and parents. For example, with the advent of the third edition of the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual and its revi- sions (DSM-III, DSM-III-R, DSM-IVand DSM-IV-TR), the differential diagnostic nomenclature was revised; consequently, the material presented on characterolog- ical development and differential diagnosis reflected the latest advances in the understanding of such psychopathology. Yet despite these newer formulations of personality vicissitudes, the Handbook still rested on the model provided by the basic projective battery—the Rorschach Inkblot Test, the Thematic Apperception Test (TAT), and the Machover Figure Drawing Test—with the addition of contributions from intelligence tests. The use of this projective battery was inextricably related to the development of the entire field of clinical psychopathology and the study of personality. This particular aspect of the field of clinical psychopathology and personality— that of projective psychology—was a direct outgrowth of efforts to expand the domain of the field of psychology to include a broader clinical base. In the his- tory of the development of projective psychology, this clinical base intersected with and drew on the field of psychoanalysis. From the 1920s to the 1950s, an exceptional ferment occurred in thinking, psychological experimentation, and observational methods; essentially, it was the time when the field of projective psychology crystallized and matured. For almost 50 years, three projective tests—the Rorschach, TAT, and Machover—have comprised the clinician’s core projective assessment technol- ogy for the distillation of information on the infrastructure of emotions, person- ality, and thinking. Although clinicians have also utilized other tests such as word association, sentence completion, the Bender Gestalt, and animal metaphors to fill outthe basic battery, these other tests have been used quite selectively. Simply by the power of their clinical usefulness, the Rorschach, TAT, and Machover have become the generally agreed on basic projective battery. Together, it was observed that these tests could, by projective means, elicit a picture of the per- son’s emotions, defenses, psychodynamic arena of conflict, personality configu- ration or type, unique psychopathology, symptoms, and diagnostic state. In addition, the power of this projective battery generated a proliferation of general interest in the development of projective psychology, as well as in the develop- ment of other tests. The use of these tests produces a prodigious amount of clinical data, leading to the gradual surfacing of the person’s emotional landscape in greater detail. This emotional landscape also includes aspects of personality, cognitive processes, and diagnostic considerations. Thus, this Handbook has its basis and rationale in a history that includes technology that was developed to reveal both the inner life and the unconscious aspect of that life. Preface ix The uncovering of these multiple facets of personality tends in itself to con- firmthat the personality is composed of many components, and is not simply an amorphous configuration. For example, the projective battery yields data that includes behavioral samples, information on reality testing and cognitive func- tioning, indicators of anxiety, the vicissitudes of impulse versus control in the personality, information on the defense system and its effect on emotions, pat- terns of interpersonal behavior, and diagnostic information including the infra- structure of character formation. With this profusion of information, the clinical psychologist first needs to compartmentalize such a body of data into the various aspects of personality such as impulse versus control or nature of reality testing, and then organize this data into a meaningful report. Insofar as such a process of compartmental- ization and organization corresponds exactly to the scientist’s requirement of analyzing and then synthesizing data and phenomena, we may declare that the construction of the psychodiagnostic report is a unique and distinctive opera- tion where the art of the clinical psychologist is fused with the science of clin- ical psychology. Thus, this Handbook of Psychodiagnostic Testing: Analysis of Personality, becomes an instrument or a template that can be used by the clinician to analyze the personality and to synthesize the resulting data so that the final psychodiag- nostic report becomes an integrated and faithful representation of the person’s inner life with respect to the central ingredients of the personality. Several new developments in the broad fields of personality analysis, psychopathology, and psychodiagnostics were included in the third edition of the Handbook. When the first edition of this book appeared in 1981, the revised edition of DSM-III had not yet been completed and the recent introduction of DSM-III itself was having a dramatic impact in its attempt to alter and improve on the previous nomenclatures of DSM-I and DSM-II that were in vogue for decades. Since the first publication of this Handbook 25 years ago, the continu- ing evolution of the diagnostic nomenclature has gone beyond even DSM-IV toDSM-IV-TR in the understanding of diagnosis. Newest diagnostic conceptions are now fully represented here in this fourth revised edition with respect to DSM-IV-TR (Text Revision). In addition to the evolution of the diagnostic nomenclature, there has been a particular ferment of interest involving both the borderline and narcissistic com- ponents of psychopathology. The representation of borderline and narcissistic phenomena and the syndromes associated with them, along with their relation to personality functioning and diagnostic testing concerns, have also been consider- ably amplified in this new edition of the Handbook. Corresponding with these newer diagnostic developments, the major individual intelligence scales—the Wechsler and the Stanford-Binet—have seen substantial revisions with new subscales, formats, and statistical calibrations. Discussion of these new revisions with their added strengths has also been incorporated here. Thus, this Handbook covers the newer elements in the development of the nomenclature, including the emerging interest in borderline and narcissistic x Preface pathologies, the latest revision of the DSM, and references to the latest versions of the classic intelligence tests for children and adults. Accordingly, this book enables the previous integration of material found in earlier editions to be further infused with the newer ideas that these latest developments have generated. In addition, references to several special issues have been added. One such issue is the nationwide development of concerns regarding bilingual education and the increasingly urgent need to consider, whenever relevant, bilingual and bicultural background factors in the assessment of intellectual functioning and psychopathology. Large-scale changes in society, generated by newer immigra- tion patterns, necessitate consideration of bilingual and bicultural factors in arriv- ing at as rigorous and accurate an assessment as possible of numerous individuals whose functioning is affected by such special language and cultural considera- tions. Corresponding with the emergence of bilingual and even trilingual factors in a proportion of people needing to be evaluated and assessed, the special skills and sensitivities that are required by the psychological tester to evaluate such peo- ple have been addressed in this revision. Some expansion has also been given to the increased emphasis that is cur- rently placed on psychological testing of preschool children. With the growth in the fields of child clinical psychology and school psychology, there has been an increasing emphasis on family problems that may be reflected in behavioral, learning, and personal disturbances in children. Because problems may emerge at preschool ages, the preschool population offers a significant context for diag- nosis and prevention. Further, this population is now more frequently seen for psychological testing to uncover personality or learning problems at a point where early intervention can produce more rapid amelioration. This preschool intervention, in contrast with later identification and intervention, prevents more deeply entrenched difficulties from crystallizing. Thus, prevention of personal, developmental, and learning problems by means of early recognition and inter- vention is receiving increased societal recognition, which is also reflected in this Handbook. In keeping with the goal of providing the psychology student and professional psychologist with a book that can be utilized to analyze the various aspects of personality and to synthesize a mass of data into a useful psychological docu- ment, this latest fourth edition devotes attention to the inclusion of the most recent facets of the subject of personality analysis that are relevant to the psy- chodiagnostic report. At the same time, the incorporation of newer diagnostic and technical developments has continued to be embodied in a dynamic view of personality functioning, relying strongly on traditional projective test material. This approach has proved valuable and stimulating in clinical work for decades and continues to demonstrate merit. Even though alternative theories and meth- ods have surfaced, the compelling value of assessing an individual’s functioning through responses to projective material and well-known intelligence measures continues to contribute impressively to the network of ideas enabling the fields of clinical and school psychology to expand in their capacity to understand and help people. Preface xi The particular perspective of the report as a psychological document that marked the approach advocated and explained in the original Handbook 25 years ago has been retained. This perspective on personality analysis is characterized as one that generates, in the report, an in-depth opening into a wide array of crucial aspects of personality functioning. Each of these aspects of personality function- ing is systematically assessed and then integrated in the report to relate the find- ings in a synthesized manner to the original pathological disturbance. This point of view, namely, the value of distilling the essential variables of the personality and interpreting the findings in a coalesced report has been retained and deepened wherever possible. This has been done because of the historic fruitfulness of such personality analysis and its relation to the enormous expansion of the field of clin- ical psychology. This psychodynamic approach continues to have relevance and utility in spite of the advent of numerous alternative strategies that invariably view and evaluate people in more constricted or limited ways. Thus, a method that enables a deeper look at the full spectrum of personality functioning and cre- ates a formula for harnessing the sea of personality data remains the central focus of this revised fourth edition Handbookon its 25th anniversary.
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