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Paul E. Meehl

Paul Everett Meehl (3 January 1920 – 14 February 2003) was an American clinical psychologist, Hathaway and Regents' Professor of Psychology at the University of Minnesota, and past president of the American Psychological Association.[1] A Review of General Psychology survey, published in 2002, ranked Meehl as the 74th most cited psychologist of the 20th century, in a tie with Eleanor J. Gibson.[2] Throughout his nearly 60-year career, Meehl made seminal contributions to psychology, including empirical studies and theoretical accounts of construct validity, schizophrenia etiology, psychological assessment, behavioral prediction, and philosophy of science.

Paul E. Meehl
Born
Paul Everett Swedal

(1920-01-03)3 January 1920
Died14 February 2003(2003-02-14) (aged 83)
Minneapolis, Minnesota, US
Alma materUniversity of Minnesota
Known forMinnesota Multiphasic Personality Inventory, genetics of schizophrenia, construct validity, clinical v. statistical prediction, philosophy of science, taxometrics
AwardsNational Academy of Sciences (1987), APA Award for Lifetime Contributions to Psychology (1996), James McKeen Cattell Fellow Award (1998), Bruno Klopfer Award (1979)
Scientific career
FieldsPsychology, philosophy of science
InstitutionsUniversity of Minnesota
Doctoral advisorStarke R. Hathaway
Doctoral studentsHarrison G. Gough, Dante Cicchetti, Donald R. Peterson, George Schlager Welsh
Websitemeehl.umn.edu

Biography

Childhood

Paul Meehl was born January 3, 1920, in Minneapolis, Minnesota, to Otto and Blanche Swedal. His family name "Meehl" was his stepfather's.[3] When he was age 16, his mother died as the result of poor medical care which, according to Meehl, greatly affected his faith in the expertise of medical practitioners and diagnostic accuracy of clinicians.[3] After his mother's death, Meehl lived briefly with his stepfather, then with a neighborhood family for one year so he could finish high school. He then lived with his maternal grandparents, who lived near the University of Minnesota.

Education and academic career

Meehl started as an undergraduate at the University of Minnesota in March 1938.[3] He earned his bachelor's degree in 1941[4] with Donald G. Paterson as his advisor, and took his PhD in psychology at Minnesota under Starke R. Hathaway in 1945. Meehl's graduate student cohort at the time included Marian Breland Bailey, William K. Estes, Norman Guttman, William Schofield, and Kenneth MacCorquodale.[3] Upon taking his doctorate, Meehl immediately accepted a faculty position at the university, which he held throughout his career. In addition, he had appointments in psychology, law, psychiatry, neurology, philosophy, and served as a fellow of the Minnesota Center for Philosophy of Science, founded by Herbert Feigl, Meehl, and Wilfrid Sellars.[3]

Meehl rose quickly to academic positions of prominence. He was chairman of the University of Minnesota Psychology Department at age 31, president of the Midwestern Psychological Association at age 34, recipient of the American Psychological Association's Award for Distinguished Scientific Contributions to Psychology at age 38, and president of that association at age 42. He was promoted to Regents' professor, the highest academic position at the University of Minnesota, in 1968. He received the Bruno Klopfer Distinguished Contributor Award in personality assessment in 1979, and was elected to the National Academy of Sciences in 1987.[3]

Meehl was not particularly religious during his upbringing,[3] but in adulthood during the 1950s collaborated with a group of Lutheran theologians and psychologists to write What, Then, Is Man?.[5] This project was commissioned by the Lutheran Church–Missouri Synod through Concordia Seminary. The project explored both orthodox theology, psychological science, and how Christians (Lutherans, in particular) could responsibly function as both Christians and psychologists without betraying orthodoxy or sound science and practice.

Later life and death

In 1995, Meehl was a signatory of a collective statement titled "Mainstream Science on Intelligence", written by Linda Gottfredson and published in the Wall Street Journal.[6] He died on February 14, 2003, at his home in Minneapolis of chronic myelomonocytic leukemia.[4] In 2005, Donald R. Peterson, a student of Meehl's, published a volume of their correspondence.[7]

Philosophy of science

Meehl founded, along with Herbert Feigl and Wilfrid Sellars, the Minnesota Center for the Philosophy of Science, and was a leading figure in philosophy of science as applied to psychology.[3]

Arguably Meehl's most important contributions to psychological research methodology were in legitimizing scientific claims about unobservable psychological processes. In the first half of the 20th century, psychology was dominated by operationism and behaviorism. As outlined in Bridgman's The Logic of Modern Physics, if two researchers had different operational definitions, they had different concepts. There was no "surplus meaning". If, for example, two researchers had different measures of "anomia" or "intelligence", they had different concepts. Behaviorists focussed on stimulus–response theories and were deeply skeptical of "unscientific" explanations in terms of unobservable psychological processes. Behaviorists and operationists would have rejected as unscientific any notion that there was some general thing called "intelligence" that existed inside a person's head and that might be reflected almost-equivalently in Stanford-Binet IQ tests or Wechsler scales. Meehl changed that via two landmark papers.

In 1948, Kenneth MacCorquodale and Meehl introduced the distinction between "hypothetical construct" and "intervening variable".[8] "Naively, it would seem that there is a difference in logical status between constructs which involve the hypothesization of an entity, process, or event which is not itself observed, and constructs which do not involve such hypothesization."[9] An intervening variable is simply a mathematical combination of operations. If one speaks of the "expected value" of a gamble (probability of winning × payoff for winning), this is not hypothesizing any unobservable psychological process. Expected value is simply a mathematical combination of observables. On the other hand, if one attempts to make statements about "attractiveness" of a gamble, if this is not observable or perfectly captured by some single operational measure, this is a "hypothetical construct"—a theoretical term that is not itself observable or a direct function of observables. They used as examples Hull's rg (anticipatory goal response[10]) or Allport's "biophysical traits", or Murray's "needs". "These constructs involve terms which are not wholly reducible to empirical terms; they refer to processes or entities that are not directly observed (although they need not be in principle unobservable)." Such constructs had "surplus meaning". Thus, good behaviorists and operationists should be comfortable with statements about intervening variables, but should have greater wariness of hypothetical constructs.

In 1955, Lee J. Cronbach and Meehl legitimized theory tests about unobservable, hypothetical constructs.[11] Constructs are unobservables, and they can be stable traits of individuals (e.g., "Need for Cognition") or temporary states (e.g., nonconscious goal activation). Previously, good behaviorists had deep skepticism about the legitimacy of psychological research about unobservable processes. Cronbach and Meehl introduced the concept of "construct" validity for cases in which there was no "gold standard" criterion for validating a test of a hypothetical construct. Hence, any construct had "surplus meaning". Construct validity was distinguished from predictive validity, concurrent validity, and content validity. They also introduced the concept of the "nomological net"—the network of associations among constructs and measures. Cronbach and Meehl argued that the meaning of a hypothetical construct is given by its relations to other variables in a nomological network. One tests a theory of relations among hypothetical constructs by showing that putative measures of these constructs relate to each other as implied by one's theory, as captured in the nomological network. This set the stage for modern psychological test and set the stage for the cognitive revolution in psychology that focusses on the study of mental processes that are not directly observable.

After Karl Popper's The Logic of Scientific Discovery was published in English in 1959, Meehl counted himself a "Popperian" for a short time, later as "a 'neo-Popperian' philosophical eclectic",[3] still using the Popperian approach of conjectures and refutations,[12][13] but without endorsing all of Popper's philosophy.[14] Meehl was a strident critic of using statistical null hypothesis testing for the evaluation of scientific theory. He believed that null hypothesis testing was partly responsible for the lack of progress in many of the "scientifically soft" areas of psychology (e.g. clinical, counseling, social, personality, and community).[15][16]

Meehl's paradox

Meehl's paradox is that in the hard sciences more sophisticated and precise methods make it harder to claim support for one's theory. The opposite is true in soft sciences like the social sciences. Hard sciences like physics make exact point predictions and work by testing whether observed data falsify those predictions. With increased precision, one is better able to detect small deviations from the model's predictions and harder to claim support for the model. In contrast, softer social sciences make only directional predictions, not point predictions. Softer social sciences claim support when the direction of the observed effect matches predictions, rejecting only the null hypothesis of zero effect. Meehl argued that no treatment in the real world has zero effect. With sufficient sample size, therefore, one should almost always be able to reject the null hypothesis of zero effect. Researchers who guessed randomly at the sign of any small effect would have a 50–50 chance of finding confirmation with sufficiently large sample size.[17]

Minnesota Multiphasic Personality Inventory

Meehl was considered an authority on the development of psychological assessments using the Minnesota Multiphasic Personality Inventory (MMPI).[4][18] While Meehl did not directly develop the original MMPI items (he was a high school junior when Hathaway and McKinley created the item pool), he contributed widely to the literature on interpreting patterns of responses to MMPI questions.[3][19] In particular, Meehl argued that the MMPI could be used to understand personality profiles systematically associated with clinical outcomes, something he termed a statistical (versus a "clinical") approach to predicting behavior.[20][21]

Interactions and suppressors: the K scale

As part of his doctoral dissertation, Meehl worked with Hathaway to develop the K scale indicator of valid responding for the MMPI.[22] During initial clinical testing of the MMPI, a subset of individuals exhibiting clear signs of mental illness still produced normal personality profiles on the various clinical scales.[23][page needed] It was suspected that these individuals were demonstrating clinical defensiveness and presenting as asymptomatic and well-adjusted. Meehl and Hathaway employed a technique called "empirical criterion keying" to compare the responses of these defensive individuals with other individuals who were not suspected of experiencing mental illness and who also produced normal MMPI profiles. The empirical criterion keying approach selected items based on their ability to maximally discriminate between these groups. They were not selected based on theory or face validity of the item content. As a result, items on the resulting scale, termed the K (for "correction") scale would be difficult to avoid for individuals attempting to present as well-adjusted when taking the MMPI. Individuals who endorsed the K scale items were thought to be demonstrating a sophisticated attempt to conceal information about their mental health history from test administrators. The K scale is an early example of a putative suppressor variable.

The K scale is used as a complement validity indicator to the L (for "lie") scale, whose items were selected based on item content face validity and are more obviously focused on impression management. The K scale has been popular among clinical psychologists, and has been a useful tool for MMPI and MMPI-2 profile interpretation.[23][page needed] Meehl and Hathaway continued to conduct research using MMPI validity indicators and noticed K scales elevations were associated with greater denial of symptoms on some clinical scales more than others.[22] To compensate for this, they developed a K scale correction factor aimed at offsetting effects of defensive responding on other scales measuring psychopathology. Substantial subsequent research conducted on the original MMPI clinical scales used these "K-corrected" scores, although research on the usefulness of the corrections has produced mixed results.[23][24][25] The most recent iteration of the K scale, developed for the MMPI-2-RF, is still used for psychological assessments in clinical, neuropsychological, and forensic contexts.[26]

Clinical versus statistical prediction

Meehl's proposal

Meehl's 1954 book Clinical vs. Statistical Prediction: A Theoretical Analysis and a Review of the Evidence analyzed the claim that mechanical (i.e., formal, algorithmic, actuarial) methods of data combination would outperform clinical (i.e., subjective, informal) methods to predict behavior.[27] Meehl argued that mechanical methods of prediction, when used correctly, make more efficient and reliable decisions about patient prognosis and treatment. His conclusions were controversial and have long conflicted with the prevailing consensus about psychiatric decision-making.[28]

Historically, mental health professionals commonly make decisions based on their professional clinical judgment (i.e., combining clinical information "in their head" and arriving at a prediction about a patient).[29] Meehl theorized that clinicians would make more mistakes than a mechanical prediction tool created to combine clinical data and arrive at predictions.[27] Within his view, mechanical prediction approaches need not exclude any type of data from being combined and could incorporate coded clinical impressions. Once the clinical information is quantified, Meehl proposed mechanical approaches would make 100% reliable predictions for exactly the same data every time. Clinical prediction, on the other hand, would not provide this guarantee.[27]

Later research comparing clinical versus mechanical prediction

Meta-analyses comparing clinical and mechanical prediction efficiency have supported Meehl's (1954) conclusion that mechanical methods outperform clinical methods.[30][31] In response to objections, Meehl continued to defend algorithmic prediction throughout his career and proposed that clinicians should rarely deviate from mechanically derived conclusions.[32] To illustrate this, Meehl described a "broken leg" scenario in which mechanical prediction indicated that an individual has a 90% chance of attending the movies. However, the "clinician" is aware that the individual recently broke his leg, and this was not factored into the mechanical prediction. Therefore, the clinician can confidently conclude the mechanical prediction will be incorrect. The broken leg is objective evidence determined with high accuracy and highly correlated with staying home from the movies. Meehl argued, however, that mental health professionals rarely have access to such clear countervailing information as a broken leg, and therefore rarely if ever can appropriately disregard valid mechanical predictions.

Meehl argued that humans introduce biases when making decisions during clinical practice.[28][33] For example, clinicians may seek out information to support their presuppositions, or miss and ignore information challenging their views. Additionally, Meehl described how clinical judgment could be influenced by overconfidence or anecdotal observations unsupported by empirical research. In contrast, mechanical prediction tools can be configured to use important clinical information and are not influenced by psychological biases. In support of this conclusion, Meehl and his colleagues found that clinicians still make less accurate decisions than mechanical formulas even when given the same mechanical formulas to help with their decision-making.[33] Human biases have become central to research in diverse fields including behavioral economics and decision-making.

Schizophrenia

 
Paul Meehl's dominant schizogene theory of schizophrenia: Proposed effects across the human organism and the environment are displayed. CNS = central nervous system. (Adapted from Meehl 1962, Meehl 1989b, Meehl 1990b.)

Meehl was elected president of the American Psychological Association in 1962. In his address to the annual convention, he presented his comprehensive theory about the genetic causes of schizophrenia.[34] This conflicted with the prevailing notion that schizophrenia was primarily the result of a person's childhood rearing environment.[4] Meehl argued schizophrenia should be considered a genetically based neurological disorder manifesting via complex interactions with personal and environmental factors. His reasoning was shaped by the writings of psychoanalyst Sandor Rado as well as the behavioral genetics findings at the time. He proposed that existing psychodynamic theory about schizophrenia could be meaningfully integrated into his neurobiological framework for the disorder.[35]

Dominant schizogene theory

Meehl hypothesized the existence of an autosomal dominant schizogene widespread throughout the population, which would function as a necessary, but not sufficient, condition for schizophrenia.[34][36][37] The schizogene would manifest on the cellular level throughout the central nervous system and should be observed as a functional control aberration called hypokrisia. Cells exhibiting hypokrisia should contribute to a characteristic pattern of impaired integrative signal processing across multiple neural circuits in the brain, which Meehl termed "schizotaxia". In response to typical rearing environments and social reinforcement schedules, this neural aberration should invariably lead to a collection of observable behavioral tendencies called "schizotypy". Schizotypy indicators would include neurological soft signs, subtle differences in language usage ("cognitive slippage"), and effects on personality and emotion. Meehl believed many people in society exhibit signs of schizotypy as a result of the schizogene without showing signs of schizophrenia. Schizophrenia would only occur when individuals are carrying other non-specific genetic risk factors ("polygenic potentiators") relevant for traits such as anhedonia, ambivalence, and social fear. These additional traits would be more likely expressed under stress (e.g., trauma) and inconsistent social schedules from parents. Given these combinations of conditions, decompensation from schizotypy to schizophrenia would result.[citation needed]

Meehl's dominant schizogene theory had a substantial influence on subsequent research efforts.[38] His theorizing increased interest in longitudinal study of individuals at risk for psychosis and family members of people with schizophrenia who may be carrying the schizogene.[39] Meehl's descriptions of schizophrenia as largely a neurological phenomenon and schizotypy as a genetically based risk factor for schizophrenia have been supported.[40] However, researchers have not uncovered strong evidence for a single schizogene, and instead believe the genetic risk for schizophrenia is better explained by polygenic combinations of common variants and rare genetic mutations.[41][42]

Taxometrics

With the help of several colleagues, Meehl developed multiple statistical methods for identifying the presence of categorical groupings within biological or psychological variables.[4][43] Meehl was a critic of the checklist ("polythetic") structure used to categorize mental illnesses in diagnostic manuals such as the DSM-III.[44] Although many DSM-defined psychiatric syndromes can be reliability identified in clinical settings, Meehl argued that the categorical nature of mental illnesses assumed by these diagnoses (i.e., a person is either sick or well) should be tested empirically rather than accepted at face value. Meehl advocated for a data-driven approach that could, in the words of Plato, "carve nature at its joints", and determine when it is most appropriate to conceptualize something as being categorical or continuous/dimensional.[citation needed]

In his writings, Meehl advocated for the creation of a field called "taxometrics" to test for categorical groupings across diverse scientific disciplines.[44][45] Based on this approach, latent "taxons" would be conceptualized as causal factors leading to true differences in kind within a population. Taxons could include many types of biological and psychosocial phenomena such as expression of an autosomal dominant gene (e.g., Huntington's disease), biological sex, or indoctrination into a highly homogenous religious sect. Meehl envisioned applying taxometric approaches when the precise underlying latent causes are currently unknown and only observable "indicators" are available (e.g., psychiatric conditions). By mathematically examining patterns across these manifested indicators, Meehl proposed that converging evidence could be used to assess the plausibility of a true latent taxon while also estimating the base rate of that taxon.[citation needed]

 
Depiction of Coherent Cut Kinetics procedures for identifying a latent "taxon" with a 30% base rate.[44] The "hitmax" interval distinguishing between the two categorical groups is shown with vertical dotted lines.

Coherent Cut Kinetics and L-Mode

Coherent Cut Kinetics is the suite of statistical tools developed by Meehl and his colleagues to perform taxometric analysis.[46] "Cut Kinetics" refers to the mathematical operation of moving potential cut points across distributions of indicator variables to create subsamples using dichotomous splits. Then, several metrics can be applied to assess if the candidate cut points can be explained by a latent taxon. "Coherent" refers to the process of using multiple indicators and metrics together to make a case for convergence about the categorical or dimensional nature of the phenomenon being studied. Meehl played a role in developing the following taxometric procedures: MAMBAC,[47] MAXCOV,[48] MAXSLOPE,[49] MAXEIG,[46] and L-Mode.[46]

Application, influence, and criticism of taxometric methods

Taxometric analyses have contributed to a shift away from the use of diagnostic categories among mental health researchers.[50] In line with Meehl's theorizing, studies using taxometric methods have demonstrated how most psychiatric conditions are better conceptualized as being dimensional rather than categorical[51] (e.g., psychopathy,[52][53] posttraumatic stress disorder,[54] and clinical depression[55]). However, some possible exceptions have been identified such as a latent taxon representing the tendency to experience maladaptive dissociative states.[56] Since Meehl's death, factor mixture modeling has been proposed as an alternative to address the statistical weaknesses of his taxometric methods.[57]

Applied clinical views and work

Meehl practiced as a licensed and board-certified clinical psychologist throughout his career.[1] In 1958, Meehl performed psychoanalysis on Saul Bellow while Bellow was an instructor at the University of Minnesota.[58] He identified as "strongly psychodynamic in theoretical orientation", and used a combination of psychoanalysis and rational emotive therapy.[37]

"Why I Do Not Attend Case Conferences"

In 1973, Paul Meehl published the polemic "Why I Do Not Attend Case Conferences".[59] He discussed his avoidance of case conferences in mental health clinics, where individual patients, or "cases", are discussed at length by a team, often as a training exercise. Meehl found such case conferences boring and lacking intellectual rigor. In contrast, he recalled numerous interesting illuminating case conferences within internal medicine or neurology departments, which often centered around pathologist reports and objective data about patients' pathophysiology. In other words, case conferences outside mental health disciplines were benefiting from including objective evidence against which clinical expertise could be compared and contrasted. Meehl argued for creating a psychiatric analogue to the pathologist's report. Additionally, he outlined a proposed format for case conferences beginning with initial discussion of clinical observations, and ending with a revealing of a subset of patient data (e.g., psychological testing results) to compare with attendees' clinical inferences and proposed diagnoses.

Meehl also elaborated upon the issue of clinical versus statistical prediction and the known weakness of unstructured clinical decision-making during typical case conferences. He encouraged clinicians to be humble when collaborating about patient care and pushed for a higher scientific standard for clinical reasoning in mental health treatment settings.[59] Meehl directly identified several common deficiencies in reasoning that he had observed among his clinical colleagues, and to which he applied memorable names:

  • Barnum effect: Making a statement that is trivial and true of nearly all patients, but which is made as though it is important for the current patient.[21]
  • Sick-sick ("pathological set"): The tendency to generalize from personal experiences of health and ways of being, to the identification of others who are different from ourselves as being "sick".[citation needed]
  • Me too: The opposite of sick-sick. Imagining that "everyone does this" and thereby minimizing a symptom without assessing the probability of whether a mentally healthy person would actually do it. A variation of this is Uncle George's pancake fallacy. This minimizes a symptom through reference to a friend/relative who exhibited a similar symptom, thereby implying that it is normal.[4]
  • Multiple Napoleons fallacy: "It's not real to us, but it's 'real' to him". "So what if he thinks he's Napoleon?" There is a distinction between reality and delusion that is important to make when assessing a patient and so the consideration of comparative realities can mislead and distract from the importance of a patient's delusion to a diagnostic decision.[18] "If I think the moon is made of green cheese and you think it's a piece of rock, one of us must be wrong". For this, pointing out that the deviated cognitions of a delusional patient "seem real to him" is a waste of time. So, the statement "It is reality to him", which is philosophically either trivial or false, is also clinically misleading.[59]
  • Hidden decisions: Decisions based on factors that we do not own up to or challenge. An example is the placement of middle- and upper-class patients in therapy while lower-class patients are given medication. Meehl identified these decisions as related to an implicit ideal patient who is young, attractive, verbal, intelligent, and successful (YAVIS). He argued that YAVIS patients are preferred by psychotherapists because they can pay for long-term treatment and are more enjoyable to interact with.[59]
  • The spun-glass theory of the mind: The belief that the human organism is so fragile that minor negative events, such as criticism, rejection, or failure, are bound to cause major trauma—essentially not giving humans, and sometimes patients, enough credit for their resilience and ability to recover.
  • Crummy criterion fallacy: This fallacy refers to how psychologists explain away the technical aspects of tests, using inappropriate and 'crummy' criterion that is observational instead of scientific, rather than incorporating the psychometric aspects into the interview, history, and other material being presented at case conferences.
  • Understanding it makes it normal: The act of normalizing or excusing a behavior just because one understands the cause or function of it, regardless of its normalcy or appropriateness.
  • Assumptions that content and dynamics explain why this person is abnormal: Those who seek psychological services have characteristics associated with being a patient/care-seeker, but also characteristics of being human. Meehl argues that it is problematic to view a patient's normative life dysfunction to their psychopathology. For example, no individual is maximally effective in all aspects of their life. This will be true of non-patients and patients alike, and must be distinguished by the clinician from those aspects of the patient's life which are pathological and dysfunctional.
  • Identifying the softhearted with the softheaded: The belief that those who have sincere concern for the suffering (the softhearted) are the same as those who tend to be wrong in logical and empirical decisions (softheaded).
  • Ad hoc fallacy: Creating explanations after we have been presented with evidence that is consistent with what has now been proven.
  • Doing it the hard way: Going about a task in a more difficult manner when an equivalent easier option exists; for example, in clinical psychology, using an unnecessary instrument or procedure that can be difficult and time-consuming while the same information can be ascertained through interviewing or interacting with the client.
  • Social scientists' anti-biology bias: Meehl argued that social scientists like psychologists, sociologists, and psychiatrists have a tendency to react negatively to biological contributors to abnormal behavior, and therefore tending to be anti-drug, anti-genetic, and anti-ECT.
  • Double standard of evidential morals: When one is making an argument and requires less evidence for him or herself than does so for another.

Selected works

  • Meehl, Paul E. (1971) [1945]. "The dynamics of 'structured' personality tests" (PDF). In Goodstein, Leonard David; Lanyon, Richard I. (eds.). Readings in personality assessment. New York: Wiley. pp. 245–253. ISBN 9780471315001. OCLC 146546. Originally published in Journal of Clinical Psychology, 1, 296–303. Also republished as: Meehl, Paul E. (March 2000). "The dynamics of 'structured' personality tests, 1945". Journal of Clinical Psychology. 56 (3): 367–373. doi:10.1002/(sici)1097-4679(200003)56:3<367::aid-jclp12>3.0.co;2-u. PMID 10726672.
  • Meehl, Paul E.; Hathaway, Starke R. (1946). "The K factor as a suppressor variable in the Minnesota Multiphasic Personality Inventory" (PDF). Journal of Applied Psychology. 30 (5): 525–564. doi:10.1037/h0053634. ISSN 1939-1854. PMID 20282179.
  • MacCorquodale, Kenneth; Meehl, Paul E. (March 1948). "On a distinction between hypothetical constructs and intervening variables" (PDF). Psychological Review. 55 (2): 95–107. doi:10.1037/h0056029. PMID 18910284. Reprinted in Meehl 1991, pp. 249–264.
  • Hathaway, Starke R.; Meehl, Paul E. (1951). An atlas for the clinical use of the MMPI. Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press. ISBN 9780816600700. OCLC 166026. A case history handbook for professional uses of the Minnesota Multiphasic Personality Inventory.
  • Meehl, Paul E. (1954). Clinical versus statistical prediction: a theoretical analysis and a review of the evidence. Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press. doi:10.1037/11281-000. ISBN 9780816600960. OCLC 374235. Reprinted with new preface in 1996 by Jason Aronson (ISBN 978-0963878496) and in 2013 by Echo Point Books & Media (ISBN 978-0963878496).
  • Cronbach, Lee J.; Meehl, Paul E. (1955). "Construct validity in psychological tests" (PDF). Psychological Bulletin. 52 (4): 281–302. doi:10.1037/h0040957. PMID 13245896. S2CID 5312179. Reprinted in Feigl, Herbert; Scriven, Michael, eds. (1956). The foundations of science and the concepts of psychology and psychoanalysis. Minnesota studies in the philosophy of science. Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press. pp. 174–204. hdl:11299/184279. ISBN 9780816601226. OCLC 576505. Also reprinted in Meehl 1973a, pp. 3–31 and Waller et al. 2006, pp. 9–30.
  • Meehl, Paul E.; Rosen, Albert (May 1955). "Antecedent probability and the efficiency of psychometric signs, patterns, or cutting scores" (PDF). Psychological Bulletin. 52 (3): 194–216. doi:10.1037/h0048070. PMID 14371890. Reprinted in Meehl 1973a, pp. 32–62 and Waller et al. 2006, pp. 213–236.
  • Meehl, Paul E. (1956a). "Wanted—a good cook-book" (PDF). American Psychologist. 11 (6): 263–272. doi:10.1037/h0044164. Reprinted as Meehl, Paul E. (1956b). "Problems in the actuarial characterization of a person". In Feigl, Herbert; Scriven, Michael (eds.). The foundations of science and the concepts of psychology and psychoanalysis. Minnesota studies in the philosophy of science. Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press. pp. 205–222. hdl:11299/184265. ISBN 9780816601226. OCLC 576505. Also reprinted in Meehl 1973a, pp. 63–80 and Waller et al. 2006, pp. 249–262.
  • Meehl, Paul E. (1957). "When shall we use our heads instead of the formula?" (PDF). Journal of Counseling Psychology. 4 (4): 268–273. doi:10.1037/h0047554. Reprinted in Feigl, Herbert; Scriven, Michael; Maxwell, Grover, eds. (1958). Concepts, theories and the mind-body problem. Minnesota studies in the philosophy of science. Vol. 2. Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press. hdl:11299/184612. ISBN 9780816601585. OCLC 2669746. Also reprinted in Meehl 1973a, pp. 81–89 and Waller et al. 2006, pp. 263–269.
  • Meehl, Paul E.; Klann, Richard; Schmieding, Alfred; Breimeier, Kenneth; Schroeder-Slomann, Sophie (1958). What, then, is man?: a symposium of theology, psychology, and psychiatry. St. Louis, MO: Concordia Publishing House. OCLC 14598254.
  • Meehl, Paul E. (1962). "Schizotaxia, schizotypy, schizophrenia" (PDF). American Psychologist. 17 (12): 827–838. CiteSeerX 10.1.1.462.2509. doi:10.1037/h0041029. ISSN 0003-066X. Reprinted in Meehl 1973a, pp. 135–155.
  • Meehl, Paul E. (1967). "Theory-testing in psychology and physics: a methodological paradox" (PDF). Philosophy of Science. 34 (2): 103–115. doi:10.1086/288135. JSTOR 186099. S2CID 96422880. Reprinted in a couple of edited collections.
  • Meehl, Paul E. (1970). "Some methodological reflections on the difficulties of psychoanalytic research" (PDF). In Radner, Michael; Winokur, Stephen (eds.). Analyses of theories and methods of physics and psychology. Minnesota studies in the philosophy of science. Vol. 4. Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press. pp. 403–416. hdl:11299/184637. ISBN 9780816605910. OCLC 5526779. Reprinted in Meehl, Paul E. (1973b). "Some methodological reflections on the difficulties of psychoanalytic research". Psychological Issues. 8 (2): 104–117. PMID 4730734. Also reprinted in Meehl 1991, pp. 272–283.
  • Meehl, Paul E. (March 1972). "Specific genetic etiology, psychodynamics, and therapeutic nihilism". International Journal of Mental Health. 1 (1–2): 10–27. doi:10.1080/00207411.1972.11448562. ISSN 0020-7411. JSTOR 41343901. Reprinted in Meehl 173a, pp. 182–199 and Waller et al. 2006, pp. 193–206.
  • Meehl, Paul E. (1973a). Psychodiagnosis: selected papers. Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press. ISBN 978-0816606856. JSTOR 10.5749/j.cttttb7k. OCLC 736905.
  • Meehl, Paul E. (1978). "Theoretical risks and tabular asterisks: Sir Karl, Sir Ronald, and the slow progress of soft psychology" (PDF). Journal of Consulting and Clinical Psychology. 46 (4): 806–834. doi:10.1037/0022-006x.46.4.806. Reprinted in Meehl 1991, pp. 1–43 and Waller et al. 2006, pp. 57–90.
  • Meehl, Paul E. (1983). "Consistency tests in estimating the completeness of the fossil record: a neo-Popperian approach to statistical paleontology" (PDF). In Earman, John (ed.). Testing scientific theories. Minnesota studies in the philosophy of science. Vol. 10. Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press. pp. 413–473. ISBN 9780816611584. OCLC 9110477.
  • Meehl, Paul E. (1986). "Causes and effects of my disturbing little book" (PDF). Journal of Personality Assessment. 50 (3): 370–375. doi:10.1207/s15327752jpa5003_6. PMID 3806342.
  • Dawes, Robyn M.; Faust, David; Meehl, Paul E. (1989). "Clinical versus actuarial judgment" (PDF). Science. 243 (4899): 1668–1674. Bibcode:1989Sci...243.1668D. CiteSeerX 10.1.1.459.7990. doi:10.1126/science.2648573. PMID 2648573. Reprinted in Gilovich, Thomas; Griffin, Dale W.; Kahneman, Daniel, eds. (2002). Heuristics and biases: the psychology of intuitive judgement. Cambridge, UK; New York: Cambridge University Press. pp. 716–729. doi:10.1017/CBO9780511808098. ISBN 0521792606. OCLC 47364085.
  • Meehl, Paul E. (1989a). "Autobiography" (PDF). In Lindzey, Gardner (ed.). A history of psychology in autobiography. Vol. 8. Stanford, CA: Stanford University Press. pp. 337–389. doi:10.1037/11347-010. ISBN 9780804714921. OCLC 964288. Version including initial dictation that was not included in the published version.
  • Meehl, Paul E. (October 1989b). "Schizotaxia revisited" (PDF). Archives of General Psychiatry. 46 (10): 935–944. doi:10.1001/archpsyc.1989.01810100077015. ISSN 0003-990X. PMID 2552952.
  • Meehl, Paul E. (April 1990a). "Appraising and amending theories: the strategy of Lakatosian defense and two principles that warrant it" (PDF). Psychological Inquiry. 1 (2): 108–141. CiteSeerX 10.1.1.135.6444. doi:10.1207/s15327965pli0102_1. JSTOR 1448768. Reprinted in Waller et al. 2006, pp. 91–167.
  • Meehl, Paul E. (1990b). "Toward an integrated theory of schizotaxia, schizotypy, and schizophrenia" (PDF). Journal of Personality Disorders. 4 (1): 1–99. doi:10.1521/pedi.1990.4.1.1.
  • Meehl, Paul E. (February 1990c). "Why summaries of research on psychological theories are often uninterpretable" (PDF). Psychological Reports. 66 (1): 195–244. CiteSeerX 10.1.1.392.6447. doi:10.2466/pr0.1990.66.1.195. S2CID 2836704. Reprinted in Snow, Richard E.; Wiley, David E., eds. (1991). Improving inquiry in social science: a volume in honor of Lee J. Cronbach. Hillsdale, NJ: Lawrence Erlbaum Associates. pp. 13–59. doi:10.4324/9780203052341-6. ISBN 9780805805420. OCLC 22344893. Also reprinted in Waller et al. 2006, pp. 445–486.
  • Meehl, Paul E. (1991). Anderson, C. Anthony; Gunderson, Keith (eds.). Selected philosophical and methodological papers. Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press. ISBN 9780816618552. JSTOR 10.5749/j.ctttt4fs. OCLC 22208187.
  • Meehl, Paul E. (March 1992). "Factors and taxa, traits and types, differences of degree and differences in kind" (PDF). Journal of Personality. 60 (1): 117–174. CiteSeerX 10.1.1.555.6702. doi:10.1111/j.1467-6494.1992.tb00269.x. S2CID 53537836. Reprinted in Waller et al. 2006, pp. 331–370. Additional remarks by Meehl replying to a memo from L. R. Goldberg.
  • Meehl, Paul E.; Yonce, Leslie J. (1994). "Taxometric analysis: I. Detecting taxonicity with two quantitative indicators using means above and below a sliding cut (MAMBAC procedure)" (PDF). Psychological Reports. 74 (3, Part 2): 1059–1274. Appendices.
  • Meehl, Paul E. (1995). "Bootstraps taxometrics: solving the classification problem in psychopathology" (PDF). American Psychologist. 50 (4): 266–275. CiteSeerX 10.1.1.693.5492. doi:10.1037/0003-066x.50.4.266. ISSN 1935-990X. PMID 7733538. Reprinted in Waller et al. 2006, pp. 371–387.
  • Grove, William M.; Meehl, Paul E. (June 1996). "Comparative efficiency of informal (subjective, impressionistic) and formal (mechanical, algorithmic) prediction procedures: the clinical–statistical controversy" (PDF). Psychology, Public Policy, and Law. 2 (2): 293–323. CiteSeerX 10.1.1.471.592. doi:10.1037/1076-8971.2.2.293. Reprinted in Waller et al. 2006, pp. 291–320.
  • Meehl, Paul E.; Yonce, Leslie J. (1996). "Taxometric analysis: II. Detecting taxonicity using covariance of two quantitative indicators in successive intervals of a third indicator (MAXCOV procedure)" (PDF). Psychological Reports. 78 (3 Part 2): 1091–1227. CiteSeerX 10.1.1.693.4816. doi:10.2466/pr0.1996.78.3c.1091. ISSN 0033-2941. S2CID 146240707.
  • Meehl, Paul E. (2016) [1997]. "The problem is epistemology, not statistics: replace significance tests by confidence intervals and quantify accuracy of risky numerical predictions" (PDF). In Harlow, Lisa Lavoie; Mulaik, Stanley A.; Steiger, James H. (eds.). What if there were no significance tests?. Routledge classic editions. New York: Routledge. pp. 353–382. doi:10.4324/9781315629049. ISBN 9781138892460. OCLC 923017606. Originally published by Lawrence Erlbaum Associates.
  • Meehl, Paul E. (2006) [1998]. "The power of quantitative thinking" (PDF). In Waller, Niels G.; Yonce, Leslie J.; Grove, William M.; Faust, David; Lenzenweger, Mark F. (eds.). A Paul Meehl reader: essays on the practice of scientific psychology. Mahwah, NJ: Lawrence Erlbaum Associates. pp. 433–444. doi:10.4324/9780203759554. ISBN 978-0805852509. OCLC 67229353.
  • Waller, Niels G.; Meehl, Paul E. (1998). Multivariate taxometric procedures: distinguishing types from continua. Advanced quantitative techniques in the social sciences. Vol. 9. Thousand Oaks, CA: SAGE Publications. ISBN 9780761902577. OCLC 37666366.
  • Meehl, Paul E. (2004). "What's in a taxon?" (PDF). Journal of Abnormal Psychology. 113 (1): 39–43. CiteSeerX 10.1.1.693.5277. doi:10.1037/0021-843X.113.1.39. ISSN 1939-1846. PMID 14992655.
  • Peterson, Donald R. (2005). Twelve years of correspondence with Paul Meehl: tough notes from a gentle genius. Mahwah, NJ: Lawrence Erlbaum Associates. doi:10.4324/9781315084510. ISBN 9780805854893. OCLC 57754047.
  • Waller, Niels G.; Yonce, Leslie J.; Grove, William M.; Faust, David; Lenzenweger, Mark F., eds. (2006). A Paul Meehl reader: essays on the practice of scientific psychology. Mahwah, NJ: Lawrence Erlbaum Associates. doi:10.4324/9780203759554. ISBN 978-0805852509. OCLC 67229353.

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External links

  • Paul E. Meehl website including full list of publications and complete videos of Meehl teaching his course in Philosophical Psychology in 1989 at the Psychology Department of the University of Minnesota.

paul, meehl, paul, everett, meehl, january, 1920, february, 2003, american, clinical, psychologist, hathaway, regents, professor, psychology, university, minnesota, past, president, american, psychological, association, review, general, psychology, survey, pub. Paul Everett Meehl 3 January 1920 14 February 2003 was an American clinical psychologist Hathaway and Regents Professor of Psychology at the University of Minnesota and past president of the American Psychological Association 1 A Review of General Psychology survey published in 2002 ranked Meehl as the 74th most cited psychologist of the 20th century in a tie with Eleanor J Gibson 2 Throughout his nearly 60 year career Meehl made seminal contributions to psychology including empirical studies and theoretical accounts of construct validity schizophrenia etiology psychological assessment behavioral prediction and philosophy of science Paul E MeehlBornPaul Everett Swedal 1920 01 03 3 January 1920Minneapolis Minnesota USDied14 February 2003 2003 02 14 aged 83 Minneapolis Minnesota USAlma materUniversity of MinnesotaKnown forMinnesota Multiphasic Personality Inventory genetics of schizophrenia construct validity clinical v statistical prediction philosophy of science taxometricsAwardsNational Academy of Sciences 1987 APA Award for Lifetime Contributions to Psychology 1996 James McKeen Cattell Fellow Award 1998 Bruno Klopfer Award 1979 Scientific careerFieldsPsychology philosophy of scienceInstitutionsUniversity of MinnesotaDoctoral advisorStarke R HathawayDoctoral studentsHarrison G Gough Dante Cicchetti Donald R Peterson George Schlager WelshWebsitemeehl wbr umn wbr edu Contents 1 Biography 1 1 Childhood 1 2 Education and academic career 1 3 Later life and death 2 Philosophy of science 2 1 Meehl s paradox 3 Minnesota Multiphasic Personality Inventory 3 1 Interactions and suppressors the K scale 4 Clinical versus statistical prediction 4 1 Meehl s proposal 4 2 Later research comparing clinical versus mechanical prediction 5 Schizophrenia 5 1 Dominant schizogene theory 6 Taxometrics 6 1 Coherent Cut Kinetics and L Mode 6 2 Application influence and criticism of taxometric methods 7 Applied clinical views and work 7 1 Why I Do Not Attend Case Conferences 8 Selected works 9 References 10 External linksBiography EditChildhood Edit Paul Meehl was born January 3 1920 in Minneapolis Minnesota to Otto and Blanche Swedal His family name Meehl was his stepfather s 3 When he was age 16 his mother died as the result of poor medical care which according to Meehl greatly affected his faith in the expertise of medical practitioners and diagnostic accuracy of clinicians 3 After his mother s death Meehl lived briefly with his stepfather then with a neighborhood family for one year so he could finish high school He then lived with his maternal grandparents who lived near the University of Minnesota Education and academic career Edit Meehl started as an undergraduate at the University of Minnesota in March 1938 3 He earned his bachelor s degree in 1941 4 with Donald G Paterson as his advisor and took his PhD in psychology at Minnesota under Starke R Hathaway in 1945 Meehl s graduate student cohort at the time included Marian Breland Bailey William K Estes Norman Guttman William Schofield and Kenneth MacCorquodale 3 Upon taking his doctorate Meehl immediately accepted a faculty position at the university which he held throughout his career In addition he had appointments in psychology law psychiatry neurology philosophy and served as a fellow of the Minnesota Center for Philosophy of Science founded by Herbert Feigl Meehl and Wilfrid Sellars 3 Meehl rose quickly to academic positions of prominence He was chairman of the University of Minnesota Psychology Department at age 31 president of the Midwestern Psychological Association at age 34 recipient of the American Psychological Association s Award for Distinguished Scientific Contributions to Psychology at age 38 and president of that association at age 42 He was promoted to Regents professor the highest academic position at the University of Minnesota in 1968 He received the Bruno Klopfer Distinguished Contributor Award in personality assessment in 1979 and was elected to the National Academy of Sciences in 1987 3 Meehl was not particularly religious during his upbringing 3 but in adulthood during the 1950s collaborated with a group of Lutheran theologians and psychologists to write What Then Is Man 5 This project was commissioned by the Lutheran Church Missouri Synod through Concordia Seminary The project explored both orthodox theology psychological science and how Christians Lutherans in particular could responsibly function as both Christians and psychologists without betraying orthodoxy or sound science and practice Later life and death Edit In 1995 Meehl was a signatory of a collective statement titled Mainstream Science on Intelligence written by Linda Gottfredson and published in the Wall Street Journal 6 He died on February 14 2003 at his home in Minneapolis of chronic myelomonocytic leukemia 4 In 2005 Donald R Peterson a student of Meehl s published a volume of their correspondence 7 Philosophy of science EditMeehl founded along with Herbert Feigl and Wilfrid Sellars the Minnesota Center for the Philosophy of Science and was a leading figure in philosophy of science as applied to psychology 3 Arguably Meehl s most important contributions to psychological research methodology were in legitimizing scientific claims about unobservable psychological processes In the first half of the 20th century psychology was dominated by operationism and behaviorism As outlined in Bridgman s The Logic of Modern Physics if two researchers had different operational definitions they had different concepts There was no surplus meaning If for example two researchers had different measures of anomia or intelligence they had different concepts Behaviorists focussed on stimulus response theories and were deeply skeptical of unscientific explanations in terms of unobservable psychological processes Behaviorists and operationists would have rejected as unscientific any notion that there was some general thing called intelligence that existed inside a person s head and that might be reflected almost equivalently in Stanford Binet IQ tests or Wechsler scales Meehl changed that via two landmark papers In 1948 Kenneth MacCorquodale and Meehl introduced the distinction between hypothetical construct and intervening variable 8 Naively it would seem that there is a difference in logical status between constructs which involve the hypothesization of an entity process or event which is not itself observed and constructs which do not involve such hypothesization 9 An intervening variable is simply a mathematical combination of operations If one speaks of the expected value of a gamble probability of winning payoff for winning this is not hypothesizing any unobservable psychological process Expected value is simply a mathematical combination of observables On the other hand if one attempts to make statements about attractiveness of a gamble if this is not observable or perfectly captured by some single operational measure this is a hypothetical construct a theoretical term that is not itself observable or a direct function of observables They used as examples Hull s rg anticipatory goal response 10 or Allport s biophysical traits or Murray s needs These constructs involve terms which are not wholly reducible to empirical terms they refer to processes or entities that are not directly observed although they need not be in principle unobservable Such constructs had surplus meaning Thus good behaviorists and operationists should be comfortable with statements about intervening variables but should have greater wariness of hypothetical constructs In 1955 Lee J Cronbach and Meehl legitimized theory tests about unobservable hypothetical constructs 11 Constructs are unobservables and they can be stable traits of individuals e g Need for Cognition or temporary states e g nonconscious goal activation Previously good behaviorists had deep skepticism about the legitimacy of psychological research about unobservable processes Cronbach and Meehl introduced the concept of construct validity for cases in which there was no gold standard criterion for validating a test of a hypothetical construct Hence any construct had surplus meaning Construct validity was distinguished from predictive validity concurrent validity and content validity They also introduced the concept of the nomological net the network of associations among constructs and measures Cronbach and Meehl argued that the meaning of a hypothetical construct is given by its relations to other variables in a nomological network One tests a theory of relations among hypothetical constructs by showing that putative measures of these constructs relate to each other as implied by one s theory as captured in the nomological network This set the stage for modern psychological test and set the stage for the cognitive revolution in psychology that focusses on the study of mental processes that are not directly observable After Karl Popper s The Logic of Scientific Discovery was published in English in 1959 Meehl counted himself a Popperian for a short time later as a neo Popperian philosophical eclectic 3 still using the Popperian approach of conjectures and refutations 12 13 but without endorsing all of Popper s philosophy 14 Meehl was a strident critic of using statistical null hypothesis testing for the evaluation of scientific theory He believed that null hypothesis testing was partly responsible for the lack of progress in many of the scientifically soft areas of psychology e g clinical counseling social personality and community 15 16 Meehl s paradox Edit Meehl s paradox is that in the hard sciences more sophisticated and precise methods make it harder to claim support for one s theory The opposite is true in soft sciences like the social sciences Hard sciences like physics make exact point predictions and work by testing whether observed data falsify those predictions With increased precision one is better able to detect small deviations from the model s predictions and harder to claim support for the model In contrast softer social sciences make only directional predictions not point predictions Softer social sciences claim support when the direction of the observed effect matches predictions rejecting only the null hypothesis of zero effect Meehl argued that no treatment in the real world has zero effect With sufficient sample size therefore one should almost always be able to reject the null hypothesis of zero effect Researchers who guessed randomly at the sign of any small effect would have a 50 50 chance of finding confirmation with sufficiently large sample size 17 Minnesota Multiphasic Personality Inventory EditMeehl was considered an authority on the development of psychological assessments using the Minnesota Multiphasic Personality Inventory MMPI 4 18 While Meehl did not directly develop the original MMPI items he was a high school junior when Hathaway and McKinley created the item pool he contributed widely to the literature on interpreting patterns of responses to MMPI questions 3 19 In particular Meehl argued that the MMPI could be used to understand personality profiles systematically associated with clinical outcomes something he termed a statistical versus a clinical approach to predicting behavior 20 21 Interactions and suppressors the K scale Edit As part of his doctoral dissertation Meehl worked with Hathaway to develop the K scale indicator of valid responding for the MMPI 22 During initial clinical testing of the MMPI a subset of individuals exhibiting clear signs of mental illness still produced normal personality profiles on the various clinical scales 23 page needed It was suspected that these individuals were demonstrating clinical defensiveness and presenting as asymptomatic and well adjusted Meehl and Hathaway employed a technique called empirical criterion keying to compare the responses of these defensive individuals with other individuals who were not suspected of experiencing mental illness and who also produced normal MMPI profiles The empirical criterion keying approach selected items based on their ability to maximally discriminate between these groups They were not selected based on theory or face validity of the item content As a result items on the resulting scale termed the K for correction scale would be difficult to avoid for individuals attempting to present as well adjusted when taking the MMPI Individuals who endorsed the K scale items were thought to be demonstrating a sophisticated attempt to conceal information about their mental health history from test administrators The K scale is an early example of a putative suppressor variable The K scale is used as a complement validity indicator to the L for lie scale whose items were selected based on item content face validity and are more obviously focused on impression management The K scale has been popular among clinical psychologists and has been a useful tool for MMPI and MMPI 2 profile interpretation 23 page needed Meehl and Hathaway continued to conduct research using MMPI validity indicators and noticed K scales elevations were associated with greater denial of symptoms on some clinical scales more than others 22 To compensate for this they developed a K scale correction factor aimed at offsetting effects of defensive responding on other scales measuring psychopathology Substantial subsequent research conducted on the original MMPI clinical scales used these K corrected scores although research on the usefulness of the corrections has produced mixed results 23 24 25 The most recent iteration of the K scale developed for the MMPI 2 RF is still used for psychological assessments in clinical neuropsychological and forensic contexts 26 Clinical versus statistical prediction EditMeehl s proposal Edit Meehl s 1954 book Clinical vs Statistical Prediction A Theoretical Analysis and a Review of the Evidence analyzed the claim that mechanical i e formal algorithmic actuarial methods of data combination would outperform clinical i e subjective informal methods to predict behavior 27 Meehl argued that mechanical methods of prediction when used correctly make more efficient and reliable decisions about patient prognosis and treatment His conclusions were controversial and have long conflicted with the prevailing consensus about psychiatric decision making 28 Historically mental health professionals commonly make decisions based on their professional clinical judgment i e combining clinical information in their head and arriving at a prediction about a patient 29 Meehl theorized that clinicians would make more mistakes than a mechanical prediction tool created to combine clinical data and arrive at predictions 27 Within his view mechanical prediction approaches need not exclude any type of data from being combined and could incorporate coded clinical impressions Once the clinical information is quantified Meehl proposed mechanical approaches would make 100 reliable predictions for exactly the same data every time Clinical prediction on the other hand would not provide this guarantee 27 Later research comparing clinical versus mechanical prediction Edit Meta analyses comparing clinical and mechanical prediction efficiency have supported Meehl s 1954 conclusion that mechanical methods outperform clinical methods 30 31 In response to objections Meehl continued to defend algorithmic prediction throughout his career and proposed that clinicians should rarely deviate from mechanically derived conclusions 32 To illustrate this Meehl described a broken leg scenario in which mechanical prediction indicated that an individual has a 90 chance of attending the movies However the clinician is aware that the individual recently broke his leg and this was not factored into the mechanical prediction Therefore the clinician can confidently conclude the mechanical prediction will be incorrect The broken leg is objective evidence determined with high accuracy and highly correlated with staying home from the movies Meehl argued however that mental health professionals rarely have access to such clear countervailing information as a broken leg and therefore rarely if ever can appropriately disregard valid mechanical predictions Meehl argued that humans introduce biases when making decisions during clinical practice 28 33 For example clinicians may seek out information to support their presuppositions or miss and ignore information challenging their views Additionally Meehl described how clinical judgment could be influenced by overconfidence or anecdotal observations unsupported by empirical research In contrast mechanical prediction tools can be configured to use important clinical information and are not influenced by psychological biases In support of this conclusion Meehl and his colleagues found that clinicians still make less accurate decisions than mechanical formulas even when given the same mechanical formulas to help with their decision making 33 Human biases have become central to research in diverse fields including behavioral economics and decision making Schizophrenia Edit Paul Meehl s dominant schizogene theory of schizophrenia Proposed effects across the human organism and the environment are displayed CNS central nervous system Adapted from Meehl 1962 Meehl 1989b Meehl 1990b Meehl was elected president of the American Psychological Association in 1962 In his address to the annual convention he presented his comprehensive theory about the genetic causes of schizophrenia 34 This conflicted with the prevailing notion that schizophrenia was primarily the result of a person s childhood rearing environment 4 Meehl argued schizophrenia should be considered a genetically based neurological disorder manifesting via complex interactions with personal and environmental factors His reasoning was shaped by the writings of psychoanalyst Sandor Rado as well as the behavioral genetics findings at the time He proposed that existing psychodynamic theory about schizophrenia could be meaningfully integrated into his neurobiological framework for the disorder 35 Dominant schizogene theory Edit Meehl hypothesized the existence of an autosomal dominant schizogene widespread throughout the population which would function as a necessary but not sufficient condition for schizophrenia 34 36 37 The schizogene would manifest on the cellular level throughout the central nervous system and should be observed as a functional control aberration called hypokrisia Cells exhibiting hypokrisia should contribute to a characteristic pattern of impaired integrative signal processing across multiple neural circuits in the brain which Meehl termed schizotaxia In response to typical rearing environments and social reinforcement schedules this neural aberration should invariably lead to a collection of observable behavioral tendencies called schizotypy Schizotypy indicators would include neurological soft signs subtle differences in language usage cognitive slippage and effects on personality and emotion Meehl believed many people in society exhibit signs of schizotypy as a result of the schizogene without showing signs of schizophrenia Schizophrenia would only occur when individuals are carrying other non specific genetic risk factors polygenic potentiators relevant for traits such as anhedonia ambivalence and social fear These additional traits would be more likely expressed under stress e g trauma and inconsistent social schedules from parents Given these combinations of conditions decompensation from schizotypy to schizophrenia would result citation needed Meehl s dominant schizogene theory had a substantial influence on subsequent research efforts 38 His theorizing increased interest in longitudinal study of individuals at risk for psychosis and family members of people with schizophrenia who may be carrying the schizogene 39 Meehl s descriptions of schizophrenia as largely a neurological phenomenon and schizotypy as a genetically based risk factor for schizophrenia have been supported 40 However researchers have not uncovered strong evidence for a single schizogene and instead believe the genetic risk for schizophrenia is better explained by polygenic combinations of common variants and rare genetic mutations 41 42 Taxometrics EditWith the help of several colleagues Meehl developed multiple statistical methods for identifying the presence of categorical groupings within biological or psychological variables 4 43 Meehl was a critic of the checklist polythetic structure used to categorize mental illnesses in diagnostic manuals such as the DSM III 44 Although many DSM defined psychiatric syndromes can be reliability identified in clinical settings Meehl argued that the categorical nature of mental illnesses assumed by these diagnoses i e a person is either sick or well should be tested empirically rather than accepted at face value Meehl advocated for a data driven approach that could in the words of Plato carve nature at its joints and determine when it is most appropriate to conceptualize something as being categorical or continuous dimensional citation needed In his writings Meehl advocated for the creation of a field called taxometrics to test for categorical groupings across diverse scientific disciplines 44 45 Based on this approach latent taxons would be conceptualized as causal factors leading to true differences in kind within a population Taxons could include many types of biological and psychosocial phenomena such as expression of an autosomal dominant gene e g Huntington s disease biological sex or indoctrination into a highly homogenous religious sect Meehl envisioned applying taxometric approaches when the precise underlying latent causes are currently unknown and only observable indicators are available e g psychiatric conditions By mathematically examining patterns across these manifested indicators Meehl proposed that converging evidence could be used to assess the plausibility of a true latent taxon while also estimating the base rate of that taxon citation needed Depiction of Coherent Cut Kinetics procedures for identifying a latent taxon with a 30 base rate 44 The hitmax interval distinguishing between the two categorical groups is shown with vertical dotted lines Coherent Cut Kinetics and L Mode Edit Coherent Cut Kinetics is the suite of statistical tools developed by Meehl and his colleagues to perform taxometric analysis 46 Cut Kinetics refers to the mathematical operation of moving potential cut points across distributions of indicator variables to create subsamples using dichotomous splits Then several metrics can be applied to assess if the candidate cut points can be explained by a latent taxon Coherent refers to the process of using multiple indicators and metrics together to make a case for convergence about the categorical or dimensional nature of the phenomenon being studied Meehl played a role in developing the following taxometric procedures MAMBAC 47 MAXCOV 48 MAXSLOPE 49 MAXEIG 46 and L Mode 46 Application influence and criticism of taxometric methods Edit Taxometric analyses have contributed to a shift away from the use of diagnostic categories among mental health researchers 50 In line with Meehl s theorizing studies using taxometric methods have demonstrated how most psychiatric conditions are better conceptualized as being dimensional rather than categorical 51 e g psychopathy 52 53 posttraumatic stress disorder 54 and clinical depression 55 However some possible exceptions have been identified such as a latent taxon representing the tendency to experience maladaptive dissociative states 56 Since Meehl s death factor mixture modeling has been proposed as an alternative to address the statistical weaknesses of his taxometric methods 57 Applied clinical views and work EditMeehl practiced as a licensed and board certified clinical psychologist throughout his career 1 In 1958 Meehl performed psychoanalysis on Saul Bellow while Bellow was an instructor at the University of Minnesota 58 He identified as strongly psychodynamic in theoretical orientation and used a combination of psychoanalysis and rational emotive therapy 37 Why I Do Not Attend Case Conferences Edit In 1973 Paul Meehl published the polemic Why I Do Not Attend Case Conferences 59 He discussed his avoidance of case conferences in mental health clinics where individual patients or cases are discussed at length by a team often as a training exercise Meehl found such case conferences boring and lacking intellectual rigor In contrast he recalled numerous interesting illuminating case conferences within internal medicine or neurology departments which often centered around pathologist reports and objective data about patients pathophysiology In other words case conferences outside mental health disciplines were benefiting from including objective evidence against which clinical expertise could be compared and contrasted Meehl argued for creating a psychiatric analogue to the pathologist s report Additionally he outlined a proposed format for case conferences beginning with initial discussion of clinical observations and ending with a revealing of a subset of patient data e g psychological testing results to compare with attendees clinical inferences and proposed diagnoses Meehl also elaborated upon the issue of clinical versus statistical prediction and the known weakness of unstructured clinical decision making during typical case conferences He encouraged clinicians to be humble when collaborating about patient care and pushed for a higher scientific standard for clinical reasoning in mental health treatment settings 59 Meehl directly identified several common deficiencies in reasoning that he had observed among his clinical colleagues and to which he applied memorable names Barnum effect Making a statement that is trivial and true of nearly all patients but which is made as though it is important for the current patient 21 Sick sick pathological set The tendency to generalize from personal experiences of health and ways of being to the identification of others who are different from ourselves as being sick citation needed Me too The opposite of sick sick Imagining that everyone does this and thereby minimizing a symptom without assessing the probability of whether a mentally healthy person would actually do it A variation of this is Uncle George s pancake fallacy This minimizes a symptom through reference to a friend relative who exhibited a similar symptom thereby implying that it is normal 4 Multiple Napoleons fallacy It s not real to us but it s real to him So what if he thinks he s Napoleon There is a distinction between reality and delusion that is important to make when assessing a patient and so the consideration of comparative realities can mislead and distract from the importance of a patient s delusion to a diagnostic decision 18 If I think the moon is made of green cheese and you think it s a piece of rock one of us must be wrong For this pointing out that the deviated cognitions of a delusional patient seem real to him is a waste of time So the statement It is reality to him which is philosophically either trivial or false is also clinically misleading 59 Hidden decisions Decisions based on factors that we do not own up to or challenge An example is the placement of middle and upper class patients in therapy while lower class patients are given medication Meehl identified these decisions as related to an implicit ideal patient who is young attractive verbal intelligent and successful YAVIS He argued that YAVIS patients are preferred by psychotherapists because they can pay for long term treatment and are more enjoyable to interact with 59 The spun glass theory of the mind The belief that the human organism is so fragile that minor negative events such as criticism rejection or failure are bound to cause major trauma essentially not giving humans and sometimes patients enough credit for their resilience and ability to recover Crummy criterion fallacy This fallacy refers to how psychologists explain away the technical aspects of tests using inappropriate and crummy criterion that is observational instead of scientific rather than incorporating the psychometric aspects into the interview history and other material being presented at case conferences Understanding it makes it normal The act of normalizing or excusing a behavior just because one understands the cause or function of it regardless of its normalcy or appropriateness Assumptions that content and dynamics explain why this person is abnormal Those who seek psychological services have characteristics associated with being a patient care seeker but also characteristics of being human Meehl argues that it is problematic to view a patient s normative life dysfunction to their psychopathology For example no individual is maximally effective in all aspects of their life This will be true of non patients and patients alike and must be distinguished by the clinician from those aspects of the patient s life which are pathological and dysfunctional Identifying the softhearted with the softheaded The belief that those who have sincere concern for the suffering the softhearted are the same as those who tend to be wrong in logical and empirical decisions softheaded Ad hoc fallacy Creating explanations after we have been presented with evidence that is consistent with what has now been proven Doing it the hard way Going about a task in a more difficult manner when an equivalent easier option exists for example in clinical psychology using an unnecessary instrument or procedure that can be difficult and time consuming while the same information can be ascertained through interviewing or interacting with the client Social scientists anti biology bias Meehl argued that social scientists like psychologists sociologists and psychiatrists have a tendency to react negatively to biological contributors to abnormal behavior and therefore tending to be anti drug anti genetic and anti ECT Double standard of evidential morals When one is making an argument and requires less evidence for him or herself than does so for another Selected works EditMeehl Paul E 1971 1945 The dynamics of structured personality tests PDF In Goodstein Leonard David Lanyon Richard I eds Readings in personality assessment New York Wiley pp 245 253 ISBN 9780471315001 OCLC 146546 Originally published in Journal of Clinical Psychology 1 296 303 Also republished as Meehl Paul E March 2000 The dynamics of structured personality tests 1945 Journal of Clinical Psychology 56 3 367 373 doi 10 1002 sici 1097 4679 200003 56 3 lt 367 aid jclp12 gt 3 0 co 2 u PMID 10726672 Meehl Paul E Hathaway Starke R 1946 The K factor as a suppressor variable in the Minnesota Multiphasic Personality Inventory PDF Journal of Applied Psychology 30 5 525 564 doi 10 1037 h0053634 ISSN 1939 1854 PMID 20282179 MacCorquodale Kenneth Meehl Paul E March 1948 On a distinction between hypothetical constructs and intervening variables PDF Psychological Review 55 2 95 107 doi 10 1037 h0056029 PMID 18910284 Reprinted in Meehl 1991 pp 249 264 Hathaway Starke R Meehl Paul E 1951 An atlas for the clinical use of the MMPI Minneapolis University of Minnesota Press ISBN 9780816600700 OCLC 166026 A case history handbook for professional uses of the Minnesota Multiphasic Personality Inventory Meehl Paul E 1954 Clinical versus statistical prediction a theoretical analysis and a review of the evidence Minneapolis University of Minnesota Press doi 10 1037 11281 000 ISBN 9780816600960 OCLC 374235 Reprinted with new preface in 1996 by Jason Aronson ISBN 978 0963878496 and in 2013 by Echo Point Books amp Media ISBN 978 0963878496 Cronbach Lee J Meehl Paul E 1955 Construct validity in psychological tests PDF Psychological Bulletin 52 4 281 302 doi 10 1037 h0040957 PMID 13245896 S2CID 5312179 Reprinted in Feigl Herbert Scriven Michael eds 1956 The foundations of science and the concepts of psychology and psychoanalysis Minnesota studies in the philosophy of science Minneapolis University of Minnesota Press pp 174 204 hdl 11299 184279 ISBN 9780816601226 OCLC 576505 Also reprinted in Meehl 1973a pp 3 31 and Waller et al 2006 pp 9 30 Meehl Paul E Rosen Albert May 1955 Antecedent probability and the efficiency of psychometric signs patterns or cutting scores PDF Psychological Bulletin 52 3 194 216 doi 10 1037 h0048070 PMID 14371890 Reprinted in Meehl 1973a pp 32 62 and Waller et al 2006 pp 213 236 Meehl Paul E 1956a Wanted a good cook book PDF American Psychologist 11 6 263 272 doi 10 1037 h0044164 Reprinted as Meehl Paul E 1956b Problems in the actuarial characterization of a person In Feigl Herbert Scriven Michael eds The foundations of science and the concepts of psychology and psychoanalysis Minnesota studies in the philosophy of science Minneapolis University of Minnesota Press pp 205 222 hdl 11299 184265 ISBN 9780816601226 OCLC 576505 Also reprinted in Meehl 1973a pp 63 80 and Waller et al 2006 pp 249 262 Meehl Paul E 1957 When shall we use our heads instead of the formula PDF Journal of Counseling Psychology 4 4 268 273 doi 10 1037 h0047554 Reprinted in Feigl Herbert Scriven Michael Maxwell Grover eds 1958 Concepts theories and the mind body problem Minnesota studies in the philosophy of science Vol 2 Minneapolis University of Minnesota Press hdl 11299 184612 ISBN 9780816601585 OCLC 2669746 Also reprinted in Meehl 1973a pp 81 89 and Waller et al 2006 pp 263 269 Meehl Paul E Klann Richard Schmieding Alfred Breimeier Kenneth Schroeder Slomann Sophie 1958 What then is man a symposium of theology psychology and psychiatry St Louis MO Concordia Publishing House OCLC 14598254 Meehl Paul E 1962 Schizotaxia schizotypy schizophrenia PDF American Psychologist 17 12 827 838 CiteSeerX 10 1 1 462 2509 doi 10 1037 h0041029 ISSN 0003 066X Reprinted in Meehl 1973a pp 135 155 Meehl Paul E 1967 Theory testing in psychology and physics a methodological paradox PDF Philosophy of Science 34 2 103 115 doi 10 1086 288135 JSTOR 186099 S2CID 96422880 Reprinted in a couple of edited collections Meehl Paul E 1970 Some methodological reflections on the difficulties of psychoanalytic research PDF In Radner Michael Winokur Stephen eds Analyses of theories and methods of physics and psychology Minnesota studies in the philosophy of science Vol 4 Minneapolis University of Minnesota Press pp 403 416 hdl 11299 184637 ISBN 9780816605910 OCLC 5526779 Reprinted in Meehl Paul E 1973b Some methodological reflections on the difficulties of psychoanalytic research Psychological Issues 8 2 104 117 PMID 4730734 Also reprinted in Meehl 1991 pp 272 283 Meehl Paul E March 1972 Specific genetic etiology psychodynamics and therapeutic nihilism International Journal of Mental Health 1 1 2 10 27 doi 10 1080 00207411 1972 11448562 ISSN 0020 7411 JSTOR 41343901 Reprinted in Meehl 173a pp 182 199harvnb error no target CITEREFMeehl173a help and Waller et al 2006 pp 193 206 Meehl Paul E 1973a Psychodiagnosis selected papers Minneapolis University of Minnesota Press ISBN 978 0816606856 JSTOR 10 5749 j cttttb7k OCLC 736905 Meehl Paul E 1978 Theoretical risks and tabular asterisks Sir Karl Sir Ronald and the slow progress of soft psychology PDF Journal of Consulting and Clinical Psychology 46 4 806 834 doi 10 1037 0022 006x 46 4 806 Reprinted in Meehl 1991 pp 1 43 and Waller et al 2006 pp 57 90 Meehl Paul E 1983 Consistency tests in estimating the completeness of the fossil record a neo Popperian approach to statistical paleontology PDF In Earman John ed Testing scientific theories Minnesota studies in the philosophy of science Vol 10 Minneapolis University of Minnesota Press pp 413 473 ISBN 9780816611584 OCLC 9110477 Meehl Paul E 1986 Causes and effects of my disturbing little book PDF Journal of Personality Assessment 50 3 370 375 doi 10 1207 s15327752jpa5003 6 PMID 3806342 Dawes Robyn M Faust David Meehl Paul E 1989 Clinical versus actuarial judgment PDF Science 243 4899 1668 1674 Bibcode 1989Sci 243 1668D CiteSeerX 10 1 1 459 7990 doi 10 1126 science 2648573 PMID 2648573 Reprinted in Gilovich Thomas Griffin Dale W Kahneman Daniel eds 2002 Heuristics and biases the psychology of intuitive judgement Cambridge UK New York Cambridge University Press pp 716 729 doi 10 1017 CBO9780511808098 ISBN 0521792606 OCLC 47364085 Meehl Paul E 1989a Autobiography PDF In Lindzey Gardner ed A history of psychology in autobiography Vol 8 Stanford CA Stanford University Press pp 337 389 doi 10 1037 11347 010 ISBN 9780804714921 OCLC 964288 Version including initial dictation that was not included in the published version Meehl Paul E October 1989b Schizotaxia revisited PDF Archives of General Psychiatry 46 10 935 944 doi 10 1001 archpsyc 1989 01810100077015 ISSN 0003 990X PMID 2552952 Meehl Paul E April 1990a Appraising and amending theories the strategy of Lakatosian defense and two principles that warrant it PDF Psychological Inquiry 1 2 108 141 CiteSeerX 10 1 1 135 6444 doi 10 1207 s15327965pli0102 1 JSTOR 1448768 Reprinted in Waller et al 2006 pp 91 167 Meehl Paul E 1990b Toward an integrated theory of schizotaxia schizotypy and schizophrenia PDF Journal of Personality Disorders 4 1 1 99 doi 10 1521 pedi 1990 4 1 1 Meehl Paul E February 1990c Why summaries of research on psychological theories are often uninterpretable PDF Psychological Reports 66 1 195 244 CiteSeerX 10 1 1 392 6447 doi 10 2466 pr0 1990 66 1 195 S2CID 2836704 Reprinted in Snow Richard E Wiley David E eds 1991 Improving inquiry in social science a volume in honor of Lee J Cronbach Hillsdale NJ Lawrence Erlbaum Associates pp 13 59 doi 10 4324 9780203052341 6 ISBN 9780805805420 OCLC 22344893 Also reprinted in Waller et al 2006 pp 445 486 Meehl Paul E 1991 Anderson C Anthony Gunderson Keith eds Selected philosophical and methodological papers Minneapolis University of Minnesota Press ISBN 9780816618552 JSTOR 10 5749 j ctttt4fs OCLC 22208187 Meehl Paul E March 1992 Factors and taxa traits and types differences of degree and differences in kind PDF Journal of Personality 60 1 117 174 CiteSeerX 10 1 1 555 6702 doi 10 1111 j 1467 6494 1992 tb00269 x S2CID 53537836 Reprinted in Waller et al 2006 pp 331 370 Additional remarks by Meehl replying to a memo from L R Goldberg Meehl Paul E Yonce Leslie J 1994 Taxometric analysis I Detecting taxonicity with two quantitative indicators using means above and below a sliding cut MAMBAC procedure PDF Psychological Reports 74 3 Part 2 1059 1274 Appendices Meehl Paul E 1995 Bootstraps taxometrics solving the classification problem in psychopathology PDF American Psychologist 50 4 266 275 CiteSeerX 10 1 1 693 5492 doi 10 1037 0003 066x 50 4 266 ISSN 1935 990X PMID 7733538 Reprinted in Waller et al 2006 pp 371 387 Grove William M Meehl Paul E June 1996 Comparative efficiency of informal subjective impressionistic and formal mechanical algorithmic prediction procedures the clinical statistical controversy PDF Psychology Public Policy and Law 2 2 293 323 CiteSeerX 10 1 1 471 592 doi 10 1037 1076 8971 2 2 293 Reprinted in Waller et al 2006 pp 291 320 Meehl Paul E Yonce Leslie J 1996 Taxometric analysis II Detecting taxonicity using covariance of two quantitative indicators in successive intervals of a third indicator MAXCOV procedure PDF Psychological Reports 78 3 Part 2 1091 1227 CiteSeerX 10 1 1 693 4816 doi 10 2466 pr0 1996 78 3c 1091 ISSN 0033 2941 S2CID 146240707 Meehl Paul E 2016 1997 The problem is epistemology not statistics replace significance tests by confidence intervals and quantify accuracy of risky numerical predictions PDF In Harlow Lisa Lavoie Mulaik Stanley A Steiger James H eds What if there were no significance tests Routledge classic editions New York Routledge pp 353 382 doi 10 4324 9781315629049 ISBN 9781138892460 OCLC 923017606 Originally published by Lawrence Erlbaum Associates Meehl Paul E 2006 1998 The power of quantitative thinking PDF In Waller Niels G Yonce Leslie J Grove William M Faust David Lenzenweger Mark F eds A Paul Meehl reader essays on the practice of scientific psychology Mahwah NJ Lawrence Erlbaum Associates pp 433 444 doi 10 4324 9780203759554 ISBN 978 0805852509 OCLC 67229353 Waller Niels G Meehl Paul E 1998 Multivariate taxometric procedures distinguishing types from continua Advanced quantitative techniques in the social sciences Vol 9 Thousand Oaks CA SAGE Publications ISBN 9780761902577 OCLC 37666366 Meehl Paul E 2004 What s in a taxon PDF Journal of Abnormal Psychology 113 1 39 43 CiteSeerX 10 1 1 693 5277 doi 10 1037 0021 843X 113 1 39 ISSN 1939 1846 PMID 14992655 Peterson Donald R 2005 Twelve years of correspondence with Paul Meehl tough notes from a gentle genius Mahwah NJ Lawrence Erlbaum Associates doi 10 4324 9781315084510 ISBN 9780805854893 OCLC 57754047 Waller Niels G Yonce Leslie J Grove William M Faust David Lenzenweger Mark F eds 2006 A Paul Meehl reader essays on the practice of scientific psychology Mahwah NJ Lawrence Erlbaum Associates doi 10 4324 9780203759554 ISBN 978 0805852509 OCLC 67229353 References Edit a b Curriculum Vitae Paul E Meehl meehl umn edu Retrieved 2019 01 02 Haggbloom Steven J Warnick Renee Warnick Jason E Jones Vinessa K Yarbrough Gary L Russell Tenea M Borecky Chris M McGahhey Reagan Powell III John L Beavers Jamie Monte Emmanuelle 2002 The 100 most eminent psychologists of the 20th century Review of General Psychology 6 2 139 152 CiteSeerX 10 1 1 586 1913 doi 10 1037 1089 2680 6 2 139 S2CID 145668721 a b c d e f g h i j Meehl 1989a a b c d e f Goode Erica 19 February 2003 Paul Meehl 83 an Example For Leaders of Psychotherapy The New York Times Retrieved 4 January 2017 Meehl et al 1958 Gottfredson Linda S 1997 Mainstream science on intelligence an editorial with 52 signatories history and bibliography PDF Intelligence 24 1 13 23 doi 10 1016 S0160 2896 97 90011 8 Peterson 2005 MacCorquodale amp Meehl 1948 MacCorquodale amp Meehl 1948 pp 95 96 MacCorquodale amp Meehl 1948 p 100 Cronbach amp Meehl 1955 Meehl 1983 p 422 Meehl 2016 pp 357 361 Waller et al 2006 pp 119 120 155 159 419 431 439 Meehl 1978 Waller et al 2006 pp 5 7 Meehl 1967 a b Konnikova Maria May 1 2013 The perils of hindsight judgment Scientific American Blog Network Retrieved 2018 02 15 Johnson John A February 8 2014 Paul E Meehl smartest psychologist of the 20th century Psychology Today blogs Retrieved 2018 02 14 Hathaway amp Meehl 1951 a b Meehl 1956a a b Meehl amp Hathaway 1946 a b c Graham John R 2012 MMPI 2 assessing personality and psychopathology 5th ed Oxford New York Oxford University Press ISBN 9780195378924 OCLC 683593538 Hsu Louis M 1986 Implications of differences in elevations of K corrected and non K corrected MMPI T scores Journal of Consulting and Clinical Psychology 54 4 552 557 doi 10 1037 0022 006x 54 4 552 ISSN 1939 2117 PMID 3745611 McCrae Robert R Costa Paul T Dahlstrom W Grant Barefoot John C Siegler Ilene C Williams Redford B 1989 A caution on the use of the MMPI K correction in research on psychosomatic medicine Psychosomatic Medicine 51 1 58 65 CiteSeerX 10 1 1 551 6918 doi 10 1097 00006842 198901000 00006 ISSN 0033 3174 PMID 2928461 S2CID 985409 Ben Porath Yossef S 2012 Interpreting the MMPI 2 RF Minnesota University of Minnesota Press ISBN 9780816669660 OCLC 745304242 a b c Meehl 1954 a b Meehl 1986 Vrieze Scott I Grove William M 2009 Survey on the use of clinical and mechanical prediction methods in clinical psychology Professional Psychology Research and Practice 40 5 525 531 doi 10 1037 a0014693 ISSN 1939 1323 Grove William M Zald David H Lebow Boyd S Snitz Beth E Nelson Chad 2000 Clinical versus mechanical prediction a meta analysis Psychological Assessment 12 1 19 30 doi 10 1037 1040 3590 12 1 19 PMID 10752360 AEgisdottir Stefania White Michael J Spengler Paul M Maugherman Alan S Anderson Linda A Cook Robert S Nichols Cassandra N Lampropoulos Georgios K Walker Blain S Cohen Genna May 2006 The meta analysis of clinical judgment project fifty six years of accumulated research on clinical versus statistical prediction The Counseling Psychologist 34 3 341 382 doi 10 1177 0011000005285875 ISSN 0011 0000 S2CID 145150890 Meehl 1957 a b Dawes Faust amp Meehl 1989 a b Meehl 1962 Meehl 1972 Meehl 1989b a b Meehl 1990b Lilienfeld Scott O Waller Niels G 2006 A great pioneer of clinical science remembered Introduction to the special issue in honor of Paul E Meehl Journal of Clinical Psychology 62 6 1201 7 doi 10 1002 jclp 20253 ISSN 0021 9762 PMID 16041777 Lenzenweger Mark F 1993 Explorations in schizotypy and the psychometric high risk paradigm Progress in Experimental Personality amp Psychopathology Research 16 66 116 ISSN 1056 7151 PMID 8293084 Barrantes Vidal Neus Grant Phillip Kwapil Thomas R 2015 The role of schizotypy in the study of the etiology of schizophrenia spectrum disorders Schizophrenia Bulletin 41 Suppl 2 Suppl 2 S408 416 doi 10 1093 schbul sbu191 ISSN 1745 1701 PMC 4373635 PMID 25810055 The International Schizophrenia Consortium 2009 Common polygenic variation contributes to risk of schizophrenia and bipolar disorder Nature 460 7256 748 752 Bibcode 2009Natur 460 748P doi 10 1038 nature08185 ISSN 1476 4687 PMC 3912837 PMID 19571811 Sebat Jonathan Levy Deborah L McCarthy Shane E 2009 Rare structural variants in schizophrenia one disorder multiple mutations one mutation multiple disorders Trends in Genetics 25 12 528 535 doi 10 1016 j tig 2009 10 004 ISSN 0168 9525 PMC 3351381 PMID 19883952 Taxometrics using Coherent Cut Kinetics Paul E Meehl meehl umn edu Retrieved 2018 02 15 a b c Meehl 1995 Meehl 2004 a b c Waller amp Meehl 1998 Meehl amp Yonce 1994 Meehl amp Yonce 1996 Grove William M 2004 The MAXSLOPE taxometric procedure mathematical derivation parameter estimation consistency tests Psychological Reports 95 6 517 550 doi 10 2466 pr0 95 6 517 550 ISSN 0033 2941 PMID 15587219 Schmidt Norman B Kotov Roman Joiner Thomas E 2004 Taxometrics toward a new diagnostic scheme for psychopathology Washington DC American Psychological Association doi 10 1037 10810 000 ISBN 9781591471424 OCLC 54029315 Haslam Nick McGrath Melanie J Viechtbauer Wolfgang Kuppens Peter 2020 06 04 Dimensions over categories a meta analysis of taxometric research Psychological Medicine 50 9 1418 1432 doi 10 1017 S003329172000183X ISSN 1469 8978 PMID 32493520 S2CID 219316193 Edens John F Marcus David K Lilienfeld Scott O Poythress Norman G February 2006 Psychopathic not psychopath Taxometric evidence for the dimensional structure of psychopathy Journal of Abnormal Psychology 115 1 131 144 doi 10 1037 0021 843x 115 1 131 ISSN 1939 1846 PMID 16492104 S2CID 19223010 Marcus David K John Siji L Edens John F 2004 A taxometric analysis of psychopathic personality Journal of Abnormal Psychology 113 4 626 635 doi 10 1037 0021 843x 113 4 626 ISSN 1939 1846 PMID 15535794 Ruscio Ayelet Meron Ruscio John Keane Terence M 2002 The latent structure of posttraumatic stress disorder A taxometric investigation of reactions to extreme stress Journal of Abnormal Psychology 111 2 290 301 CiteSeerX 10 1 1 462 153 doi 10 1037 0021 843X 111 2 290 ISSN 1939 1846 PMID 12003450 Ruscio John Ruscio Ayelet Meron 2000 Informing the continuity controversy A taxometric analysis of depression Journal of Abnormal Psychology 109 3 473 487 CiteSeerX 10 1 1 718 9936 doi 10 1037 0021 843X 109 3 473 ISSN 1939 1846 PMID 11016117 Waller Niels G Ross Colin A November 1997 The prevalence and biometric structure of pathological dissociation in the general population Taxometric and behavior genetic findings Journal of Abnormal Psychology 106 4 499 510 doi 10 1037 0021 843x 106 4 499 ISSN 1939 1846 PMID 9358680 Lubke Gitta Tueller Stephen 2010 10 06 Latent class detection and class assignment a comparison of the MAXEIG taxometric procedure and factor mixture modeling approaches Structural Equation Modeling 17 4 605 628 doi 10 1080 10705511 2010 510050 ISSN 1070 5511 PMC 3955757 PMID 24648712 Menand Louis May 11 2015 Young Saul The New Yorker Retrieved October 18 2016 a b c d Meehl 1973a pp 225 302 External links Edit Wikiquote has quotations related to Paul E Meehl Paul E Meehl website including full list of publications and complete videos of Meehl teaching his course in Philosophical Psychology in 1989 at the Psychology Department of the University of Minnesota Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Paul E Meehl amp oldid 1132320154, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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