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Thematic apperception test

Thematic apperception test (TAT) is a projective psychological test developed during the 1930s by Henry A. Murray and Christiana D. Morgan at Harvard University. Proponents of the technique assert that subjects' responses, in the narratives they make up about ambiguous pictures of people, reveal their underlying motives, concerns, and the way they see the social world.[1] Historically, the test has been among the most widely researched, taught, and used of such techniques.[2]

Thematic apperception test
MeSHD013803

History

The TAT was developed by American psychologist Murray and lay psychoanalyst Morgan at the Harvard Clinic at Harvard University during the 1930s. Anecdotally, the idea for the TAT emerged from a question asked by one of Murray's undergraduate students, Cecilia Roberts.[3] She reported that when her son was ill, he spent the day making up stories about images in magazines and she asked Murray if pictures could be employed in a clinical setting to explore the underlying dynamics of personality.

Murray wanted to use a measure that would reveal information about the whole person but found the contemporary tests of his time lacking in this regard. Therefore, he created the TAT. The rationale behind the technique is that people tend to interpret ambiguous situations in accordance with their own past experiences and current motivations, which may be conscious or unconscious. Murray reasoned that by asking people to tell a story about a picture, their defenses to the examiner would be lowered as they would not realize the sensitive personal information they were divulging by creating the story.[4]

Murray and Morgan spent the 1930s selecting pictures from illustrative magazines and developing the test. After 3 versions of the test (Series A, Series B, and Series C), Morgan and Murray decided on the final set of pictures, Series D, which remains in use today.[3] Although she was given first authorship on the first published paper about the TAT in 1935, Morgan did not receive authorship credit on the final published instrument. Reportedly, her role in the creation of the TAT was primarily in the selection and editing of the images, but due to the primacy of the name on the original publication the majority of written inquiries about the TAT were addressed to her; since most of these letters included questions that she could not answer, she requested that her name be removed from future authorship.[5]

During the time Murray was developing the TAT he was also involved in Herman Melville studies. The therapeutic technique originally came to him from the "Doubloon chapter" in Moby Dick.[6] In this chapter, multiple characters inspect the same image (a Doubloon), but each character has vastly different interpretations of the imagery—Ahab sees symbols of himself in the coin, while the religiously devout Starbuck sees the Christian Trinity. Other characters provide interpretations of the image that give more insight into the characters themselves based on their interpretations of the imagery. Crew members, including Ahab, project their self perceptions onto the coin which was nailed to the mast. Murray, a lifelong Melvillist, often maintained that all of Melville's oeuvre was for him a TAT.

After World War II, the TAT was adopted more broadly by psychoanalysts and clinicians to evaluate emotionally disturbed patients. Later, in the 1970s, the Human Potential Movement encouraged psychologists to use the TAT to help their clients understand themselves better and stimulate personal growth.

Procedure

The TAT is popularly known as the picture interpretation technique because it uses a series of provocative yet ambiguous pictures about which the subject is asked to tell a story. The TAT manual provides the administration instructions used by Murray,[7] although these procedures are commonly altered. The subject is asked to tell as dramatic a story as they can for each picture presented, including the following:

  • what has led up to the event shown
  • what is happening at the moment
  • what the characters are feeling and thinking
  • what the outcome of the story was

If these elements are omitted, particularly for children or individuals of low cognitive abilities, the evaluator may ask the subject about them directly. Otherwise, the examiner is to avoid interjecting and should not answer questions about the content of the pictures. The examiner records stories verbatim for later interpretation.

The complete version of the test contains 32 picture cards. Some of the cards show male figures, some female, some both male and female figures, some of ambiguous gender, some adults, some children, and some show no human figures at all. One card is completely blank and is used to elicit both a scene and a story about the given scene from the storyteller. Although the cards were originally designed to be matched to the subject in terms of age and gender, any card may be used with any subject. Murray hypothesized that stories would yield better information about a client if the majority of cards administered featured a character similar in age and gender to the client.[7]

Although Murray recommended using 20 cards, most practitioners choose a set of between 8 and 12 selected cards, either using cards that they feel are generally useful, or that they believe will encourage the subject's expression of emotional conflicts relevant to their specific history and situation.[8] However, the examiner should aim to select a variety of cards in order to get a more global perspective of the storyteller and to avoid confirmation bias (i.e., finding only what you are looking for).

Many of the TAT drawings consist of sets of themes such as: success and failure, competition and jealousy, feeling about relationships, aggression, and sexuality.[9] These are usually depicted through picture cards.

Psychometric characteristics

Thematic apperception tests are meant to evoke an involuntary display of one's subconscious. There is no standardization for evaluating one's TAT responses; each evaluation is completely subjective because each response is unique. Validity and reliability are, consequently, the largest question marks of the TAT.[10] There are trends and patterns, which help identify psychological traits, but there are no distinct responses to indicate different conditions a patient may or may not have. Medical professionals most commonly use it in the early stages of patient treatment. The TAT helps professionals identify a broad range of issues that their patients may suffer from. Even when individual scoring procedures are examined, the absence of standardization or norms make it difficult to compare the results of validity and reliability research across studies. Specifically, even studies using the same scoring system often use different cards, or a different number of cards.[11] Standardization is also absent amongst clinicians, who often alter the instructions and procedures.[12] Murstein[13] explained that different cards may be more or less useful for specific clinical questions and purposes, making the use of one set of cards for all clients impractical.

Reliability

Internal consistency, a reliability estimate focusing on how highly test items correlate to each other, is often quite low for TAT scoring systems. Some authors have argued that internal consistency measures do not apply to the TAT. In contrast to traditional test items, which should all measure the same construct and be correlated to each other, each TAT card represents a different situation and should yield highly different response themes.[10] Lilienfeld and colleagues [11] countered this point by questioning the practice of compiling TAT responses to form scores. Both inter-rater reliability (the degree to which different raters score TAT responses the same) and test–retest reliability (to degree to which individuals receive the same scores over time) are highly variable across scoring techniques.[13] However, Murray asserted that TAT answers are highly related to internal states such that high test-retest reliability should not be expected.[11] Gruber and Kreuzpointner (2013) developed a new method for calculating internal consistency using categories instead of pictures. As they demonstrated in a mathematical proof, their method provides a better fit for the underlying construction principles of TAT, and also achieved adequate Cronbach's alpha scores up to .84 [14]

Validity

The validity of the TAT, or the degree to which it measures what it is supposed to measure,[15] is low.[11] Jenkins [16] has stated that “the phrase ‘validity of the TAT’ is meaningless, because validity is specific not to the pictures, but to the set of scores derived from the population, purpose, and circumstances involved in any given data collection." That is, the validity of the test would be ascertained by seeing how clinician's decisions were assisted based on the TAT. Evidence on this front suggests it is a weak guide at best. For example, one study indicated that clinicians classified individuals as clinical or non-clinical at close to chance levels (57% where 50% would be guessing) based on TAT data alone. The same study found that classifications were 88% correct based on MMPI data. Using TAT in addition to the MMPI reduced accuracy to 80%.[17]

Alternate considerations

Despite the conflicting information about the psychometric characteristics of the TAT, proponents have argued that the TAT should not be judged using traditional standards of reliability and validity. According to Holt,[18] “the TAT is a complex method of assessing people, which does not lend itself to the standard rules of thumb about test standards [. . .]” (p. 101). For example, it has been argued that the purpose of the TAT is to reveal a wide range of personality characteristics and complex, nuanced patterns, as opposed to traditional psychological tests that are designed to measure unitary and narrow constructs.[16] Hibbard and colleagues[19] examined several considerations about traditional views of reliability and validity as they apply to the TAT. First, they noted that traditional views of reliability may limit the validity of a measure (such as occurs with multi-faceted concepts in which characteristics are not necessarily related to each other, but are meaningful in combination). Further, Cronbach's alpha, a commonly used measure of internal consistency, is dependent on the number of items in scale. For the TAT, most scales use only a small number of cards (with each card treated like an item) so alphas would not be expected to be very high. Many clinicians also discount the importance of psychometrics, believing that generalizability of the findings to a given client's situation is more important than generalizing findings to the population.[16]

Scoring systems

When he created the TAT, Murray also developed a scoring system based on his need-press theory of personality. Murray's system involved coding every sentence given for the presence of 28 needs and 20 presses (environmental influences), which were then scored from 1 to 5, based on intensity, frequency, duration, and importance to the plot.[7] However, implementing this scoring system is time-consuming and was not widely used. Rather, examiners have traditionally relied on their clinical intuition to come to conclusions about storytellers.[20]

Although not widely used in the clinical setting, several formal scoring systems have been developed for analyzing TAT stories systematically and consistently. Three common methods that are currently used in research are the:

Defense Mechanisms Manual (DMM)[21]
This assesses three defense mechanisms: denial (least mature), projection (intermediate), and identification (most mature). A person's thoughts/feelings are projected in stories involved.
Social Cognition and Object Relations (SCOR)[22] scale
This assesses four different dimensions of object relations: Complexity of Representations of People, Affect-Tone of Relationship Paradigms, Capacity for Emotional Investment in Relationships and Moral Standards, and Understanding of Social Causality.
Personal Problem-Solving System—Revised (PPSS-R[23][24])
This assesses how people identify, think about and resolve problems through the scoring of thirteen different criteria. This scoring system is useful because theoretically, good problem-solving ability is an indicator of an individual’s mental health. Although the TAT is a projective personality technique that is based primarily on the psychoanalytic perspective, the PPSS-R scoring system is designed for clinicians and researchers working from a cognitive behavioral framework. The PPSS-R scoring system has been studied in a wide range of populations, including college students, community residents, jail inmates, university clinic clients, community mental health center clients, and psychiatric day treatment clients. Thus, the PPSS-R scoring system allows clinicians and researchers to assess for problem solving ability and social functioning in many types of people, without being hindered by social desirability effects.

Similar to other scoring systems, with the PPSS-R TAT cards are typically administered individually and examinees' responses are recorded verbatim. Unlike other scoring systems, the PPSS-R only uses six of the 31 TAT cards: 1, 2, 4, 7BM, 10, and 13MF. The PPSS-R provides information about four different areas related to problem solving ability: Story Design, Story Orientation, Story Solutions, and Story Resolution. These four areas are assessed by the 13 scoring criteria, 12 of which are rated on a 5-point scale that ranges from -1 to 3.

Each of these scoring categories attempts to measure the following information:

  • Story Design measures the examinee's ability to identify and formulate a problem situation.
  • Story Orientation assesses the examinee's level of personal control, emotional distress, confidence and motivation.
  • Story Solutions assesses how impulsive the examinee is. In addition to evaluating the types of problem solutions that are provided, the number of problem solutions that examinees provide for each of the TAT cards is summed.
  • Story Resolution provides information on the examinee's ability to formulate problem solutions that maximize both short and long-term goals.

Examiners are encouraged to explore information obtained from the TAT stories as hypotheses for testing rather than concrete facts.

General Interpretation

Interpretation of the responses will vary depending on the examiner and what type of scoring was used. It is common that the standard scoring systems are used more in research settings than clinical settings. Individuals can select certain scoring systems if they have the goal to evaluate a specific variable such as motivation, defense mechanisms, achievement, problem-solving skills, etc. If a clinician selects not to use a scoring system, there are some general guidelines that can be utilized. For example, the stories created by the individuals in response to the TAT cards are a combination of three things: the card stimulus, the testing environment, and the personality of the examinee. For each card, the individual must subjectively interpret the pictures which involves the individual taking their own experiences and feelings to create a story. Therefore, it is beneficial to look at the common themes in the stories’ content and structure to help make conclusions.[12] Murray states that in the stories built by the person being evaluated there is a hero with whom the subject identifies and to whom he attributes his own motivations. On the other hand, there are the characters that interact with this hero, and represent the real social and family environment of the person.[25]

With interpretation of the responses, it is important for the clinician to consider some cautions to verify the information is as accurate as possible. First, the examiner should always be conservative when interpreting responses. It is important to always err on the side of caution instead of making bold conclusions. The examiner should also consider all the data when using the TAT in a testing or evaluative setting. One response should not be given more importance over the other responses. Additionally, the examiner should take the individual's developmental status and cultural background into consideration when examining responses. All of these cautions should be considered when an examiner is using the TAT [12]

Criticisms

Like other projective techniques, the TAT has been criticized on the basis of poor psychometric properties (see above).[11] Criticisms include that the TAT is unscientific because it cannot be proved to be valid (that it actually measures what it claims to measure), or reliable (that it gives consistent results over time). As stories about the cards are a reflection of both the conscious and unconscious motives of the storyteller, it is difficult to disprove the conclusions of the examiner and to find appropriate behavioral measures that would represent the personality traits under examination. Characteristics of the TAT that make conclusions based on the stories yielded from TAT cards hard to be disproved have been termed "immunizing tactics."[11] These characteristics include the Walter Mitty effect (i.e., the assertion that individuals will exhibit high levels of a given trait in TAT stories that do not match their overt behavior because TAT responses may represent how a person wishes they were, not how they truly are) and the inhibition effect (i.e., the assertion that individuals will not exhibit high levels of a trait in TAT responses because they are repressing that trait). In addition, as the present needs of the storyteller change over time, it is not expected that later stories will produce the same results.[citation needed]

The lack of standardization of the cards given and scoring systems applied is problematic because it makes comparing research on the TAT very difficult. With a dearth of sound evidence and normative samples, it is tough to determine how much useful information can be gathered in this manner.

Some critics of the TAT cards have observed that the characters and environments are dated, even 'old-fashioned', creating a 'cultural or psycho-social distance' between the patients and the stimuli that makes identifying with them less likely.[26] In specific situations it is even hard to identify with people of opposite gender.[27] Also, in researching the responses of subjects given photographs versus the TAT, researchers found that the TAT cards evoked more 'deviant' stories (i.e., more negative) than photographs, leading researchers to conclude that the difference was due to the differences in the characteristics of the images used as stimuli.[citation needed]

In a 2005 dissertation,[28] Matthew Narron, Psy.D. attempted to address these issues by reproducing a Leopold Bellak[29] 10 card set photographically and performing an outcome study. The results concluded that the old TAT elicited answers that included many more specific time references than the new TAT.

Contemporary applications

Despite criticisms, the TAT continues to be used as a tool for research into areas of psychology such as dreams, fantasies, mate selection and what motivates people to choose their occupation. Sometimes it is used in a psychiatric or psychological context to assess personality disorders, thought disorders, in forensic examinations to evaluate crime suspects, or to screen candidates for high-stress occupations. It is also commonly used in routine psychological evaluations, typically without a formal scoring system, as a way to explore emotional conflicts and object relations.[30]

TAT is widely used in France and Argentina using a psychodynamic approach.[citation needed]

David McClelland and Ruth Jacobs conducted a 12-year longitudinal study of leadership using TAT and found no gender differences in motivational predictors of attained management level. The content analysis, however, "revealed 2 distinct styles of power-related themes that distinguished the successful men from the successful women. The successful male managers were more likely to use reactive power [that is, aggressive[31]] themes while the successful female managers were more likely to use resourceful [that is, nurturing[31]] power themes. Differences between the sexes in the power themes were less pronounced among the managers who had remained in lower levels of management."[32]

Popular culture

Due to the test's earlier popularity within psychology, the TAT has appeared in a wide variety of media. For example, the Thomas Harris novel Red Dragon (1981) includes a scene where the imprisoned psychiatrist and serial killer Dr. Hannibal Lecter mocks a previous attempt to administer the test to him. Michael Crichton included the TAT in the battery of tests given to the disturbed main character Harry Benson in his novel The Terminal Man (1972). The test is also given to the main characters in two widely differing tales about the human mind: A Clockwork Orange (1962) and Daniel Keyes's Flowers for Algernon (1958–1966). Italian poet Edoardo Sanguineti wrote a collection of poetry called T.A.T (1966–1968) that refers to the Test.

See also

References

  1. ^ Schacter, Daniel, Daniel Gilbert, and Daniel Wegner. Psychology. 2nd. New York: Worth Publishers, 2009. 18. Print.
  2. ^ Definition of Thematic Apperception Test at TheFreeDictionary.com
  3. ^ a b Morgan, W. (2002). "Origin and History of the Earliest Thematic Apperception test". Journal of Personality Assessment. 79 (3): 422–445. doi:10.1207/s15327752jpa7903_03. PMID 12511014. S2CID 45859195. ; see Weber's "Christiana Morgan (1897–1967)," in Michel Weber and William Desmond, Jr. (eds.), Handbook of Whiteheadian Process Thought, Frankfurt / Lancaster, Ontos Verlag, 2008, v. II, pp. 465-468.
  4. ^ Murray, H. (1973). The Analysis of Fantasy. Huntington, NY: Robert E. Krieger Publishing Company..
  5. ^ Anderson, J. W. (1999). Henry A. Murray and the Creation of the Thematic Apperception Test. In L. Gieser & M. I. Stein (Eds.), Evocative Images: The Thematic Apperception Test, Washington, DC: American Psychological Association.
  6. ^ Vincent, Howard P. (1980). The Trying-out of Moby-Dick. Kent, Ohio: Kent State University Press. p. Introduction. ISBN 0-87338-247-1.
  7. ^ a b c Murray, H. A. (1943). Thematic Apperception Test manual. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press.
  8. ^ Cramer, P. (2004). Storytelling, narrative, and the Thematic Apperception Test. New York: Guilford Press..
  9. ^ Schacter, D. L., Gilbert, D. T. and Wegner, D. M. Psychology (loose leaf). Worth Pub, 2011. Print.
  10. ^ a b Cramer, P. (1999). Future directions for the Thematic Apperception Test. Journal of Personality Assessment, 72, 74-92.
  11. ^ a b c d e f Lilienfeld, S. O., Wood, J. M., & Garb, H. N. (2000). The scientific status of projective techniques. Psychological Science in the Public Interest, 1(2), 27-66.
  12. ^ a b c Aronow, E., Weiss, K. A., & Rezinkoff, M. (2001). A Practical Guide to the Thematic Apperception Test. Philadelphia: Brunner Routledge.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: uses authors parameter (link)
  13. ^ a b Murstein, B. I. (1963). Theory and Research in Projective Techniques (Emphasizing the TAT). New York, NY: John Wiley & Sons
  14. ^ Gruber, N. & Kreuzpointner, L. (2013). Measuring the reliability of picture story exercises like the TAT. PLoS One, 8(11), e79450. doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0079450
  15. ^ "32: Validity: Measuring What We Intend to Measure – AllPsych".
  16. ^ a b c Jenkins, S. R. (2008). Introduction: Why "score" TATs, anyway?. In S. R. Jenkins & (Eds.), A handbook of clinical scoring systems for the Thematic Apperception Test. New York, NY: Taylor and Francis Group.
  17. ^ Wildman, R.W., & Wildman, R.W. II. (1975). An investigation into the comparative validity of several diagnostic tests and test batteries. Journal of Clinical Psychology, 31, 455-458
  18. ^ Holt, R. R. (1999). Empiricism and the Thematic Apperception Test: Validity is the payoff. In L. Gieser & M. I. Stein (Eds.), Evocative Images: The Thematic Apperception Test, Washington, DC: American Psychological Association.
  19. ^ Hibbard, S., Mitchell, D., & Porcerelli, J. (2001). Internal consistency of the object relations and social cognition scales for the thematic apperception test. Journal of Personality Assessment, 77(3), 408-419.
  20. ^ Vane, J (1981). "The Thematic Apperception test: A Review". Clinical Psychology Review. 1 (3): 319–336. doi:10.1016/0272-7358(81)90009-x.
  21. ^ Cramer, P (1991). The Development of Defense Mechanisms: Theory, Research, and Assessment. New York: Springer-Verlag.
  22. ^ Westen, Drew. Clinical Assessment of Object Relations Using the TAT. Journal of Personality Assessment, Volume 56, Issue 1 February 1991, pages 56 - 74.
  23. ^ Ronan, G. F. & Gibbs, M. S. (2008). Scoring manual for personal problem-solving system –revised. In S. R. Jenkins (Ed.), A handbook of clinical scoring systems for thematic apperceptive techniques: Series in personality and clinical psychology (pp. 209-227). New York, NY: Taylor & Francis Group, LLC.
  24. ^ Ronan, G. F., Gibbs, M. S., Dreer, L. E., & Lombardo, J. A. (2008). Personal problem-solving system – revised. In S. R. Jenkins (Ed.), A handbook of clinical scoring systems for thematic apperceptive techniques: Series in personality and clinical psychology (pp. 181- 207). New York, NY: Taylor & Francis Group, LLC.
  25. ^ Heredia, Liliana (October 2019). "Test TAT: ¿Qué revelan las 31 láminas sobre la personalidad?". Psicólogos Córdoba.
  26. ^ Holmstrom, R.W., Silber, D.E., & Karp, S.A. (1990), "Development of the Apperceptive Personality Test", Journal of Personality Assessment, 54 (1 & 2), 252-264.
  27. ^ Gruber, N. (2017), "Is the achievement motive gender biased? The validity of TAT/PSE in women and men", Frontiers in Psychology, 8, 181.
  28. ^ Narron, M. C. (2005), Updating the TAT: A Photographic Revision of the Thematic Apperception Test, Dissertations Abstract International, DAI-B 66/01, p. 568, July 2005
  29. ^ Saxon, Wolfgang (30 March 2000). "Leopold Bellak, 83; Expert on Psychological Tests". The New York Times. Retrieved 25 May 2010.
  30. ^ Cramer, 2004
  31. ^ a b Linda Gong Austin (2001). What's Holding You Back?: Eight Critical Choices For Women's Success. Basic Books. p. 158. ISBN 9780465032631.
  32. ^ Jacobs, R. L., & McClelland, D. C. (1994), "Moving up the corporate ladder: A longitudinal study of the leadership motive pattern and managerial success in women and men", Consulting Psychology Journal: Practice and Research, 46(1), 32-41. doi:10.1037/1061-4087.46.1.32

External links

  • Book review of Storytelling, Narrative, and the Thematic Apperception Test
  • Research into the origins of imagery used in the TAT
  • Information about the Thematic Apperception Test from Thomson Gale

thematic, apperception, test, projective, psychological, test, developed, during, 1930s, henry, murray, christiana, morgan, harvard, university, proponents, technique, assert, that, subjects, responses, narratives, they, make, about, ambiguous, pictures, peopl. Thematic apperception test TAT is a projective psychological test developed during the 1930s by Henry A Murray and Christiana D Morgan at Harvard University Proponents of the technique assert that subjects responses in the narratives they make up about ambiguous pictures of people reveal their underlying motives concerns and the way they see the social world 1 Historically the test has been among the most widely researched taught and used of such techniques 2 Thematic apperception testMeSHD013803 Contents 1 History 2 Procedure 3 Psychometric characteristics 3 1 Reliability 3 2 Validity 3 3 Alternate considerations 4 Scoring systems 5 General Interpretation 6 Criticisms 7 Contemporary applications 8 Popular culture 9 See also 10 References 11 External linksHistory EditThe TAT was developed by American psychologist Murray and lay psychoanalyst Morgan at the Harvard Clinic at Harvard University during the 1930s Anecdotally the idea for the TAT emerged from a question asked by one of Murray s undergraduate students Cecilia Roberts 3 She reported that when her son was ill he spent the day making up stories about images in magazines and she asked Murray if pictures could be employed in a clinical setting to explore the underlying dynamics of personality Murray wanted to use a measure that would reveal information about the whole person but found the contemporary tests of his time lacking in this regard Therefore he created the TAT The rationale behind the technique is that people tend to interpret ambiguous situations in accordance with their own past experiences and current motivations which may be conscious or unconscious Murray reasoned that by asking people to tell a story about a picture their defenses to the examiner would be lowered as they would not realize the sensitive personal information they were divulging by creating the story 4 Murray and Morgan spent the 1930s selecting pictures from illustrative magazines and developing the test After 3 versions of the test Series A Series B and Series C Morgan and Murray decided on the final set of pictures Series D which remains in use today 3 Although she was given first authorship on the first published paper about the TAT in 1935 Morgan did not receive authorship credit on the final published instrument Reportedly her role in the creation of the TAT was primarily in the selection and editing of the images but due to the primacy of the name on the original publication the majority of written inquiries about the TAT were addressed to her since most of these letters included questions that she could not answer she requested that her name be removed from future authorship 5 During the time Murray was developing the TAT he was also involved in Herman Melville studies The therapeutic technique originally came to him from the Doubloon chapter in Moby Dick 6 In this chapter multiple characters inspect the same image a Doubloon but each character has vastly different interpretations of the imagery Ahab sees symbols of himself in the coin while the religiously devout Starbuck sees the Christian Trinity Other characters provide interpretations of the image that give more insight into the characters themselves based on their interpretations of the imagery Crew members including Ahab project their self perceptions onto the coin which was nailed to the mast Murray a lifelong Melvillist often maintained that all of Melville s oeuvre was for him a TAT After World War II the TAT was adopted more broadly by psychoanalysts and clinicians to evaluate emotionally disturbed patients Later in the 1970s the Human Potential Movement encouraged psychologists to use the TAT to help their clients understand themselves better and stimulate personal growth Procedure EditThe TAT is popularly known as the picture interpretation technique because it uses a series of provocative yet ambiguous pictures about which the subject is asked to tell a story The TAT manual provides the administration instructions used by Murray 7 although these procedures are commonly altered The subject is asked to tell as dramatic a story as they can for each picture presented including the following what has led up to the event shown what is happening at the moment what the characters are feeling and thinking what the outcome of the story wasIf these elements are omitted particularly for children or individuals of low cognitive abilities the evaluator may ask the subject about them directly Otherwise the examiner is to avoid interjecting and should not answer questions about the content of the pictures The examiner records stories verbatim for later interpretation The complete version of the test contains 32 picture cards Some of the cards show male figures some female some both male and female figures some of ambiguous gender some adults some children and some show no human figures at all One card is completely blank and is used to elicit both a scene and a story about the given scene from the storyteller Although the cards were originally designed to be matched to the subject in terms of age and gender any card may be used with any subject Murray hypothesized that stories would yield better information about a client if the majority of cards administered featured a character similar in age and gender to the client 7 Although Murray recommended using 20 cards most practitioners choose a set of between 8 and 12 selected cards either using cards that they feel are generally useful or that they believe will encourage the subject s expression of emotional conflicts relevant to their specific history and situation 8 However the examiner should aim to select a variety of cards in order to get a more global perspective of the storyteller and to avoid confirmation bias i e finding only what you are looking for Many of the TAT drawings consist of sets of themes such as success and failure competition and jealousy feeling about relationships aggression and sexuality 9 These are usually depicted through picture cards Psychometric characteristics EditThematic apperception tests are meant to evoke an involuntary display of one s subconscious There is no standardization for evaluating one s TAT responses each evaluation is completely subjective because each response is unique Validity and reliability are consequently the largest question marks of the TAT 10 There are trends and patterns which help identify psychological traits but there are no distinct responses to indicate different conditions a patient may or may not have Medical professionals most commonly use it in the early stages of patient treatment The TAT helps professionals identify a broad range of issues that their patients may suffer from Even when individual scoring procedures are examined the absence of standardization or norms make it difficult to compare the results of validity and reliability research across studies Specifically even studies using the same scoring system often use different cards or a different number of cards 11 Standardization is also absent amongst clinicians who often alter the instructions and procedures 12 Murstein 13 explained that different cards may be more or less useful for specific clinical questions and purposes making the use of one set of cards for all clients impractical Reliability Edit Internal consistency a reliability estimate focusing on how highly test items correlate to each other is often quite low for TAT scoring systems Some authors have argued that internal consistency measures do not apply to the TAT In contrast to traditional test items which should all measure the same construct and be correlated to each other each TAT card represents a different situation and should yield highly different response themes 10 Lilienfeld and colleagues 11 countered this point by questioning the practice of compiling TAT responses to form scores Both inter rater reliability the degree to which different raters score TAT responses the same and test retest reliability to degree to which individuals receive the same scores over time are highly variable across scoring techniques 13 However Murray asserted that TAT answers are highly related to internal states such that high test retest reliability should not be expected 11 Gruber and Kreuzpointner 2013 developed a new method for calculating internal consistency using categories instead of pictures As they demonstrated in a mathematical proof their method provides a better fit for the underlying construction principles of TAT and also achieved adequate Cronbach s alpha scores up to 84 14 Validity Edit The validity of the TAT or the degree to which it measures what it is supposed to measure 15 is low 11 Jenkins 16 has stated that the phrase validity of the TAT is meaningless because validity is specific not to the pictures but to the set of scores derived from the population purpose and circumstances involved in any given data collection That is the validity of the test would be ascertained by seeing how clinician s decisions were assisted based on the TAT Evidence on this front suggests it is a weak guide at best For example one study indicated that clinicians classified individuals as clinical or non clinical at close to chance levels 57 where 50 would be guessing based on TAT data alone The same study found that classifications were 88 correct based on MMPI data Using TAT in addition to the MMPI reduced accuracy to 80 17 Alternate considerations Edit Despite the conflicting information about the psychometric characteristics of the TAT proponents have argued that the TAT should not be judged using traditional standards of reliability and validity According to Holt 18 the TAT is a complex method of assessing people which does not lend itself to the standard rules of thumb about test standards p 101 For example it has been argued that the purpose of the TAT is to reveal a wide range of personality characteristics and complex nuanced patterns as opposed to traditional psychological tests that are designed to measure unitary and narrow constructs 16 Hibbard and colleagues 19 examined several considerations about traditional views of reliability and validity as they apply to the TAT First they noted that traditional views of reliability may limit the validity of a measure such as occurs with multi faceted concepts in which characteristics are not necessarily related to each other but are meaningful in combination Further Cronbach s alpha a commonly used measure of internal consistency is dependent on the number of items in scale For the TAT most scales use only a small number of cards with each card treated like an item so alphas would not be expected to be very high Many clinicians also discount the importance of psychometrics believing that generalizability of the findings to a given client s situation is more important than generalizing findings to the population 16 Scoring systems EditWhen he created the TAT Murray also developed a scoring system based on his need press theory of personality Murray s system involved coding every sentence given for the presence of 28 needs and 20 presses environmental influences which were then scored from 1 to 5 based on intensity frequency duration and importance to the plot 7 However implementing this scoring system is time consuming and was not widely used Rather examiners have traditionally relied on their clinical intuition to come to conclusions about storytellers 20 Although not widely used in the clinical setting several formal scoring systems have been developed for analyzing TAT stories systematically and consistently Three common methods that are currently used in research are the Defense Mechanisms Manual DMM 21 This assesses three defense mechanisms denial least mature projection intermediate and identification most mature A person s thoughts feelings are projected in stories involved Social Cognition and Object Relations SCOR 22 scale This assesses four different dimensions of object relations Complexity of Representations of People Affect Tone of Relationship Paradigms Capacity for Emotional Investment in Relationships and Moral Standards and Understanding of Social Causality Personal Problem Solving System Revised PPSS R 23 24 This assesses how people identify think about and resolve problems through the scoring of thirteen different criteria This scoring system is useful because theoretically good problem solving ability is an indicator of an individual s mental health Although the TAT is a projective personality technique that is based primarily on the psychoanalytic perspective the PPSS R scoring system is designed for clinicians and researchers working from a cognitive behavioral framework The PPSS R scoring system has been studied in a wide range of populations including college students community residents jail inmates university clinic clients community mental health center clients and psychiatric day treatment clients Thus the PPSS R scoring system allows clinicians and researchers to assess for problem solving ability and social functioning in many types of people without being hindered by social desirability effects Similar to other scoring systems with the PPSS R TAT cards are typically administered individually and examinees responses are recorded verbatim Unlike other scoring systems the PPSS R only uses six of the 31 TAT cards 1 2 4 7BM 10 and 13MF The PPSS R provides information about four different areas related to problem solving ability Story Design Story Orientation Story Solutions and Story Resolution These four areas are assessed by the 13 scoring criteria 12 of which are rated on a 5 point scale that ranges from 1 to 3 Each of these scoring categories attempts to measure the following information Story Design measures the examinee s ability to identify and formulate a problem situation Story Orientation assesses the examinee s level of personal control emotional distress confidence and motivation Story Solutions assesses how impulsive the examinee is In addition to evaluating the types of problem solutions that are provided the number of problem solutions that examinees provide for each of the TAT cards is summed Story Resolution provides information on the examinee s ability to formulate problem solutions that maximize both short and long term goals Examiners are encouraged to explore information obtained from the TAT stories as hypotheses for testing rather than concrete facts General Interpretation EditInterpretation of the responses will vary depending on the examiner and what type of scoring was used It is common that the standard scoring systems are used more in research settings than clinical settings Individuals can select certain scoring systems if they have the goal to evaluate a specific variable such as motivation defense mechanisms achievement problem solving skills etc If a clinician selects not to use a scoring system there are some general guidelines that can be utilized For example the stories created by the individuals in response to the TAT cards are a combination of three things the card stimulus the testing environment and the personality of the examinee For each card the individual must subjectively interpret the pictures which involves the individual taking their own experiences and feelings to create a story Therefore it is beneficial to look at the common themes in the stories content and structure to help make conclusions 12 Murray states that in the stories built by the person being evaluated there is a hero with whom the subject identifies and to whom he attributes his own motivations On the other hand there are the characters that interact with this hero and represent the real social and family environment of the person 25 With interpretation of the responses it is important for the clinician to consider some cautions to verify the information is as accurate as possible First the examiner should always be conservative when interpreting responses It is important to always err on the side of caution instead of making bold conclusions The examiner should also consider all the data when using the TAT in a testing or evaluative setting One response should not be given more importance over the other responses Additionally the examiner should take the individual s developmental status and cultural background into consideration when examining responses All of these cautions should be considered when an examiner is using the TAT 12 Criticisms EditLike other projective techniques the TAT has been criticized on the basis of poor psychometric properties see above 11 Criticisms include that the TAT is unscientific because it cannot be proved to be valid that it actually measures what it claims to measure or reliable that it gives consistent results over time As stories about the cards are a reflection of both the conscious and unconscious motives of the storyteller it is difficult to disprove the conclusions of the examiner and to find appropriate behavioral measures that would represent the personality traits under examination Characteristics of the TAT that make conclusions based on the stories yielded from TAT cards hard to be disproved have been termed immunizing tactics 11 These characteristics include the Walter Mitty effect i e the assertion that individuals will exhibit high levels of a given trait in TAT stories that do not match their overt behavior because TAT responses may represent how a person wishes they were not how they truly are and the inhibition effect i e the assertion that individuals will not exhibit high levels of a trait in TAT responses because they are repressing that trait In addition as the present needs of the storyteller change over time it is not expected that later stories will produce the same results citation needed The lack of standardization of the cards given and scoring systems applied is problematic because it makes comparing research on the TAT very difficult With a dearth of sound evidence and normative samples it is tough to determine how much useful information can be gathered in this manner Some critics of the TAT cards have observed that the characters and environments are dated even old fashioned creating a cultural or psycho social distance between the patients and the stimuli that makes identifying with them less likely 26 In specific situations it is even hard to identify with people of opposite gender 27 Also in researching the responses of subjects given photographs versus the TAT researchers found that the TAT cards evoked more deviant stories i e more negative than photographs leading researchers to conclude that the difference was due to the differences in the characteristics of the images used as stimuli citation needed In a 2005 dissertation 28 Matthew Narron Psy D attempted to address these issues by reproducing a Leopold Bellak 29 10 card set photographically and performing an outcome study The results concluded that the old TAT elicited answers that included many more specific time references than the new TAT Contemporary applications EditDespite criticisms the TAT continues to be used as a tool for research into areas of psychology such as dreams fantasies mate selection and what motivates people to choose their occupation Sometimes it is used in a psychiatric or psychological context to assess personality disorders thought disorders in forensic examinations to evaluate crime suspects or to screen candidates for high stress occupations It is also commonly used in routine psychological evaluations typically without a formal scoring system as a way to explore emotional conflicts and object relations 30 TAT is widely used in France and Argentina using a psychodynamic approach citation needed David McClelland and Ruth Jacobs conducted a 12 year longitudinal study of leadership using TAT and found no gender differences in motivational predictors of attained management level The content analysis however revealed 2 distinct styles of power related themes that distinguished the successful men from the successful women The successful male managers were more likely to use reactive power that is aggressive 31 themes while the successful female managers were more likely to use resourceful that is nurturing 31 power themes Differences between the sexes in the power themes were less pronounced among the managers who had remained in lower levels of management 32 Popular culture EditDue to the test s earlier popularity within psychology the TAT has appeared in a wide variety of media For example the Thomas Harris novel Red Dragon 1981 includes a scene where the imprisoned psychiatrist and serial killer Dr Hannibal Lecter mocks a previous attempt to administer the test to him Michael Crichton included the TAT in the battery of tests given to the disturbed main character Harry Benson in his novel The Terminal Man 1972 The test is also given to the main characters in two widely differing tales about the human mind A Clockwork Orange 1962 and Daniel Keyes s Flowers for Algernon 1958 1966 Italian poet Edoardo Sanguineti wrote a collection of poetry called T A T 1966 1968 that refers to the Test See also Edit Psychology portalBlacky pictures test Psychological testingReferences Edit Schacter Daniel Daniel Gilbert and Daniel Wegner Psychology 2nd New York Worth Publishers 2009 18 Print Definition of Thematic Apperception Test at TheFreeDictionary com a b Morgan W 2002 Origin and History of the Earliest Thematic Apperception test Journal of Personality Assessment 79 3 422 445 doi 10 1207 s15327752jpa7903 03 PMID 12511014 S2CID 45859195 see Weber s Christiana Morgan 1897 1967 in Michel Weber and William Desmond Jr eds Handbook of Whiteheadian Process Thought Frankfurt Lancaster Ontos Verlag 2008 v II pp 465 468 Murray H 1973 The Analysis of Fantasy Huntington NY Robert E Krieger Publishing Company Anderson J W 1999 Henry A Murray and the Creation of the Thematic Apperception Test In L Gieser amp M I Stein Eds Evocative Images The Thematic Apperception Test Washington DC American Psychological Association Vincent Howard P 1980 The Trying out of Moby Dick Kent Ohio Kent State University Press p Introduction ISBN 0 87338 247 1 a b c Murray H A 1943 Thematic Apperception Test manual Cambridge MA Harvard University Press Cramer P 2004 Storytelling narrative and the Thematic Apperception Test New York Guilford Press Schacter D L Gilbert D T and Wegner D M Psychology loose leaf Worth Pub 2011 Print a b Cramer P 1999 Future directions for the Thematic Apperception Test Journal of Personality Assessment 72 74 92 a b c d e f Lilienfeld S O Wood J M amp Garb H N 2000 The scientific status of projective techniques Psychological Science in the Public Interest 1 2 27 66 a b c Aronow E Weiss K A amp Rezinkoff M 2001 A Practical Guide to the Thematic Apperception Test Philadelphia Brunner Routledge a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint uses authors parameter link a b Murstein B I 1963 Theory and Research in Projective Techniques Emphasizing the TAT New York NY John Wiley amp Sons Gruber N amp Kreuzpointner L 2013 Measuring the reliability of picture story exercises like the TAT PLoS One 8 11 e79450 doi 10 1371 journal pone 0079450 32 Validity Measuring What We Intend to Measure AllPsych a b c Jenkins S R 2008 Introduction Why score TATs anyway In S R Jenkins amp Eds A handbook of clinical scoring systems for the Thematic Apperception Test New York NY Taylor and Francis Group Wildman R W amp Wildman R W II 1975 An investigation into the comparative validity of several diagnostic tests and test batteries Journal of Clinical Psychology 31 455 458 Holt R R 1999 Empiricism and the Thematic Apperception Test Validity is the payoff In L Gieser amp M I Stein Eds Evocative Images The Thematic Apperception Test Washington DC American Psychological Association Hibbard S Mitchell D amp Porcerelli J 2001 Internal consistency of the object relations and social cognition scales for the thematic apperception test Journal of Personality Assessment 77 3 408 419 Vane J 1981 The Thematic Apperception test A Review Clinical Psychology Review 1 3 319 336 doi 10 1016 0272 7358 81 90009 x Cramer P 1991 The Development of Defense Mechanisms Theory Research and Assessment New York Springer Verlag Westen Drew Clinical Assessment of Object Relations Using the TAT Journal of Personality Assessment Volume 56 Issue 1 February 1991 pages 56 74 Ronan G F amp Gibbs M S 2008 Scoring manual for personal problem solving system revised In S R Jenkins Ed A handbook of clinical scoring systems for thematic apperceptive techniques Series in personality and clinical psychology pp 209 227 New York NY Taylor amp Francis Group LLC Ronan G F Gibbs M S Dreer L E amp Lombardo J A 2008 Personal problem solving system revised In S R Jenkins Ed A handbook of clinical scoring systems for thematic apperceptive techniques Series in personality and clinical psychology pp 181 207 New York NY Taylor amp Francis Group LLC Heredia Liliana October 2019 Test TAT Que revelan las 31 laminas sobre la personalidad Psicologos Cordoba Holmstrom R W Silber D E amp Karp S A 1990 Development of the Apperceptive Personality Test Journal of Personality Assessment 54 1 amp 2 252 264 Gruber N 2017 Is the achievement motive gender biased The validity of TAT PSE in women and men Frontiers in Psychology 8 181 Narron M C 2005 Updating the TAT A Photographic Revision of the Thematic Apperception Test Dissertations Abstract International DAI B 66 01 p 568 July 2005 Saxon Wolfgang 30 March 2000 Leopold Bellak 83 Expert on Psychological Tests The New York Times Retrieved 25 May 2010 Cramer 2004 a b Linda Gong Austin 2001 What s Holding You Back Eight Critical Choices For Women s Success Basic Books p 158 ISBN 9780465032631 Jacobs R L amp McClelland D C 1994 Moving up the corporate ladder A longitudinal study of the leadership motive pattern and managerial success in women and men Consulting Psychology Journal Practice and Research 46 1 32 41 doi 10 1037 1061 4087 46 1 32External links EditBook review of Storytelling Narrative and the Thematic Apperception Test Research into the origins of imagery used in the TAT Information about the Thematic Apperception Test from Thomson Gale Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Thematic apperception test amp oldid 1107286888, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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