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This book serves as an up-to-date Rorschach primer and elaborates
on the various applications of Rorschach assessment for adolescents
with respect to differential diagnosis, forensic consultation, and
therapeutic assessment. It opens with three chapters that provide
readers with a basic overview and introduction to the topics
integrated throughout the text. The first reviews the development
and foundations of the Rorschach Inkblot Method; the second
discusses key issues in the assessment of adolescents, with
particular attention to differentiating patterns of psychopathology
from normal developmental variations; and the third presents
general considerations in using performance-based assessment
instruments in the assessment of personality functioning in
adolescence. Later chapters explore the current status of the
Rorschach Inkblot Method with respect to theoretical formulations,
research findings, and practice guidelines. The final chapter draws
on information in the preceding chapters to present a model for
Rorschach assessment of adolescents. This model is designed to
facilitate accurate and useful formulations of personality
functioning that contribute substantially to advancing responsible
adolescent development.
Psychodiagnosis in Schizophrenia is a reprint of a classic volume
in assessment psychology that first appeared in 1966. The book
concerns the use of psychodiagnostic techniques in the differential
diagnosis of schizophrenia. The author first presents a conceptual
analysis of schizophrenic disturbance in terms of impaired ego
functioning and extrapolates from schizophrenic ego impairments to
psychodiagnostic indices that have been demonstrated to assess
them. In particular, Weiner refers to the Wechsler Adult
Intelligence Scale, the Rorschach Inkblot Method, and the
Draw-A-Person test. Clinical and research data delineating the
nature of psychological deficits in schizophrenia are reviewed, and
practical guidelines for the clinical assessment of these deficits
are presented. The author next considers several differential
diagnostic possibilities frequently considered in the evaluation of
schizophrenic persons, with separate chapters devoted to the many
forms of schizophrenia, such as: acute, chronic, paranoid,
nonparanoid, incipient, remitting, borderline and pseudoneurotic.
There are also chapters that focus on schizoaffective disorder and
adolescent schizophrenia. The conceptual and empirical
contributions to these distinctions are reviewed; accordingly, the
differentiating characteristics of these subcategories are related
to parameters of psychodiagnostic test performance. In additon, the
process of differential psychodiagnosis in schizophrenia is
illustrated by detailed case studies. In an extended new preface,
the author comments on current perspectives and contemporary
literature related to the individual chapters of the text.
Psychodiagnosis in Schizophrenia is a reprint of a classic volume
in assessment psychology that first appeared in 1966. The book
concerns the use of psychodiagnostic techniques in the differential
diagnosis of schizophrenia. The author first presents a conceptual
analysis of schizophrenic disturbance in terms of impaired ego
functioning and extrapolates from schizophrenic ego impairments to
psychodiagnostic indices that have been demonstrated to assess
them. In particular, Weiner refers to the Wechsler Adult
Intelligence Scale, the Rorschach Inkblot Method, and the
Draw-A-Person test. Clinical and research data delineating the
nature of psychological deficits in schizophrenia are reviewed, and
practical guidelines for the clinical assessment of these deficits
are presented.
The author next considers several differential diagnostic
possibilities frequently considered in the evaluation of
schizophrenic persons, with separate chapters devoted to the many
forms of schizophrenia, such as: acute, chronic, paranoid,
nonparanoid, incipient, remitting, borderline and pseudoneurotic.
There are also chapters that focus on schizoaffective disorder and
adolescent schizophrenia. The conceptual and empirical
contributions to these distinctions are reviewed; accordingly, the
differentiating characteristics of these subcategories are related
to parameters of psychodiagnostic test performance. In additon, the
process of differential psychodiagnosis in schizophrenia is
illustrated by detailed case studies. In an extended new preface,
the author comments on current perspectives and contemporary
literature related to the individual chapters of the text.
This second edition of Irving Weiner's classic comprehensive,
clinician-friendly guide to utilizing the Rorschach for personality
description has been revised to reflect both recent modifications
in the Rorschach Comprehensive System and new evidence concerning
the soundness and utility of Rorschach assessment. It integrates
the basic ingredients of structural, thematic, behavioral, and
sequence analysis strategies into systematic guidelines for
describing personality functioning. It is divided into three parts.
Part I concerns basic considerations in Rorschach testing and deals
with conceptual and empirical foundations of the inkblot method and
with critical issues in formulating and justifying Rorschach
inferences. Part II is concerned with elements of interpretation
that contribute to thorough utilization of data in a Rorschach
protocol: the Comprehensive System search strategy; the
complementary roles of projection and card pull in determining
response characteristics; and the interpretive significance of
structural variables, content themes, test behaviors, and the
sequence in which various response characteristics occur. Each of
the chapters presents and illustrates detailed guidelines for
translating Rorschach findings into descriptions of structural and
dynamic aspects of personality functioning. The discussion
throughout emphasizes the implications of Rorschach data for
personality assets and liabilities, with specific respect to
adaptive and maladaptive features of the manner in which people
attend to their experience, use ideation, modulate affect, manage
stress, view themselves, and relate to others. Part III presents 10
case illustrations of how the interpretive principles delineated in
Part II can be used to identify assets and liabilities in
personality functioning and apply this information in clinical
practice. These cases represent persons from diverse demographic
backgrounds and demonstrate a broad range of personality styles and
clinical issues. Discussion of these cases touches on numerous
critical concerns in arriving at different diagnoses, formulating
treatment plans, and elucidating structural and dynamic
determinants of behavior.
This book serves as an up-to-date Rorschach primer and elaborates
on the various applications of Rorschach assessment for adolescents
with respect to differential diagnosis, forensic consultation, and
therapeutic assessment. It opens with three chapters that provide
readers with a basic overview and introduction to the topics
integrated throughout the text. The first reviews the development
and foundations of the Rorschach Inkblot Method; the second
discusses key issues in the assessment of adolescents, with
particular attention to differentiating patterns of psychopathology
from normal developmental variations; and the third presents
general considerations in using performance-based assessment
instruments in the assessment of personality functioning in
adolescence. Later chapters explore the current status of the
Rorschach Inkblot Method with respect to theoretical formulations,
research findings, and practice guidelines. The final chapter draws
on information in the preceding chapters to present a model for
Rorschach assessment of adolescents. This model is designed to
facilitate accurate and useful formulations of personality
functioning that contribute substantially to advancing responsible
adolescent development.
This second edition of Irving Weiner's classic comprehensive,
clinician-friendly guide to utilizing the Rorschach for personality
description has been revised to reflect both recent modifications
in the Rorschach Comprehensive System and new evidence concerning
the soundness and utility of Rorschach assessment. It integrates
the basic ingredients of structural, thematic, behavioral, and
sequence analysis strategies into systematic guidelines for
describing personality functioning. It is divided into three parts.
Part I concerns basic considerations in Rorschach testing and deals
with conceptual and empirical foundations of the inkblot method and
with critical issues in formulating and justifying Rorschach
inferences. Part II is concerned with elements of interpretation
that contribute to thorough utilization of data in a Rorschach
protocol: the Comprehensive System search strategy; the
complementary roles of projection and card pull in determining
response characteristics; and the interpretive significance of
structural variables, content themes, test behaviors, and the
sequence in which various response characteristics occur. Each of
the chapters presents and illustrates detailed guidelines for
translating Rorschach findings into descriptions of structural and
dynamic aspects of personality functioning. The discussion
throughout emphasizes the implications of Rorschach data for
personality assets and liabilities, with specific respect to
adaptive and maladaptive features of the manner in which people
attend to their experience, use ideation, modulate affect, manage
stress, view themselves, and relate to others. Part III presents 10
case illustrations of how the interpretive principles delineated in
Part II can be used to identify assets and liabilities in
personality functioning and apply this information in clinical
practice. These cases represent persons from diverse demographic
backgrounds and demonstrate a broad range of personality styles and
clinical issues. Discussion of these cases touches on numerous
critical concerns in arriving at different diagnoses, formulating
treatment plans, and elucidating structural and dynamic
determinants of behavior.
Psychology is of interest to academics from many fields, as well as
to the thousands of academic and clinical psychologists and general
public who can't help but be interested in learning more about why
humans think and behave as they do. This award-winning
twelve-volume reference covers every aspect of the ever-fascinating
discipline of psychology and represents the most current knowledge
in the field. This ten-year revision now covers discoveries based
in neuroscience, clinical psychology's new interest in
evidence-based practice and mindfulness, and new findings in
social, developmental, and forensic psychology.
This comprehensive text describes a multimethod approach to
assessing psychological and behavioral features of bipolar
spectrum disorders alongside important contextual considerations.
 It provides mental health professionals with valuable
empirical and interpretive support as they answer assessment
questions for diagnostic and decision-making purposes. Chapters are
written by assessment psychologists who are renowned for their
expertise and contributions in developing and researching specific
assessment instruments or topics. Contributors provide key
information about widely used interview methods, self-report
measures, and performance-based tests, including the MMPI-3, the
SPECTRA, the Rorschach test, and cognitive and neuropsychological
evaluations. They also review diagnostic criteria from the DSM-5-TR
and the ICD-11. Â Additional chapters review special
considerations for differential diagnosis, including comorbidity
with medical conditions, distinguishing bipolar spectrum disorders
from other disorders with similar traits, and accounting for
multicultural factors. Two in-depth case examples provide
comprehensive illustrations of the multimethod evaluation process
with an adolescent and an adult.
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