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  2. Multidimensional Personality Questionnaire - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Multidimensional...

    The Multidimensional Personality Questionnaire (MPQ) is a personality test meant to measure normal personality developed by Auke Tellegen in 1982. [1] It is currently sold by the University of Minnesota Press. The test in its various versions has had 300, 276 and 198 true-false items. The current version is the 276 items one.

  3. Szondi test - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Szondi_test

    The Szondi test is a 1935 nonverbal projective personality test developed by Léopold Szondi. [1] [2] He theorized people's decisions are determined by genetically coded preferences ("drives") that untimately shape their entire life ("fate"/"destiny"), and these unconscious preferences can be uncovered through the subject's attraction to photographs of similar individuals.

  4. Child Behavior Checklist - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Child_Behavior_Checklist

    The original scale used principal components analysis to group the items, [4] and more recent research has used confirmatory factor analysis to test the structure. [ 5 ] [ 6 ] [ 7 ] Similar questions are grouped into a number of syndrome scale scores, and their scores are summed to produce a raw score for that syndrome.

  5. Draw-a-Person test - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Draw-a-Person_test

    Smiling tadpole person (combined head and body) drawn by a child aged 4 + 1 ⁄ 2. The Draw-a-Person test (DAP, DAP test), Draw-A-Man test (DAM), or Goodenough–Harris Draw-a-Person test is a type of test in the domain of psychology. It is both a personality test, specifically projective test, and a cognitive test like IQ. The test subject ...

  6. 16PF Questionnaire - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/16PF_Questionnaire

    The most recent edition of the Sixteen Personality Factor Questionnaire (16PF), released in 1993, is the fifth edition (16PF5e) of the original instrument. [25] [26] The self-report instrument was first published in 1949; the second and third editions were published in 1956 and 1962, respectively; and the five alternative forms of the fourth edition were released between 1967 and 1969.

  7. Big Five personality traits - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Big_Five_personality_traits

    Many studies of longitudinal data, which correlate people's test scores over time, and cross-sectional data, which compare personality levels across different age groups, show a high degree of stability in personality traits during adulthood, especially Neuroticism that is often regarded as a temperament trait [148] similarly to longitudinal ...

  8. Stanford–Binet Intelligence Scales - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stanford–Binet...

    Various high-IQ societies also accept this test for admission into their ranks; for example, the Triple Nine Society accepts a minimum qualifying score of 151 for Form L or M, 149 for Form L-M if taken in 1986 or earlier, 149 for SB-IV, and 146 for SB-V; in all cases the applicant must have been at least 16 years old at the date of the test.

  9. Karolinska Scales of Personality - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Karolinska_Scales_of...

    Karolinska Scales of Personality is a personality test, superseded by the Swedish Universities Scales of Personality. It measures personalities with a 135-item questionnaire, answered on a four-point Likert scale and grouped into 15 scales: Psychic anxiety; Somatic anxiety; Muscular tension; Psychasthenia; Inhibition of aggression; Detachment ...