• Title of article

    Designer testing: using subjectsʹ personal vocabulary to produce individualised tests

  • Author/Authors

    Tannis M. Laidlaw، نويسنده ,

  • Issue Information
    روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 1999
  • Pages
    11
  • From page
    1197
  • To page
    1207
  • Abstract
    The principle of designer tests is that of using a subjectʹs own semantics rather than lists of words that may or may not be relevant or even understandable for the subject. The Personalised Emotional Index (PEI) is a prototype designer test, in this case a mood test, that uses words that the subject chooses from a list of suggestions within mood categories. Each personʹs test is custom made from familiar and understandable words from his/her own vocabulary. Such a test has much face validity, can be succinct and has comprehensibility for the subject. The results obtained when using this test at the same time as the Profile of Mood States Bipolar Version (POMS-BI) were very similar (e.g. in a regression analysis, the ‘elated-depressedʹ variable predicted present overall mood on both tests (POMS: t=5.25, p<0.000, PEI: t=5.84, p<0.000) with a high correlation for total scores (r=0.82, p<0.000). The PEI results were correlated within the two week interval (rʹs about −0.74; p<0.000) and reasonably but not highly correlated on retesting some months after the first testing (rʹs about −0.25; p<0.000). It was successfully used to differentiate mood variables from a group consisting of caregivers of people with schizophrenia (n=30, producing 399 days of data) and a group of unselected controls (n=62, producing 1080 days of data). The test appears to have validity, reliability, comparability, and utility.
  • Keywords
    Individual di?erences , Repeated measures , Diary , Mood , Semantics , Test
  • Journal title
    Personality and Individual Differences
  • Serial Year
    1999
  • Journal title
    Personality and Individual Differences
  • Record number

    456484