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16 - The Issue of Faking

from PART FIVE - CHALLENGES TO TESTING

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  05 June 2012

George Domino
Affiliation:
University of Arizona
Marla L. Domino
Affiliation:
University of South Carolina
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Summary

AIM In this chapter we begin by asking, “What can interfere with the validity of a particular test score? If Rebecca scores at the 95th percentile on a test of vocabulary, can we really conclude that she does possess a high level of vocabulary?” While there are many issues that can affect our conclusion, in this chapter we focus mainly on just one – faking. We take a brief look at two additional issues – test anxiety and testwiseness. We use a variety of tests, such as the MMPI and CPI, to illustrate some basic points; you have met all of these tests in earlier chapters.

SOME BASIC ISSUES

Response sets. As discussed in Chapter 2, a test is typically constructed from an appropriate item pool by selecting the items that meet certain rational and/or empirical and statistical criteria. Basically, what a test measures is determined by the content of the items, yet the final score for a person reflects not only the item content, but also the item and response formats – aspects which Cronbach defined as response sets. In a pioneering article, Cronbach (1946) defined response sets as any tendency that might cause a person to consistently give different responses to test items than he or she would have given if the same content was presented in a different form.

Type
Chapter
Information
Psychological Testing
An Introduction
, pp. 427 - 459
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2006

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References

Cofer, C. N., Chance, J., & Judson, A. J. (1949). A study of malingering on the Minnesota Multiphasic Personality Inventory. Journal of Psychology, 27, 491–499.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Ganellen, R. J. (1994). Attempting to conceal psychological disturbance: MMPI defensive response sets and the Rorschach. Journal of Personality Assessment, 63, 423–437.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Heilbrun, K., Bennett, W. S., White, A. J., & Kelly, J. (1990). An MMPI-based empirical model of malingering and deception. Behavioral Sciences and the Law, 8, 45–53.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Lees-Ha ley, P. R., English, L. T., & Glenn, W. J. (1991). A fake bad scale on the MMPI-2 for personal injury claimants. Psychological Reports, 68, 203–210.CrossRefGoogle Scholar

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