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23 Cards in this Set

  • Front
  • Back

Idiographic Understanding

An understanding of the behavior of a particular individual.

Assessment

The process of collecting and interpreting relevant information about a client or research participant.

Standardization

The process in which a test is administered to a large group of people whose performance then serves as a standard or norm against which any individual's score can be measured.

Reliability

A measure of the consistency of test or research results.

Validity

The accuracy of a test's or study's results; that is, the extent to which the test or study actually measures or shows what it claims.

Mental Status Exam

A set of interview questions and observations designed to reveal the degree and nature of a client's abnormal functioning.

Test

A device for gathering information about a few aspects of a person's psychological functioning from which broader information about the person can be inferred.

Projective Test

A test consisting of ambiguous material that people interpret or respond to.

Personality Inventory

A test designed to measure broad personality characteristics, consisting of statements about behaviors, beliefs, and feelings that people evaluate as either characteristic or uncharacteristic of them.

Response Inventories

Tests designed to measure a person's responses in one specific area of functioning, such as affect, social skills, or cognitive processes.

Psychophysiological Test

A test that measures physical responses (such as heart rate and muscle tension) as possible indicators of psychological problems.

Neurological Test

A test that directly measures brain structure or activity.

Neuroimaging Techniques

Neurological tests that provide images of brain structure or activity, such as CT scans, PET scans, and MRIs. Also called brain scans.

Neuropsychological Test

A test that detects brain impairment by measuring a person's cognitive, perceptual, and motor performances.

Intelligence Test

A test designed to measure a person's intellectual ability.

Intelligence Quotient (IQ)

An overall score derived from intelligence tests.

Diagnosis

A determination that a person's problems reflect a particular disorder.

Syndrome

A cluster of symptoms that usually occur together.

Classification System

A list of disorders, along with descriptions of symptoms and guidelines for making appropriate diagnoses.

DSM-5

The current edition of the 'Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders'.

Empirically Supported Treatment

A movement in the clinical field that seeks to identify which therapies have received clear research support for each disorder, to develop corresponding treatment guidelines, and to spread such information to clinicians. Also known as evidence based treatment.

Rapprochement Movement

An effort to identify a set of common strategies that runthrough the work of all effective therapists.

Psychopharmacologist

A psychiatrist who primarily prescribes medications.