- **Speech Sounds Perception Test:** Identify spoken words
- **Finger Oscillation Task:** Speed
## Psychosocial Assessment
### Assessment Interviews
- Face-to-face interaction
- Structured interviews
- Unstructured interviews
### Clinical Observation of Behavior
- Clinical observation in natural environments
- Clinical observations in therapeutic or medical settings
- Self-monitoring
### Psychological Tests
#### Intelligence tests
- WISC-IV(children); WAISIV (adults)
- Stanford-Binet
#### Personality tests
##### Projective personality tests
- Unstructured stimuli are presented
- Meaning or structure projected onto stimuli
- Projections reveal hidden motives
**Projective personality tests examples:**
- Rorschach Inkblot Test
- Thematic Apperception Test (TAT)
- Sentence Completion Test
##### Objective personality tests
Examples: NEO-PI, MMPI-2
Objective personality tests offer several advantages, such as standardization, efficiency, and ease of administration, but also have limitations, including limited depth, potential response distortion, and cultural bias.
## The Integration of Assessment Data
- Developing integrated, coherent working model
- Utilizing individual or team approach
- Identifying definitive picture vs. discrepancie
### Ethical Issues in Assessment
- Potential cultural bias
- Theoretical orientation of clinician
- Underemphasis on external situation
- Insufficient validation
- Inaccurate data or premature evaluation
## Classifying Abnormal Behavior
- Classification involves attempts to delineate meaningful sub-varieties of maladaptive behavior.
- Classification makes it possible to communicate about particular clusters of abnormal behavior in agreed-on and relatively precise ways.
- Classification of some kind is a necessary first step toward introducing order into our discussion of the nature, causes, and treatment of such behavior.
- Classification enables the clarification of insurance issues.
### Differing Models of Classification
Three basic approaches include:
- Categorical approach:
a patient is healthy or disordered, but there is no overlap
- Dimensional approach:
the patient may fall along a range from superior functioning
to absolutely impaired functioning
- Prototypal approach:
a conceptual entity depicts an idealized combination of
characteristics, some of which the patient may not have
### Formal Diagnostic Classification of Mental Disorders
- Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders (DSM-5)
- International Classification of Disease (ICD-10)
#### Definition criteria based on:
- Symptoms (subjective)
- Signs (objective)
#### The DSM-5
- More comprehensive and more subtypes of disorders
- Allows for gender related differences in diagnosis
- Provides structured interview regarding cultural influences
#### Problem of diagnostic labeling
- Allows label capturing more than a behavioral pattern