We found a match
Your institution may have rights to this item. Sign in to continue.
- Title
RELATIONSHIPS OF THE HILDRETH FEELING AND ATTITUDE SCALES TO THE MINNESOTA MULTIPHASIC PERSONALITY INVENTORY.
- Authors
Hunt, Edward L.; Lehner, George F. J.
- Abstract
This article attempts to describe certain relationships between the Feeling and Attitude Scales and the Minnesota Multiphasic Personality Inventory when both are used with a college group. This comparison appears appropriate because the FAS might presumably serve some functions similar to those of the MMPI, which is now widely used with college students, but which requires a great deal more time for administration and scoring than the FAS. The FAS can be administered in from five to ten minutes. Such a comparison might eventually also have another value because, as Hildreth points out, the FAS was designed to provide an objective scale to measure changes which might accompany psychotherapeutic treatment of a patient or to make possible comparative evaluations of different kinds of therapeutic procedures.
- Subjects
MINNESOTA Multiphasic Personality Inventory; PERSONALITY tests; PERSONALITY; COLLEGE graduates; PSYCHOTHERAPY; EDUCATION
- Publication
Journal of Clinical Psychology, 1948, Vol 4, Issue 4, p412
- ISSN
0021-9762
- Publication type
Article
- DOI
10.1002/1097-4679(194810)4:4<412::AID-JCLP2270040405>3.0.CO;2-9