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Obsessionality and Self-Appraisal Questionnaires

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  29 January 2018

G. F. Reed*
Affiliation:
Department of Psychology, University of Aberdeen
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In an authoritative paper, Sandler and Hazari (1960) examined the responses of 100 neurotic patients to a personality questionnaire. The latter was in fact the Tavistock Self-Assessment Inventory, which consists of 867 statements each of which the subject is required to mark as “True” or “False” in regard to himself. Sandler and Hazari extracted responses to forty of these statements which were regarded as having reference to obsessive/compulsive character traits and symptoms, and subjected the data to factor analysis. Two factors were identified, and the original items were then classified according to their projection on two reference vectors, A and B, obtained through rotation of the Centroid factor axes through 45°. The two groups of items represented “two tendencies which, in their appearance in this group of patients, appear to be more or less unrelated”.

Type
Personality Disorders and Personality Measurements
Copyright
Copyright © Royal College of Psychiatrists, 1969 

References

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