I still want to know where the disagreeable LW-ers are. Come out, come out, wherever you are!
Apparently, I’m one: O59-C0-E37-A0-N80 - i.e. I have zero agreeability and conscientiousness.
But, being such a disagreeable person, I’m inclined to dispute the validity of the test. ;-)
After all, it directly asks you about traits, with questions that are pretty obviously correlated with the results. It therefore seems to be a test of your opinions about yourself, rather than being an actual test of yourself.
After all, it directly asks you about traits, with questions that are pretty obviously correlated with the results. It therefore seems to be a test of your opinions about yourself, rather than being an actual test of yourself.
I’ve yet to see a test that avoids this problem. I really don’t understand why tests like this and the Aspergers one, which will obviously vary dramatically with your moods, are considered to have any meaning at all.
Psychologists tend to treat a test as having meaning when it has some form of ‘validity’, ‘validity’ being the catch-all name for the different ways a psychologist might assess if a test looks meaningful. For example, some Big Five personality scores correlate with things like job performance, suggesting predictive validity. Whether this kind of validation can prove that a test has meaning will hinge on what you feel it means for a test to have meaning.
Whether this kind of validation can prove that a test has meaning will hinge on what you feel it means for a test to have meaning.
In that case we should probably taboo “meaning” (in this context) and talk directly about whatever it is we want a test to do — make clinically useful predictions, carve reality along its natural joints, etc.
Strangely enough, I’d only considered the ‘validity’ side—basically are the categories used universal? Somehow missed how biased self-reporting might be.
Apparently, I’m one: O59-C0-E37-A0-N80 - i.e. I have zero agreeability and conscientiousness.
But, being such a disagreeable person, I’m inclined to dispute the validity of the test. ;-)
After all, it directly asks you about traits, with questions that are pretty obviously correlated with the results. It therefore seems to be a test of your opinions about yourself, rather than being an actual test of yourself.
I’ve yet to see a test that avoids this problem. I really don’t understand why tests like this and the Aspergers one, which will obviously vary dramatically with your moods, are considered to have any meaning at all.
Psychologists tend to treat a test as having meaning when it has some form of ‘validity’, ‘validity’ being the catch-all name for the different ways a psychologist might assess if a test looks meaningful. For example, some Big Five personality scores correlate with things like job performance, suggesting predictive validity. Whether this kind of validation can prove that a test has meaning will hinge on what you feel it means for a test to have meaning.
In that case we should probably taboo “meaning” (in this context) and talk directly about whatever it is we want a test to do — make clinically useful predictions, carve reality along its natural joints, etc.
Strangely enough, I’d only considered the ‘validity’ side—basically are the categories used universal? Somehow missed how biased self-reporting might be.