Module 2.1
Module 2.1
Module 2.1
1
Three Concepts Determine the Value of Assessment Domains of Assessment:
The Clinical Interview and Physical Exam
Reliability
Physical Exam – Referral to physician
Examples include test-retest, inter-rater reliability
Rule out medical conditions
Validity Clinical Interview
Examples include content, concurrent, Most common clinical assessment method
discriminant, construct, and face validity Structured or semi-structured
Standardization and Norms Mental Status Exam
Examples include administration procedures, Appearance and behavior
scoring, and evaluation of data Thought processes
Mood and affect
Intellectual functioning
Sensorium
2
Domains of Assessment: Domains of Assessment:
Behavioral Assessment and Observation Behavioral Assessment and Observation
Behavioral Assessment
Focus on here and now
Tends to be direct and minimally inferential
Target behaviors are identified and observed
Focus on antecedents, behaviors, and
consequences
Behavioral Observation and Behavioral Assessment
Can be either formal or informal
Self-monitoring vs. others observing
Problem of reactivity using direct observation
Psychological Testing
Must be reliable and valid
Projective Tests
Project aspects of personality onto ambiguous
stimuli
Roots in psychoanalytic tradition
High degree of inference in scoring and
interpretation
Examples include the Rorschach Inkblot Test,
Thematic Apperception Test
Reliability and validity data tend to be mixed
3
Thematic Apperception Test Domains of Assessment: Psychological
Testing and Objective Tests
Objective Tests
Test stimuli are minimally ambiguous
Roots in empirical tradition
Require minimal inference in scoring and interpretation
Objective Personality Tests
Minnesota Multiphasic Personality Inventory (MMPI, MMPI-
2, MMPI-A)
Millon Clinical Multiaxial Inventory
Objective Intelligence Tests
WAIS/WISC – Performance and Verbal Scales
Stanford-Binet – Mental Age/Age = IQ
Raven Progressive Matrices Test – Non-verbal
4
Domains of Assessment: Diagnosing Psychological Disorders:
Neuroimaging and Brain Function (cont.) Foundations in Classification
Imaging Brain Function Clinical Assessment vs. Psychiatric Diagnosis
Positron emission tomography (PET) Assessment – Idiographic approach
Single photon emission computed tomography (SPECT) Diagnosis – Nomothetic approach
Both are important in treatment planning and
Both involve injection of radioactive isotopes intervention
React with oxygen, blood, and glucose in the brain Diagnostic Classification
Functional MRI (fMRI) – Brief changes in brain activity Classification is central to all sciences
Used mainly in research
Develop categories based on shared attributes
Terminology of Classification Systems
Taxonomy – Classification in a scientific context
Nosology – Taxonomy in psychological / medical
contexts
Nomenclature – Nosological labels (e.g., panic
disorder)
5
History of the DSM
DSM-5 Diagnostic Categories
DSM-I: 1952
Neurodevelopmental Dissociative disorders
DSM-II: 1968 disorders Somatic symptom and
DSM-III: 1980; DSM-III-R: 1987 Elimination disorders related disorders
Disruptive, impulse-control, Feeding and eating
DSM-IV: 1994; DSM-IV-TR: 2000 and conduct disorders disorders
DSM-5: 2013 Schizophrenia spectrum Sleep-wake disorders
and other psychotic Sexual dysfunctions
The general consensus is that DSM-5 is largely disorders Gender dysphoria
unchanged from DSM-IV although some new disorders Bipolar and related Substance-related and
disorders addictive disorders
are introduced and other disorders have been
Depressive disorders
reclassified Neurocognitive disorders
Anxiety disorders Personality disorders
Obsessive-compulsive and Paraphilic disorders
related disorders
Trauma- and stressor- Other mental disorders
related disorders
6
Summary of Clinical Assessment and Diagnosis