2005
DOI: 10.1177/1073191104273384
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Field Reliability of Comprehensive System Scoring in an Adolescent Inpatient Sample

Abstract: The extent to which the Comprehensive System for the Rorschach is reliably scored has been a topic of some controversy. Although several studies have concluded it can be scored reliably in research settings, little is known about its reliability in field settings. This study evaluated the reliability of both response-level codes and protocol-level scores among 84 adolescent psychiatric inpatients in a clinical setting. Rorschachs were originally administered and scored for clinical purposes. Among response cod… Show more

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Cited by 27 publications
(22 citation statements)
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References 26 publications
(71 reference statements)
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“…These concerns may also be understood in terms of research reliability versus field reliability. Importantly, evidence indicates that reliability tends to be largely consistent across settings at least for CS variables (McGrath et al, 2005;Meyer et al, 2002). As noted in our online supplement examining potential moderators, varying levels of rater training did not markedly influence reliability results; this also provides partial support for the generalizability of these findings.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 53%
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“…These concerns may also be understood in terms of research reliability versus field reliability. Importantly, evidence indicates that reliability tends to be largely consistent across settings at least for CS variables (McGrath et al, 2005;Meyer et al, 2002). As noted in our online supplement examining potential moderators, varying levels of rater training did not markedly influence reliability results; this also provides partial support for the generalizability of these findings.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 53%
“…Exner's Comprehensive System (CS;Exner, 2003) is the most popular means for administering, scoring, and interpreting the Rorschach. Good reliability (McGrath et al, 2005;Meyer et al, 2002) and reasonable validity have been shown for many CS scores (Hiller, Rosenthal, Bornstein, Berry, & Brunell-Neuleib, 1999;Meyer & Archer, 2001;Meyer & Viglione, 2008;Mihura, 2008;Viglione & Hilsenroth, 2001). The CS Aggressive Movement (AG) score is assigned for aggressive actions taking place in the present.…”
mentioning
confidence: 98%
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“…Factor analysis was conducted on ordinal test items constructed by summarising nominal items that were used to measure symbolism and Cronbach-alpha coefficients were used in measuring the internal consistency of measurement items. McGrath et al (2005) argue that coefficients greater than 0.80 are usually desirable, appropriate and achievable in practice. Suhr and Shay (2009) also argue that depending on the purpose of the instrument, the acceptable reliability coefficient (alpha) levels can be as low as 0.60.…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In their work, Acklin, McDowell, Verschell, and Chan (2000) suggest kappa was the most adequate statistic to use. During the first few years of the last decade several important works followed: Meyer et al (2002), Taylor (2003), andMcGrath et al (2005). In all of them, the protocol-level and response-level reliability values found for the variable FQu are notably lower than the values for X+% and X−%.…”
Section: Silva and Piresmentioning
confidence: 99%