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Grupos de noticias: rec.games.chess.analysis, rec.games.chess.computer, rec.games.chess.misc, rec.games.chess.politics, sci.psychology.theory, sci.psychology
John N. Buck was chess master who was a psychologist. He won the Southern Open Chess Championship in the 1930s. I believe that he was also Virginia State Champion. My mother knew him well because he lived near us and my mother was a psychiatrist. I spoke to him on the telephone in the 1950s but he refused to meet me because he said that he did not want to play chess any more.
I looked up the house-tree-person test on the Internet and found the following reference:
Description: The House-Tree-Person (H-T-P) projective technique developed by John Buck was originally an outgrowth of the Goodenough scale utilized to assess intellectual functioning. Buck felt artistic creativity represented a stream of personality characteristics that flowed onto graphic art. He believed that through drawings, subjects objectified unconscious difficulties by sketching the inner image of primary process. Since it was assumed that the content and quality of the H-T-P was not attributable to the stimulus itself, he believed it had to be rooted in the individual fs basic personality. Since the H-T-P was an outcropping of an intelligence test, Buck developed a quantitative scoring system to appraise gross classification levels of intelligence along with at qualitative interpretive analysis to appraise global personality characteristics.
Scoring: The Post-Drawing Interrogation form (PDI) consists of 60 questions varying from direct and concrete to indirect and abstract. Once the PDI has been administered and the interview has been completed, the examiner records items of detail, proportion, and perspective in the Scoring Folder. After completing the scoring tables, the examiner derives an IQ figure for the percentage of raw G, a net weighted score, a weighted "good" score, and a weighted "flaw" sore, which then comprise the items for the profile configuration.
Grupos de noticias: rec.games.chess.analysis, rec.games.chess.computer, rec.games.chess.misc, rec.games.chess.politics, sci.psychology.theory, sci.psychology
In rec.games.chess.computer Sam Sloan <sl...@ishipress.com> wrote:
> John N. Buck was chess master who was a psychologist. He won the > Southern Open Chess Championship in the 1930s. I believe that he was > also Virginia State Champion. My mother knew him well because he lived > near us and my mother was a psychiatrist. I spoke to him on the > telephone in the 1950s but he refused to meet me because he said that > he did not want to play chess any more.
Your mother was a psychiatrist?
What a recommendation that is.
She'd better keep that diploma under lock and key, someone will be trying to repo it.
:)
-- Robert M. Hyatt, Ph.D. Computer and Information Sciences hy...@uab.edu University of Alabama at Birmingham (205) 934-2213 136A Campbell Hall (205) 934-5473 FAX Birmingham, AL 35294-1170
Grupos de noticias: rec.games.chess.analysis, rec.games.chess.computer, rec.games.chess.misc, rec.games.chess.politics, sci.psychology.research, sci.psychology
John N. Buck was chess master who was a psychologist. He won the Southern Open Chess Championship in the 1930s. I believe that he was also Virginia State Champion. My mother knew him well because he lived near us and my mother was a psychiatrist. I spoke to him on the telephone in the 1950s but he refused to meet me because he said that he did not want to play chess any more.
I looked up the house-tree-person test on the Internet and found the following reference:
Description: The House-Tree-Person (H-T-P) projective technique developed by John Buck was originally an outgrowth of the Goodenough scale utilized to assess intellectual functioning. Buck felt artistic creativity represented a stream of personality characteristics that flowed onto graphic art. He believed that through drawings, subjects objectified unconscious difficulties by sketching the inner image of primary process. Since it was assumed that the content and quality of the H-T-P was not attributable to the stimulus itself, he believed it had to be rooted in the individual fs basic personality. Since the H-T-P was an outcropping of an intelligence test, Buck developed a quantitative scoring system to appraise gross classification levels of intelligence along with at qualitative interpretive analysis to appraise global personality characteristics.
Scoring: The Post-Drawing Interrogation form (PDI) consists of 60 questions varying from direct and concrete to indirect and abstract. Once the PDI has been administered and the interview has been completed, the examiner records items of detail, proportion, and perspective in the Scoring Folder. After completing the scoring tables, the examiner derives an IQ figure for the percentage of raw G, a net weighted score, a weighted "good" score, and a weighted "flaw" sore, which then comprise the items for the profile configuration.
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