[IPAC-List] Divergent views of validation
Shekerjian, Rene
Rene.Shekerjian at cs.state.ny.us
Fri Sep 3 14:22:49 EDT 2010
Thanks guys. I got the copy Winfred sent. Bryan, your link didn't work for me, but this one seems to, if anyone else is interested and had trouble...
http://www.tc.umn.edu/~cdeyoung/Pubs/DeYoung_2010_Big_Five_brain_structure_PS.pdf
René
René Shekerjian | Testing Services Division | NYS Department of Civil Service | 518-474-3778
==========================================================================
-----Original Message-----
From: Bryan Baldwin [mailto:Bryan.Baldwin at doj.ca.gov]
Sent: Friday, September 03, 2010 2:10 PM
To: ipac-list at ipacweb.org; Jr. Winfred Arthur
Subject: Re: [IPAC-List] Divergent views of validation
It's also available here (at least is it right now):
http://www.tc.umn.edu%2F~cdeyoung%2FPubs%2FDeYoung_2010_Big_Five_brain_structure_PS.pdf&rct=j&q=%22Testing%20predictions%20from%20personality%20%3E%20neuroscience%3A%20Brain%20structure%20and%20the%20big%20five%22&ei=UjmBTN6wA4aCsQOk8MX3Bw&usg=AFQjCNHLv-pZ7L6g5vECsCj1FdllGOxzYg&sig2=WWe6I11tdkKe1v5B9-sBuQ&cad=rja
If this doesn't work, just Google "Testing predictions from personality
> neuroscience: Brain structure and the big five"
Bryan
>>> "Winfred Arthur, Jr." <w-arthur at neo.tamu.edu> 9/3/2010 8:40 AM >>>
i will send you a copy of the paper offline. if anyone else is
interested in a copy as well, just let me know.
- winfred
On 9/3/2010 7:24 AM, Shekerjian, Rene wrote:
> I'd be interested in knowing the extent to which the measures of
volume for the various brain regions covaried with the measures of the
personality traits. My internet access to journals does not allow access
to the most recent year for Psychological Science.
>
> Has anyone had a chance to see what it says?
>
> René
>
> René Shekerjian | Testing Services Division | NYS Department of Civil
Service | 518-474-3778
>
==========================================================================
>
> -----Original Message-----
> From: Reid Klion [mailto:RKlion at panpowered.com]
> Sent: Thursday, September 02, 2010 5:00 PM
> To: ipac-list at ipacweb.org
> Subject: Re: [IPAC-List] Divergent views of validation
>
> Good discussion! ...there is also a literature that delves into some
of the challenges that have been found when attempting to replicate fMRI
research. Here is a quick overview from Science News:
http://tinyurl.com/ycveaac. Enjoy-
>
> Reid
>
>
> Reid E. Klion, Ph.D.
> Chief Science Officer
> pan - A TALX Company
> 11590 North Meridian St.
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> Carmel, IN 46032 USA
> 317.814.8808 Office
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>
> -----Original Message-----
> From: ipac-list-bounces at ipacweb.org
[mailto:ipac-list-bounces at ipacweb.org] On Behalf Of Bryan Baldwin
> Sent: Thursday, September 02, 2010 9:25 AM
> To: ipac-list at ipacweb.org; w-arthur at neo.tamu.edu
> Subject: Re: [IPAC-List] Divergent views of validation
>
> ..and to piggyback on Winfred's post, there are a couple articles in
the September Psych Bulletin dealing in some sense with biological bases
of personality (Kotov et al. and Dietrich et al.):
>
> http://psycnet.apa.org/journals/bul/136/5/
>
> Bryan
>
> Bryan Baldwin
> Staff Services Manager II
> California Department of Justice
> Division of Administrative Support
> Personnel Programs
> (916) 322-5446
>>>> "Winfred Arthur, Jr."<w-arthur at neo.tamu.edu> 09/01/10 6:03 PM>>>
> as a follow up to Jeff's last paragraph, DeYoung et al.'s (2010)
> mri/FFM study might be of interest to some of you. the full
reference is:
>
> DeYoung et al. (2010), "Testing predictions from personality
> neuroscience: Brain structure and the big five", /Psychological
Science,
> 21,/ 820-828.
>
> and the abstract reads as follows:
>
> "We used a new theory of the biological basis of the Big Five
> personality traits to generate hypotheses about the association of
each
> trait with the volume of different brain regions. Controlling for
age,
> sex, and whole-brain volume, results from structural magnetic
resonance
> imaging of 116 healthy adults supported our hypotheses for four of
the
> five traits: Extraversion, Neuroticism, Agreeableness, and
> Conscientiousness. Extraversion covaried with volume of medial
> orbitofrontal cortex, a brain region involved in processing reward
> information. Neuroticism covaried with volume of brain regions
> associated with threat, punishment, and negative affect.
Agreeableness
> covaried with volume in regions that process information about the
> intentions and mental states of other individuals. Conscientiousness
> covaried with volume in lateral prefrontal cortex, a
region involved
in
> planning and the voluntary control of behavior. These findings
support
> our biologically based, explanatory model of the Big Five and
> demonstrate the potential of personality neuroscience (i.e., the
> systematic study of individual differences in personality using
> neuroscience methods) as a discipline."
>
>
> - winfred
>
>
> On 9/1/2010 3:21 PM, Jeff Feuquay wrote:
>> If Borsboom asserts validity is what a test "should" measure, then
it seems
>> he is discussing a concept quite different from what most assessment
folk
>> think of as validity, i.e., whether a test measures what it purports
to
>> measure. That idiosyncratic definition would quite reasonably be
expected to
>> lead him down the rabbit hole to a very different world.
>>
>> Some of the discussion seems to imply we are again caught in the
trap of
>> hoping/believing that correlation reflects causation. Ah, were it
only so.
>> Then, maybe we could say that whatever our tests are measuring (not
>> predicting . . . actually measuring) cause the future behavior
sought. But,
>> we continue to measure the employee version of phlogiston. We've got
some
>> understanding of which characteristics are likely to result in
improved
>> performance, but it remains rudimentary. I mean, as Borsboom knows,
it would
>> be a whole lot simpler if we were measuring temperature, something
we now
>> undersatnd way better than we understand ourselves.
>>
>> As to the level of measurment: Unless one has gone through a
thorough
>> scaling process, certainly variations in item difficulty make us
fall short
>> of interval mesurement. But on a practical level, how short of
interval is
>> too short? When some jurisdictions continue to round T&E scores to
>> thousandths of a point and then take the top 3, is ordinal versus
interval
>> or even ratio a big issue? Yeah, it is. Scaling is an issue,
significant
>> digits is an issue, but most scales and most of the stats we
commonly use
>> are extremely robust. We may bend the prediction but we're unlikely
to break
>> it.
>>
>> Given another hundred years to work on this, measurement of
employee
>> phlogistan could conceivably evolve into something more direct and
more
>> definitive . . . I mean, everybody knows that variations in the long
arm of
>> chromsome 6 of the human genome account for 4% of the variance in
>> intelligence. See, we're on the way.
>> Jeff
>> -----------------------------------------
>> Dr. Jeffrey P Feuquay, I/O Psychologist& Attorney
>> Managing Consultant, Psychology-Law Center, LLC
>> 108 W. Walnut, Nevada, Mo 64772
>> ofc: 417-667-5076 cell: 417-549-0997
>>
>>
>> On Wed, Sep 1, 2010 at 11:37 AM, Mark
Hammer<Mark.Hammer at psc-cfp.gc.ca>wrote:
>>
>>> Would it be wrong to suggest that this is one of those perpetual
>>> discrepancies between theoreticians and clinicians? In this case,
the
>>> discrepancy is between test/measurement specialists (the
theoreticians),
>>> and test-users (the clinicians).
>>>
>>> Mark Hammer
>>> Ottawa
>>>
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