What is the Szondi test?
Szondi test is a projective psychological test proposed by Szondim, Hungary Budapest. Like the Rorschach test, the Szondi test asks people to see 48 photos of different mental patients and choose those with whom they feel most common. All people in the photographs that were not known have shown in one way or another of a sadistic nature. Szondi also placed photos in four categories; Manic-depressive, homosexual and sadistic, epileptic and hysterical and paranoid and catatonic. Modern psychology no longer uses the Szondi test as well as other psychological instruments due to the apparent weak analysis of theory.
Leopold Szondi speculated that people would either be attracted or repelled by photographs that were witnessed by their own personalities. He also assumed that their responses to photography would change and move on their mood, and as such a test would have to be again a duplicate times. To collect a better picture of the patient, Szondi suggested to beAlso analyzed by his family analyzed. This would allow the analyst to see what disorders the family could suffer from and how their lives lived in terms of love, marriage and occupation.
It is assumed that people have motivation and reactions that are unconscious and the Szondi test should reveal some of these tendencies. The test is not without his critics and some claim that it is not reliable because it is based on the subjective judgment of the person who tests. Although this method is doubted, tests are still very widely used as a means of unlocking the internal functioning of people with mental and emotional problems. It is assumed that by maintaining a projective test of ambiguous, the subject is able to freely talk about problems that resonate a deeper level.
Thetest Rorschach Inkblot is also a projective test that is used to explore and understand human psychological and emotional disorders. OnThe difference from the Szondi test is still widely used and respected as a psychological instrument. A projective psychological test is a personality test who asks a person to respond to cryptic stimuli. Obviously, this allows the psychologist to detect some deep -rooted emotional problems. An objective test is the polar opposite of the subjective test and seeks to get an insight into the person through a simple format of question and answers.