Tes Rorschach [RECOMMENDED]

Skoring Rorschach melibatkan penilaian kuantitatif dan kualitatif. Sistem Komprehensif Exner mencakup beragam skor dan indeks, seperti:

Standardized procedure (per Exner and R-PAS):

The ambiguous, unstructured nature of the task is hypothesized to bypass conscious defenses and social desirability biases, revealing implicit cognitive and affective patterns. tes rorschach

Skizofrenia: Inkohorensi logika, respons "kontaminasi" (mencampur dua objek jadi satu), + bentuk buruk. Depresi Berat: Jumlah respons sangat sedikit, penolakan (mengatakan tidak melihat apa pun), sering melihat objek mati atau membusuk. Gangguan Kepribadian Narsistik: Banyak W megah, tetapi kualitas bentuk buruk, kurangnya M yang hangat.

Ada dua fase utama dalam administrasi Tes Rorschach: The ambiguous, unstructured nature of the task is

Rorschach menuai pro dan kontra:

The Rorschach inkblot test, when administered and scored via modern systems (Exner CS or R-PAS), provides reliable and valid information about perceptual accuracy, thought organization, and cognitive-affective style. It is not a general personality inventory nor a magic window into the unconscious, but it remains a useful performance-based measure for specific domains—particularly reality testing and thought disorder—where self-report instruments fail. Contemporary clinicians can use the Rorschash ethically as one component of a multi-method assessment battery, recognizing its strengths (sensitivity to subtle cognitive slippage) and limitations (cross-cultural fragility, time intensity). The Rorschach test is a projective psychological assessment

Final recommendation: The Rorschach has earned a cautious but legitimate place in clinical psychology when used for its evidence-supported purposes, scored with up-to-date norms, and interpreted by adequately trained practitioners.


The Rorschach test is a projective psychological assessment tool consisting of ten ambiguous inkblot stimuli. Developed by Swiss psychiatrist Hermann Rorschach in 1921, it remains one of the most controversial yet extensively studied instruments in clinical psychology. Unlike self-report inventories (e.g., MMPI), the Rorschach is designed to assess underlying thought processes, personality structure, and latent psychopathology by analyzing how individuals impose organization on ambiguous visual stimuli.