Volume 41, Issue 5 pp. 629-633
Psychodiagnostic Processes: Personality Inventories and Scales
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Using the 1983 norms for the MMPI: Code type frequencies in four clinical samples

Robert C. Colligan Ph.D.

Corresponding Author

Robert C. Colligan Ph.D.

Mayo Clinic and Mayo Foundation Rochester, Minnesota

Mayo Clinic, 200 First Street SW, Rochester, Minnesota 55905Search for more papers by this author
David Osborne

David Osborne

Mayo Clinic and Mayo Foundation Rochester, Minnesota

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Wendell M. Swenson

Wendell M. Swenson

Mayo Clinic and Mayo Foundation Rochester, Minnesota

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Kenneth P. Offord

Kenneth P. Offord

Mayo Clinic and Mayo Foundation Rochester, Minnesota

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Abstract

MMPI responses obtained from a large random sample of mid western adults who were 18 through 99 years old and had no physically or mentally handicapping condition yielded a pattern significantly different from the pattern of the original norms. From these data, two new kinds of normative tables have been developed: Norms that reflect, for each sex, the response pattern of the general adult population, and a set of tables, separate for each sex, that allow comparisons to be based on age. In addition, the traditional scoring procedures based on a linear transformation that maintains any underlying skewness of the raw score distribution has been replaced by procedures that yield normalized T scores. The changes that are apparent at the item and scale level are also evident in the frequency with which certain 1-and 2-point codes occur in normal and clinical samples. These changes are apt to make our interpretive statements more meaningful because they are based on contemporary norms.

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