The interpretation and validity of projective data depends greatly on the person giving/interpreting the test.
A projective test is a type of personality test that allows a person to respond to ambiguous stimuli, presumably revealing hidden emotions and internal conflicts that the person projects into the test. To assess an individual's unconscious fears, desires, and challenges, projective tests employ ambiguous images or other ambiguous stimuli. Projective tests include the Rorschach Inkblot Test, the TAT, the RISB, and the C-TCB.
The primary distinction between projective and objective personality tests is how they are scored. Objective tests are scored in a standardized, predetermined manner, and frequently involve self-report methods and "true/false" or multiple choice questions.
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