Graphology
Graphology or handwriting analysis is the pseudoscientific idea that it is possible to assess someone's personality by analyzing their handwriting.
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Claims include making judgments about a person's personality by looking at their handwriting, or even diagnosing disease. One typical claim is that the handwriting of introverts
While it may be supported by anecdotal evidence and testimonials, no scientifically controlled studies have shown it to be effective.[1][2][3]
Legitimate handwriting analysis: graphanalysis
Handwriting analysis (also called graphanalysis) can also refer to the legitimate forensic investigation technique used by law enforcement, to determine whether handwriting found on an incriminating note or letter matches that of a suspect (e.g. whether an apparent suicide note found with a dead person was actually written by that person, as opposed to being forged by a murderer to cover up the murder), based on expert scientific or technical knowledge of things ranging from types of paper and ink on handwriting, to knowledge of variation on handwriting due to fatigue, stress, and other factors, as well as a basic understanding of modern reproduction techniques[4]. This has nothing to do with the woo mentioned above.
Note that in some languages graphology and graphanalysis may share the same name. In Polish, grafologia refers to both and is usually distinguished by context. Obviously, this makes it easier to push woo on people, by misrepresenting graphology as an extension of graphanalysis.
Graphology and the scientific method
Graphology itself does not follow the scientific method. Graphologists observe patterns in people's handwriting and create hypotheses to explain them, but often fail to make falsifiable and specific claims or do but leave themselves escape hatches (e.g., "Graphology is not accurate all the time. Behavior and personality change continuously. So taking handwriting samples for analysis over many months will give more information about the personality traits"). They use the same observations to "verify" their hypotheses. They then make predictions based on these hypotheses which is where scientists (from outside the graphologist communities) get involved and conduct double blind studies which quite consistently show graphologists do not make accurate predictions, often finding that their results are no better than guesswork or what could be ascertained from the content of the writing sample.[1] These studies are as close as you will get to graphology experiments. Reproducibility is also difficult as there are various competing schools and theories about graphology (e.g. graphoanalysis
Testimonials
Graphologists frequently point to anecdotal evidence and testimonials by people who feel their assessment is accurate; however this does not constitute scientific evidence owing to the possibility of cold reading tricks and the Forer effect. Also, graphology is often meant to have indicated personality traits, such as introversion and extraversion which should be determined by a third party. If you have already been told by a graphologist that you're an introvert, then if you then complete a psychological questionnaire to determine if it's true, it'd be easy to (even unintentionally) give answers that fit what you have already been told. Controlled studies are intended to avoid these kinds of effects, and as stated, they do not support the claims of graphologists.
Graphotherapy
Graphotherapy is the process by which you change your handwriting to a writing that your chosen school of graphology would interpret positively, in the hope of acquiring the positive attributes they associate with it, such as optimism. This has a similar status to the rest of graphology in terms of a lack of controlled studies for evidence.
External links
References
- The predictive validity of graphological inferences: A meta-analytic approach by Efrat Neter & Gershon Ben-Shakhar. Personality and Individual Differences Volume 10, Issue 7, 1989, Pages 737-745.
- Illusory correlations in graphological inference by Roy N. King & Derek J. Koehler, Journal of Experimental Psychology: Applied, Vol 6(4), Dec 2000, 336-348.
- On the failures of graphology by Michael Moore. Shaanan College Annual (שאנן: שנתון המכללה האקדמית לחינוך הדתית), 2013.
- Handwriting Examination: Meeting the Challenges of Science and the Law The conclusion section in particular documents that the FBI finds a rigorous methodological support for using handwriting analysis for writer differentiation