Society for Personality Assessment

Society for Personality Assessment is the largest psychological society focused on personality assessment.[1] It was founded in 1937 by Bruno Klopfer as "The Rorschach Institute", renamed to "The Society for Projective Tests and the Rorschach Institute" in 1948, shortened to "The Society for Projective Techniques" in 1960 and given its current name in 1971.[2]

It publishes the Journal of Personality Assessment and manages several awards, including the Bruno Klopfer Award.

History

The "Rorschach Institute" arose casually in either 1936 or 1937 as a term for the group surrounding the popular workshops and meetings at Columbia University held by Bruno Klopfer about the Rorschach test. In May 1938 the group was incorporated over concerns that others might take the name. The bylaws were formalized in March 1939 and the first officers were: Bruno Klopfer, director, Morris Krugman, president, Douglas M. Kelley, vice-president, Ruth Wolfson, secretary, and Gladys Tallman, treasurer.[3]

gollark: Link to your theorizing?
gollark: Also, we occasionally receive code from the future.
gollark: Macron uses hyperversioning.
gollark: Macron 6.τ.283.
gollark: Perl is somewhat more utterly accursuous.

References

  1. Society website
  2. "The Society for Personality Assessment". Journal of Personality Assessment, Volume 44, Issue 6, 1980.
  3. Ann M. O'Roark, John E. Exner. "History and Directory: Society for Personality Assessment Fiftieth Anniversary".


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