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Assessment
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Scale 5 of the MMPI and MMPI-A: Evidence of Disparity

Steven W. Finlay

Texas Youth Commission, Marlin, Texas

Jerome T. Kapes

Texas A&M University

Scale 5 of the MMPI and MMPI-A was compared in a repeated measures design. Participants for the study were 43 adolescents classified as emotionally disturbed in a public school system and 17 inpatients at a residential treatment center. The MMPI Scale 5 mean score was substantially higher than that of the MMPI-A. The alternate-form reliability between Scale 5 of the two forms was surprisingly low, suggesting that the deletion of 16 items and rewording of 6 additional items changed the scale on the MMPI-A to an extent that may have significantly altered the underlying construct. The authors discuss factors that could be associated with the findings, including: (a) the diminished ability to express feminine interest on the MMPI-A, and (b) general changes in attitudes among adolescents over the 3 or more decades since the MMPI norms were developed.

Key Words: MMPI-A Scale 5 (Mf) • equivalence of MMPI and MMPI-A • alternate form reliability of MMPI and MMPI-A • assessment of masculinity/femininity • test-retest reliability

Assessment, Vol. 7, No. 1, 97-101 (2000)
DOI: 10.1177/107319110000700109


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