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Take a look at this image.
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What might this be?
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A frightening monster?
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Two friendly bears?
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Or something else entirely?
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For nearly a century,
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ten inkblots like these have been used
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as what seems like an almost
mystical personality test.
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Long kept confidential for psychologists
and their patients,
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the mysterious images were said to draw
out the workings of a person’s mind.
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But what can inkblots really tell us,
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and how does this test work?
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Invented in the early 20th century
by Swiss psychiatrist Hermann Rorschach,
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the Rorschach Test is actually less about
the specific things we see,
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and more about our general approach
to perception.
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As an amateur artist Hermann
was fascinated
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by how visual perception varies from
person to person.
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He carried this interest to
medical school,
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where he learned all our senses
are deeply connected.
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He studied how our process of perception
doesn’t just register sensory inputs,
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but transforms them.
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And when he started working at a
mental hospital in eastern Switzerland,
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he began designing a series
of puzzling images
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to gain new insight into this
enigmatic process.
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Using his inkblot paintings,
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Rorschach began quizzing hundreds
of healthy subjects
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and psychiatric patients with
the same question:
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what might this be?
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However, it wasn’t what the test subjects
saw that was most important to Rorschach,
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but rather, how they approached the task.
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Which parts of the image did they
focus on or ignore?
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Did they see the image moving?
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Did the color on some inkblots help them
give better answers,
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or distract and overwhelm them?
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He developed a system to code
people’s responses,
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reducing the wide range of interpretations
to a few manageable numbers.
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Now he had empirical measures to quantify
all kinds of test takers:
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the creative and imaginative,
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the detail-oriented, the
big-picture perceivers,
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and flexible participants able
to adapt their approach.
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Some people would get stuck,
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offering the same answer
for multiple blots.
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Others gave unusual and
delightful descriptions.
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Responses were as varied as the inkblots,
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which offered different kinds of
perceptual problems–
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some easier to interpret than others.
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But analyzing the test-taker’s
overall approach
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yielded real insights into
their psychology.
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And as Rorschach tested more
and more people,
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patterns began to pile up.
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Healthy subjects with the same
personalities
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often took remarkably similar approaches.
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Patients suffering from the same
mental illnesses
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also performed similarly,
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making the test a reliable
diagnostic tool.
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It could even diagnose some conditions
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difficult to pinpoint with other
available methods.
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In 1921,
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Rorschach published his coding system
alongside the ten blots he felt
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gave the most nuanced picture of people’s
perceptual approach.
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Over the next several decades,
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the test became wildly popular in
countries around the world.
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By the 1960s,
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it had been officially administered
millions of times in the U.S. alone.
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Unfortunately, less than a year after
publishing the test,
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Hermann Rorschach had died suddenly.
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Without its inventor to keep it on track,
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the test he had methodically gathered
so much data to support
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began to be used in all sorts
of speculative ways.
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Researchers gave the test
to Nazi war criminals,
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hoping to unlock the psychological roots
of mass murder.
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Anthropologists showed the images to
remote communities
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as a sort of universal personality test.
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Employers made prejudiced hiring decisions
based on reductive decoding charts.
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As the test left clinics and entered
popular culture
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its reputation among medical
professionals plummeted,
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and the blots began to fall
out of clinical use.
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Today, the test is still controversial,
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and many people assume
it has been disproven.
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But a massive 2013 review of all the
existing Rorschach research
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showed that when administered properly
the test yields valid results,
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which can help diagnose mental illness
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or round out a patient’s
psychological profile.
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It’s hardly a stand-alone key
to the human mind–
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no test is.
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But its visual approach and lack
of any single right answer
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continue to help psychologists paint
a more nuanced picture
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of how people see the world.
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Bringing us one step closer
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to understanding the patterns
behind our perceptions.