History and development
Comrey started developing the CPT since 1961 and intended the test to improve upon prior personality tests, which he viewed as possibly creating spurious relationships between the test items and the resulting personality dimensions. In order to do this, Comrey used a technique called factored homogenous item dimension (FHID) to increase the validity of the personality dimensions that are generated during factor analysis. His first attempt was to use the technique to generate personality dimensions from the taxonomies ofScales
Throughout the development of the test, the CPT's eight personality dimensions were known under different names, but in its final version, they are known as the acronym TOCASEMP, and represented two extreme sides of a personality dimension. Each scale is represented by five factors, as detailed below.Test format
The CPT consists of 180 items measuring the TOCASEMP personality dimensions in eight scales measuring and two scales measuring response validity. These two scales are intended to check for possible confounding variable that would render the test result as invalid, including social desirability bias. Some of the items in CPT are reverse-coded. CPT uses two response scales to answer each items, each ranging from the value 1 to 7, which were defined differently.Psychometric properties
Since its initial inception, the CPT has proven to be a robust test, both in terms of validity and reliability. Besides its use of FHID to corroborate the CPT's internal validity, where it had yielded factor loadings from r = 0.30 to r = 0.84, Comrey also used several external validity procedures¸ including several concurrent validity testing with other personality indicators, such as the 16 PF. Although changes to the test occurred following the validation, factor analysis and correlation of the test items supported the existence and structure of the CPT's personality dimensions. During the early stages of CPT's development, a construct validity testing on the test was also conducted on the biographical information provided by 209 university students in the United States. The findings in this study supported the existence of the eight personality dimensions of the CPT based on correlations with the research subject's data, such as marijuana consumption and high scorers in the C scale.Usage
The CPT is intended for use on the adult general population and has also been validated for usage in Italy, Brazil, South African (in Afrikaans language), and Russian populations.{{Cite journal, last1=Rodrigues, first1=Aroldo, last2=Comrey, first2=Andrew L., date=1974-02-01, title=Personality Structure in Brazil and the United States, url=https://doi.org/10.1080/00224545.1974.9923067, journal=The Journal of Social Psychology, volume=92, issue=1, pages=19–26, doi=10.1080/00224545.1974.9923067, issn=0022-4545, pmid=4815683Further reading
* ''Comrey, A.L. (1970a) The Comrey Personality Scales. San Diego: Educational and Industrial Testing Service.'' * ''Comrey, A.L. (1970b) Manual for the Comrey Personality Scales. San Diego: Educational and Industrial Testing Service.'' * ''Comrey, A.L. (1980) Handbook of Interpretations for the Comrey Personality Scales. San Diego: Educational and Industrial Testing Service''References