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A new approach to construct elicitation for a grid test

A Karastergiou-Katsika, J P Watson

    The British Journal of Clinical Psychology
    |February 1, 1982
    PubMed
    Summary
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    Researchers developed a novel method to identify family relationship constructs applicable across different families. This technique uses a story-completion task to uncover shared understandings of family dynamics.

    Area of Science:

    • Psychology
    • Social Sciences
    • Family Studies

    Background:

    • Understanding intra-family relationships is crucial for psychological well-being.
    • Existing methods for identifying relationship constructs may lack cross-family applicability.

    Purpose of the Study:

    • To develop and validate a new method for identifying relationship constructs within families.
    • To determine if these constructs are meaningful to members of different families.

    Main Methods:

    • A missing word technique was employed using two versions of a story about an imaginary family.
    • 54 subjects completed the stories by supplying missing relationship-describing words.
    • Analysis focused on frequently supplied positive and negative constructs.

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    Main Results:

    • Ten positive and ten negative constructs were identified with sufficient frequency.
    • These constructs were deemed meaningful and applicable to members of different families.
    • The missing word technique proved effective in eliciting shared constructs.

    Conclusions:

    • The missing word technique offers a viable method for identifying universally applicable intra-family relationship constructs.
    • This approach can enhance the understanding of family dynamics across diverse family units.
    • The method shows potential for eliciting constructs for individual psychological grids.