Gallery: The Beautiful Yet Twisted History of Psychological Testing
Redstone Press01PsychologicalTest11.jpg
The early 20th century saw a boom in psychological diagnostic tests. Newfangled, experimental, and beautiful, but ultimately fraught, most of these tests are no longer in use. This one is a Make a Picture Story Test.
Redstone Press02PsychologicalTest10.jpg
Invented in 1942, it asks patients to put one of these characters into a setting (a bedroom, a kitchen, a street) and tell a story based on the scene. Pathological disorders could then be deduced from there.
Redstone Press03PsychologicalTest6.jpg
One of the most frightful old examples in Psychobook is the Szondi Test. Subjects look at photographs of real people who had been hospitalized for mental disorders (epileptics, homosexuals, and depressives, to name a few varietals) and choose their favorites and least favorites. You are what you pick, the thinking goes.
Adam Dant04PsychologicalTest8.jpg
Open-ended tests have proved more enduring. The Feeling Test, here, asks patients to identify with one of a number of blob-like cartoon characters in a drawing. There’s little trickery involved, because the characters look more like benign ghosts than real people, making them neutral proxies for different kinds of emotions.
Redstone Press05PsychologicalTest2.jpg
Rorschach’s inkblot tests are still in use today. In a study published this summer, 53.6 percent of psychologists reported using them in their assessments with patients.
Science and Society Picture Library06PsychologicalTest3.jpg
Blocks that ask patients (mostly kids) to match, sequence, and create patterns are a nonlinguistic tests from the early 20th century.
Redstone Press07PsychologicalTest9.jpg
These handmade cards—that may as well be Wes Anderson film props—go with the blocks.
Redstone Press08PsychologicalTest7.jpg
This test was used less for assessing recognition and connection skills.
Max Lüscher09PsychologicalTest5.jpg
The first color tests came out in 1947. Psychologists believed they could get a complete emotional and mental profile of a patient by asking a patients to identify colors they like most, and least. Someone who dislikes purple, for instance, would have been thought to "want to experience all life has to offer without having to suffer from nervous exhaustion." Hardly scientific.
Ehrig Wartegg10PsychologicalTest4.jpg
Drawing completion tests, created by psychiatrist Ehrig Wartegg in 1934, asks patients to fill in the basic shapes with drawings of their own imagination. It was thought to reveal aspects of personality.
The Audacity Is the Broligarchy Takedown You Were Waiting For
AMC’s new black comedy about a manchild tech titan spinning out of control is a skewering Silicon Valley’s billionaire class deserves.
Miles Klee
A Lot of Shops Won't Fix Electric Bikes. Here's Why
Bike shop mechanics have lost fingers and their shirts while repairing ebikes of dubious origins. Make sure yours is repairable and third-party certified.
Stephanie Pearson
It’s a Tablet! It’s a Laptop! After Testing the Best 2-in-1s, Here’s What I Recommend
Whether you want a detachable tablet or a laptop screen that spins, these 2-in-1 devices manage to balance being both a tablet and a laptop.
Luke Larsen
There’s a Secret Ingredient to Making Luxury Ice at Home
Nice ice is big business, but you can get perfectly clear cubes at home without freezing your assets.
Jeremy White
The Screenmaxxers Who Spend Every Waking Hour on Their Phones
As debates over social media addiction rage, people with extreme screen times tell WIRED they have no plans to cut back.
Miles Klee
Mammotion’s Spino E1 Pool Cleaner Isn’t Bad for the Price—It's Just Not That Good
This compact pool robot keeps its price down, but its performance doesn’t match that of more capable cleaners.
Christopher Null
The Best Coffee Mug Warmers Are Smart. But They Don’t Need an App
The first rule of coffee is that it must stay hot. After weeks or even years of testing, these are the three coffee warmers that will best keep it that way.
Matthew Korfhage
Crimson Desert Is a Cat Dad Simulator
Step into the shoes of the strongest, goodest boy in a game that is beautiful, baffling, and impossible to put down.
This At-Home Hair Color Printer Raised My Blood Pressure
This hair dye printer promises hundreds of shades. It couldn't even manage two.
Louryn Strampe
I Tested the MacBook Neo and the MacBook Air. Here's Which One You Should Buy
After conducting long-term testing on both the MacBook Neo and MacBook Air, I have a good idea who should buy which laptop.
Luke Larsen
The Best Electric Cargo Bikes for Carrying This and That Everywhere
You don't need a car to tote around kids and cup holders. I rode cargo ebikes for miles to find the best one for your buck.
Adrienne So
Your Push Notifications Aren’t Safe From the FBI
Plus: Iran’s internet blackout hits the 1,000-hour mark, cryptocurrency scams result in a record amount of money stolen from Americans, and more.
Matt Burgess