Rorschach in Psychotherapy
Rorschach in Psychotherapy
To cite this article: Irving B. Weiner & John E. Exner Jr. (1991) Rorschach Changes in Long-Term
Short-Term Psychotherapy, Journal of Personality Assessment, 56:3, 453-465, DOI: 10.1207/
s15327752jpa5603_7
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JOURNAL OF PERSONALITY ASSESSMENT, 1991, 56(3), 453465
Copyright GI 1991, Lawrence Erlbaum Associates, Inc.
Irving B. Weiner
University of South Florida Psychiat y Center
John E. Exner, Jr.
Rorschach Workshops
Ashevilre, NC
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Over a period of several years, repeat Rorschach testing was done with two groups
of patients receiving outpatient psychotherapy, a long-term group (n = 88)
engaged in intensive, dynamically oriented psychotherapy and a short-term group
(n =: 88) involved in behavioral or gestalt therapy. Rorschach protocols were
obtained at the beginning of the treatment and on three subsequent occasions, 1
year, 2s years, and 4 years later, when most of the long-term and all of the
short-term patients had completed their therapy. The findings demonstrate
generally beneficial effects of psychotherapy, greater change in long-term than in
short-term therapy, and the validity of the Rorschach for measuring these effects
and changes.
talk about their experiences, feeling out of touch or dissatisfied with themselves,
and avoiding interpersonal involvements, termination is rarely propitious.
Weiner and Exner suggested that certain Rorschach variables related to these
personality characteristics might provide a useful measure of progress in inten-
sive psychotherapy. Pursuant to this suggestion, the interpretive guidelines
elaborated in The Rorschach: A Comprehensive System (Exner, 1986) were exam-
ined for indices of impaired functioning that might identify need for further
treatment in a variety of forms of psychotherapy of varying duration. Twenty-
seven indices of adjustment difficulty were selected as potentially valid clues to
insufficient treatment progress.
Four of these indices indicate difficulty managing stress adequately: D < 0
(subjectively felt distress resulting from inadequate resources to meet experi-
enced demands), AdjD < 0 (persistently felt distress extending beyond transient
or situational difficulties in meeting experienced demands), EA < 7 (limited
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METHOD
Over a period of several years, Rorschach protocols were obtained at four stages
during or following the treatment of patients receiving outpatient psychother-
apy. The collection of these data was made possible by the collaboration of 5.3
doctoral-level clinicians in several large cities who recruited some of their
psychotherapy patients as volunteers in the study. These patients were told that
they would be administered the Rorschach test at the beginning of their
treatment and on three subsequent occasions as part of a research project
concerned with monitoring change during and after psychotherapy.
As subjects entered the study, they were classified as long-term or short-tern1
patients depending on the type of therapy they would be receiving. The
long-term group comprised patients who were going to be seen more than once
456 WEINER AND EXNER
TABLE 1
Demographic and Descriptive Characteristics of Long-Term and Short-Term
Psychotherapy Groups
-
Long Terma Short Terma
n % n 96
-
Sex
Male 36 71 40 45
Female 52 59 48 55
SES
Upper 9 10 3 3
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Middle 61 69 47 !i3
Lower* 18 20 38 't3
Marital status
Married 44 50 49 55
Divorced 19 21 15 17
Widowed 3 3 1 1
Single 23 26 23 26
Primary presenting complaint
Anxiety 13 14 9 10
Depression* 18 20 27 30
Tension 10 11 9 10
Emotional dyscontrol 15 17 11 12
Interpersonal difficulties 24 27 23 32
Somatic problems 8 9 3 3
Third party payer 77 87 83 94
Private therapist 45 55 41 4.6
"n = 88.
*Difference between groups yields 2 x 2 XZ significant at .Ol level.
aware that they were testing patients in psychotherapy as part of what they were
told was a "treatment effects" study. However, they had n.o information about
the kind of therapy subjects were receiving or the stage of their treatment, ant3
no examiner tested the same patient more than once.
RESULTS
Manag~ngstress
D<O
AdjD < 0
EA < 7
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CDI < 3
Dealmg with experience
Ambttence
Zd < -3.0
Lambda > 0.99
X + % < 70
X - % >20
Modulating affect
Sum Shadrng > FM +m
DEPI = 5
DEPI > 5
Afr < SO
CF+C>FC+1
Usmg ~deat~on
Sum 6 Sp Sc > 6
M- > O
MP > Ma
Intellect > 5
Exam~ningoneself
Fr + rF > 0
3r + (2)/R > .43
37 + (2)/R < .33
FD > 2
Feeling cornforable in interpersonal relationships
p>a+l 30 34 17
T =0 27 31 22
T > 1 19 22 4
Pure H < 2 28 31 15
H < [(H) + Hd + (Hd)] 48 52 37
*Significantly different from previous test, p < .05. **Significantlydifferent from previous test, P
< .01.
TABLE 3
Longitudinal Changes for Selected Rorschach Variables Among 88 Patients in
Short-Term Psychotherapy
-
First 1st Retest 2nd Retest 3rd Retest
Testing 12-14 months 27-31 months 46-50 months
Average number of sessions 41.2 62.1 62.1
Terminations 49 88 -
Variables Related to n % n % n % n %
Managing stress
D<O
AdjD < 0
EA < 7
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CDI < 3
Dealing with experience
Ambitence
Zd < -3.0
Lambda > 0.99
X + % < 70
X-% >20
Modulating affect
Sum Shading > FM m +
DEPI = 5
DEPl > 5
Afr < .50
CF+C>E%+l
Using ideation
Sum 6 Sp Sc > 6
M- >0
MP > Ada
Intellect > 5
Examining oneself
Fr + rF > 0
3r + (Z)/R > .43
3r + (2)/R < .33
FD > 2
Feeling comforable in interpersonal relationships
p > a + l 23 26 11
T=O 21 23 17
T> 1 26 29 8
Pure H < 2 37 42 27
H < [(H) + Hd + (Hd)] 55 63 33
*Significantly different from previous test, p < .05. **Significantly different from previous test, p
< .01. **Significantly different from baseline test, p < .01.
460 MrEINER AND EXNER
Long-Term Group
less escapist, and less intellectualized in thinking about life events; and more
active, interested, and satisfied in their relationships with others. At the same
time, after 1 year of therapy their frequency of FD > 2 had increased signifi-
cantly, indicating that they had become increasingly involved in examining
themselves. At the second retest (approximately2% years into treatment), FD >
2 had diminished significantly from the first retest and a total of 24 indices of
adjustment difficulty had become significantly less frequent than baseline,
demonstrating that these patients as a group were now more capable then when
they began treatment of managing stress, dealing effectively with their experi-
ence, thinking logically, feeling good about themselves, and enjoying interper-
sonal relationships. Each of these 24 indices remained significantly different
from baseline at the third retesting (approximately 4 years following the
inception of therapy), by which time two thirds of the group had terminated
treatment. Interestingly, the significant decrease in the frequency of Ambitence,
which appeared at the second retesting and was sustained at the third retesting,
was accompanied by a significant increase in lntroversiweness (from 23% of the
group at baseline to 45% after 4 years), but only a slight change in Extra-
tensiweness (from 39% at baseline to 46% at endpoint).
The only two indices aside from FD > 2 that were not significantly less
frequent after long-term therapy involve pathological elevations in Reflections
and the Depression Index. There were infrequent to begin with in this patient
group (14% and 15%, respectively) and hence probably should not be expected
to provide a barometer of improvement for patients taken into intensive
psychotherapy.
It is noteworthy that those indices not showing significant change until the
second retesting cluster in the area of stress management. For D < 0, AdjD <
0, and EA < 7.0, the findings suggest that these long-term patients as a group
were experiencing as much if not more subjectivity felt distress 1 year into
treatment as they were initially. At the 27- to 31-month retest, however, these
RORSCHACH CHANGES IN PSYCHOTHERAPY 461
three indices of coping resource difficulty have not only become significantly less
frequent than they were initially but have also decreased dramatically from the
12- to 14-month retest. D < 0 and AdjD < 0 diminish by more than half, from
39% to 17% of the group, and EA < 7 diminishes by about two thirds, from 27%
to 10% of the group. Interestingly, the D and AdjD indices of difficulty
managing stress continue to decrease significantly in frequency between the
retest at 27 to 30 months and the third retest at 46 to 50 months. Both D < 0
and AdjD < 0 characterized just 5% of the long-term therapy group at this
endpoint. The only other variable to show a significant decrease from the
second to the third retest is Lambda > .99, which appears in just 6% of the group
and indicates progressively greater openness to experience among these patients
extending to 4 years after they entered therapy.
Short-Tlerm Group
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impairment indices: D < 0 (35% in the long-term group vs. 52% in the
+
short-term group) and X % < 70 (30% in the long-term group vs. 46% in the
short-term group). These indications that the short-term group were suffering
more subjectively felt distress and were less in touch with conventional reality
than the long-term group may have influenced their being taken into short-term
rather than intensive dynamically oriented therapy.
However, the two groups at the final retesting, 4 years after entering psycho-
therapy, showed 10 significant differences at the .O1 level, with the long-term
group showing a lower frequency in each instance: in EA < 7 (3% in the
long-term group vs. 14% in the short-term group), Ambitence (7% vs. 29%),
+
X + % < 70 (3% vs. 23%), SumSh > FM m (I% vs. lo%), CF C > FC + +
1 (13% vs. 27%), M - > 0 (7% vs. 23%), Mp > Ma (11% vs. 22%), Intellect >
+
5 (7% vs. 17%),3r (2)/R > .43 (9% vs. 25%), and Pure H < 2 (2% vs. 26%).
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DISCUSSION
1. Better able to manage stress (less D < 0, less AdjD < 0, less EA < 7, less
CDI > 3).
2. More likely to deal with experience attentively, openly, conventionally,
and consistently (less Ambitence, less Zd < -3.0, less Lambda > .99, less
X + % < 70, less X-% > 20).
3. More capable of modulating and enjoying emotional experience (less
SumSh > FM + m, less DEPl = 5, less Afr < .50, less CF + C > FC +
1).
4. More effective in their ideation (less Sum 6 Sp Sc > 6, less M - > 0, less Mp
> Ma, less Intellect > 5).
5. Less preoccupied and more satisfied with themselves (less 3r +(2)/R >
.43, less 3r+ (2)/R < .33).
6. More interested and comfortable in interpersonal relationships (lessp > a
+ +
1, less T = 0, less T > 1, less Pure H < 2, less H < [(H) Hd +
(Hd)]).
ACKNOWLEDGMENT
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Irving B. Weiner
University of Florida Psychiatry Center
3515 East Fletcher Avenue
Tampa, FL 33613