Phrase Association Test–Amended and Expanded (PT)

CategoryDetails
DescriptionThe Phrase Association Test–Amended and Expanded (PT; Mandler et al., 1961) is an adaptation of Heath’s (1956, 1960) 22-item Phrase Association Test, designed to evaluate verbal responses to areas of conflict. Respondents are presented with conflictual phrases and instructed to respond with the first phrase or association that comes to mind. The test measures verbal activity concerning specific conflict areas such as Neutral, Aggression, Sex, Dependency, and Competition. It helps narrow the focus and arousal of responses for easier analysis. In the study, agreement between two judges for reliability reached 77% in Study I and 75% in Study II. The primary hypothesis of the study was that anxiety related to a specific area (as measured by the PT) would be negatively correlated with manifest imagery but positively correlated with latent imagery on the Rorschach test. Results showed varying correlations, supporting the hypothesis that anxiety from the PT relates negatively to manifest threatening imagery.
AuthorMandler, George; Mandler, Jean M.; Kremen, Irwin; Sholiton, Robert D.
PurposeTo evaluate verbal activity in response to specific areas of conflict.
ConstructCognitive Defensive Activity; Verbal Response to Threat
Instrument TypeTest
ReliabilityInterrater reliability was determined by percentage agreement between two scorers, reaching 73% agreement for the PT.
ValidityVarious findings supported the validity of the test.
Factor AnalysisNo factor analysis indicated.
Test MethodologyTest Reliability; Interrater Reliability
Test Items29 items
Classification5400 Cognitive Processes, Memory, and Decision Making
Population GroupHuman
Population DetailsSample: Harvard College Undergraduates, Location: United States
KeywordsPhrase Association Test–Amended and Expanded; Test Development; Verbal Responses to Threat; Interrater Reliability; Conflict
Index TermsConflict; Contextual Associations; Emotional Responses; Phrases; Physiological Correlates; Test Construction; Test Forms; Test Reliability; Threat; Verbal Communication
PermissionsMay use for Research/Teaching
ReferenceMandler, G., Mandler, J. M., Kremen, I., & Sholiton, R. D. (1961). The response to threat: Relations among verbal and physiological indices. Psychological Monographs: General and Applied, 75(9), 1–22. https://doi.org/10.1037/h0093803

Phrase Association Test–Amended and Expanded (PT)

  • Neutral

    N1. The horses worked well together
    N2. Steel company made new equipment
    N3. Farmer dug a new well
    N4. Tugs helped ships reach port
    N5. Children given free summer camp
    N6. Architects planned home for family

  • Aggression

    A1. Father convicted for torturing son
    A2. Boy beat mother into unconsciousness
    A3. Mother burned baby in bath
    A4. He suddenly struck his father

  • Sex

    S1. Two male monkeys sexually embraced
    S2. Prostitutes do anything men desire
    S3. Female monkey tried mating male
    S4. He enjoys sleeping with men

  • Dependency

    D1. Mother bears desert baby cubs
    D2. Father neglects his sick child
    D3. Father lions desert their cubs
    D4. Mother sent neglected child away

Phrases for Study II

  • Neutral

    N1. Architects planned home for family
    N2. He built his own boat
    N3. Circus gave them free passes
    N4. The craftsman designed new ornaments
    N5. The dairy farm bought cows
    N6. The horses worked well together
    N7. He overhauled the old motor
    N8. Steel company made new equipment

  • Aggression

  • Against
    A1. He suddenly struck his father
    A2. He spit in his mother’s face
    A3. Boy beat sister into unconsciousness
    A4. He beat up his roommate
  • From

    A5. Father convicted for torturing son
    A6. Mother brutally beat her child
    A7. His brother kicked him in the stomach
    A8. Student attacked by gang

  • Sex

  • Hetero

    S1. His girlfriend is very promiscuous
    S2. He propositioned the waitress
    S3. After the operation he was impotent
    S4. The prostitute slept with the student

  • Homo

    S5. He enjoys sleeping with men
    S6. Homosexuals are easily recognized
    S7. He likes watching nude men
    S8. His roommate made a pass at him

  • Dependency

  • Rejection

    D1. Father neglects his sick child
    D2. She deserted her baby boy
    D3. His brother refused to help
    D4. His roommate would not loan him money

  • Subjugation

    D5. He pleaded with his father
    D6. His mother had to support him
    D7. His sister had to protect him
    D8. He needed help with his homework

  • Competition

    C1. He lost the game to his father
    C2. His mother is smarter than he
    C3. His brother is more popular than he
    C4. He just missed the dean’s list
    C5. He did not fulfill his father’s hopes
    C6. His mother was disappointed with his grades
    C7. He did not get the promotion
    C8. He failed to make any team

Scoring Manual for the Phrase Association Test

  • I. Avoidance

  • 1. Comment on wording or phrasing, reference to task or to other phrases, explicit or implicit (e.g., “These are all bad guys,” “It looks like a headline”).
  • 2. Comment on physical aspects of stimulus material.
  • 3. Asks for repetition of phrase.
  • 4. Gives no substantive response, or says he cannot think of response (whether or not he gives a response).
  • 5. Denies own response or questions its adequacy (e.g., “No,” “I meant . . .”).
  • 6. Simple repetition of stimulus or restatement without addition of new content—may be synonymous expression. Major content of phrases must be restated in order to score. Also score if subject adds only “Why?” to repetition of phrase.
  • 7. Repeats exactly one or two words of the stimulus only.
  • 8. One of three shortest reaction times in record, unless there are ties.

    II. Interference

  • 9. More than one response, even if only fragmentary or if one of the responses is non-substantive. Do not score if second response is a simple elaboration of the first, but always score if there is clearly more than a one-phrase response. Do not score enumerations.
  • 10. Response is unfinished or broken.
  • 11. Repeats own response (one word or more).
  • 12. Change in length from other responses: the longest (shortest) response is at least twice (no more than half) as long as the next longest (shortest). Or response is one of two (but not more) which fulfill his criterion.
  • 13. Gives one-word substantive response or two responses which each consist of a single word.
  • 14. Laughs or sighs.
  • 15. One of three longest reaction times for substantive responses. Also score for absence of a substantive response.

    III. Recoding

  • 16. Misinterpretation or non-sensible response.
  • 17. Evasion. Evades central notion of stimulus by giving irrelevant or tangential response which has some connection with the stimulus. Major criterion is evasion of central meaning of the stimulus phrase, a failure to take into account the essential communication of the phrase. Also score if no substantive response.
  • 18. Reversal of meaning, e.g., from “a does to b” to “b does to a” or from “a hates b” to “a loves b.” Also score if inserts positive qualities for actor engaged in reprehensible deed.
  • 19. Criticizes or questions clarity of meaning (e.g., ” I don’t understand that sentence”).
  • 20. Denial of truth of phrase, explicit (“People don’t act that way”) or implicit (from “a does x” to “b does not do x”). Explicit or implicit denial of stimulus or its consequences for the responder (“It doesn’t matter,” “My mother wouldn’t”).
  • 21. Intensification or approval of deviant behavior. Frequently this changes meaning by making phrase
    seem ridiculously extreme—an undoing by intensification (e.g., “And then he raped her,” “So what!” “Good!”).

    IV. Rationalization

  • 22. Response is in the form of a question.
  • 23. Questions rather than denies the validity of the stimulus phrase. Expresses doubt rather than disbelief (e.g., “I wonder,” “Does that really happen?”).
  • 24. Justifies or defends central theme of phrase by invoking psychological motives such as character structure (“He was weak, abnormal”) or by inventing sufficient psychological causes for the act. Also score if asks for such an explanation or cause for the act or shifts responsibility within the phrase.
  • 25. Reference to norm, e.g., “x is usual, typical, common.” Justification by reference to norm.
  • 26. Introduction of characters, other than subject’s family or friends.

    V. Personalization

  • 27. Reference to self or family or name of friends or acquaintances.
  • 28. Any emotional reaction to statement; any value, ethical, or moral judgment. Must be clear-cut in terms of our cultural norms, not just descriptive adjectives such as “smart.”
  • 29. Affect or value judgment is attributed to actor in phrase.

Cite this article

Mohammed looti (2026). Phrase Association Test–Amended and Expanded (PT). PSYCHOLOGICAL SCALES. Retrieved from https://scales.arabpsychology.com/s/phrase-association-test-amended-and-expanded-pt/

Mohammed looti. "Phrase Association Test–Amended and Expanded (PT)." PSYCHOLOGICAL SCALES, 3 Apr. 2026, https://scales.arabpsychology.com/s/phrase-association-test-amended-and-expanded-pt/.

Mohammed looti. "Phrase Association Test–Amended and Expanded (PT)." PSYCHOLOGICAL SCALES, 2026. https://scales.arabpsychology.com/s/phrase-association-test-amended-and-expanded-pt/.

Mohammed looti (2026) 'Phrase Association Test–Amended and Expanded (PT)', PSYCHOLOGICAL SCALES. Available at: https://scales.arabpsychology.com/s/phrase-association-test-amended-and-expanded-pt/.

[1] Mohammed looti, "Phrase Association Test–Amended and Expanded (PT)," PSYCHOLOGICAL SCALES, vol. X, no. Y, ص Z-Z, April, 2026.

Mohammed looti. Phrase Association Test–Amended and Expanded (PT). PSYCHOLOGICAL SCALES. 2026;vol(issue):pages.

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