User talk:Takamine45Your recent editsHello. In case you didn't know, when you add content to talk pages and Wikipedia pages that have open discussion, you should sign your posts by typing four tildes ( ~~~~ ) at the end of your comment. You may also click on the signature button located above the edit window. This will automatically insert a signature with your username or IP address and the time you posted the comment. This information is useful because other editors will be able to tell who said what, and when. Thank you. --SineBot (talk) 05:02, 10 August 2009 (UTC) JMHHi Takemine, Thank-you for your comments. I note that JMH is currently under editing restrictions on the ADHD pages [1] for edit warring and incivility. Not sure how this helps with the real world damage being done here though.--Vannin (talk) 05:27, 10 August 2009 (UTC) TakaThank you for taking an interest in Wikipedia. It seems that the goal of many psychologies are at odds with the goals of Wikipedia. Are you going to attempt to hide the responses of the Glasgow Coma Scale soon? Doc James (talk · contribs · email) 06:06, 10 August 2009 (UTC)
Sharing information with a "health care team" is different than sharing test contents on wikipedia. But again, your responses never actually get at the initially issues I posed to you. You always respond with some tangential argument that is entirely unfounded if you actually read what was posed to you. As i have stated on several occasions, this is NOT about test "secrecy," this is about maintaining the validity of each particular test. The college board does not release the SAT because if they did, a high score becomes meaningless in evaluating one's aptitude; they are not trying to be secretive for some magical or mystical reason; the same goes with psychologists - we want to measure what are tests were designed to do. If someone becomes familiar with a particular tests, rather than measuring some cognitive function, we are then measuring their familiarity with the test. So stop waving a wand that says we are robbing DocJames and others of their curious pursuits - we are doing this for the good of our patients - we measure their abilities, skills, and deficits to outline effective treatment strategies (like cognitive rehab). Since you've asked me if we should remove the GCS scale content, i'll ask you - do you think it would actually benefit society, for example, if the SAT were put on wikipedia?
James, none of this is meant as personal, although you seem to have become quite personally involved in some of this. I am sorry you have been saddened by all of this; i do not believe i have been less than civil (and certainly not "hateful"). Do not mistake substantive critiques of your arguments as being personal in nature. One of my difficulties is that you have not addressed some of the more pressing concerns I have brought up. For example, you previously mentioned the Rorschach was specifically important to have the images in the entry due to it's popularity. I find it difficult to accept such an argument with something like the Wisconsin or Rey-O. I asked you this earlier, has a layperson even heard of these instruments. Of course not. In many ways, they really don't even merit a comprehensive entry (you most certainly would not find them in a bound encyclopdia). And just because you can find something on google (and you have to put some effort into even that) doesn't mean that it's okay to put it in wikipedia. I have not personally removed any material, but am against putting many of our test methods and stimuli on because they directly impact our ability to care for our patients. Simple as that. Really. It is. I promise. I can go on and on. And no wikipedia policy comes close to that for me. And i have a hard time imagining the person who does not at least strive to understand this in more detail before behaving in such an assured manner about such issues (at minimum, talk with some of the neuropsychologists at your university about this over a few lunches to maybe gain a personal appreciation for this - maybe even visit their lab/clinic - and yes, they will likely be more than willing to show you around and talk about what it is they do - most thoroughly enjoy doing so).
WCST and othersHi there, thanks for getting in touch on my talk page. I'm afraid I don't really feel qualified (or able to spare the time) to weigh in on these pages, but your comment did spur a thought or two. Increasingly I think we as a field all need to take a step back and have a long hard think about whether we should all be using tests like the Wisconsin at all anymore. You only need to look at Nintendo's brain trainer series or other games available online or as facebook apps that use common neuropsychological principles (such as trail-making or stroop) in the form of games. These aren't just available to young whiz-kids anymore, there are whole clinics of Parkinson's patients being given neuro-rehab on the Wii one minute, then being tested by a neuropsychologist the next! As a profession we have to look at what the internet is doing to knowledge; freeing it whether we like it or not, and adapt. There is no putting the genie back in the bottle. From now on if anyone sends me a paper to review featuring common neuropsych tests (that have not been updated in some time) I am going to insist they mention non-naiivete to the tests as a limitation. If I may have a few lines of soapbox I will say that the Rorschach is in my humble opinion a load of twaddle and it's important that the public see how fruitless a test it is so they can be protected against it. Most people who are going to search for WCST are going to be students; patients are unlikely to be told its technical name, especially in advance of testing. Moreover it's the responsibility of every decent neuropsychologist to anticipate patients knowing the test materials and pretending not to (just the other day I saw someone who was surprisingly good at serial sevens...) but the most important thing is the interpretation by an experienced expert, not just an individual test score reported back without context. WP's policies will never please all of the people all of the time; I'm sure the countless individuals and companies with "criticism" sections will attest to that. Sorry not to have a clearer answer, I hope you and your fellow editors find a way to get on to the same page --PaulWicks (talk) 02:20, 16 August 2009 (UTC) |
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