TY - JOUR AU - Warbin, Robert W. AB - St. Louis University University of Missouri PROBLEM Very little information is available about the 6-9/9-6 code type, apparently because it does not occur very frequently. The two studies(3* t h a t involved the 5, largest samples of state hospital patients do not refer t o i t among their 13 most frequent code types. Dahlstrom and Welsh (l) do not include interpretive summaries of either the 6-9 or 9-6 code type, nor do Gilberstadt and Duker@) it among their list 19 code types. However, Marks and Seeman(7)found that their 9-6/6-9 code type occurred frequently enough t o analyze. Of their cases t h a t fit this code type (females only), 857, were diagnosed psychotic. Furthermore, these authors found numerous descriptors associated with this code type : paranoid, excitable, mocdy, delusions, religious and overreacts t o danger. Prognosis was typically poor. Lewandowski and Graham@)also analyzed this code type by means of the split-sample technique, but found zero descriptors significant in both samples. Additional data, including male profiles, seem desirable t o help clarify the true status of this code type. METHOD Subjects and methodology have been described in detail in an earlier article (4). Briefly, Ss were TI - A new empirical automated MMPI interpretive program: The 6‐9/9‐6 code type JF - Journal of Clinical Psychology DO - 10.1002/1097-4679(197301)29:1<60::AID-JCLP2270290122>3.0.CO;2-6 DA - 1973-01-01 UR - https://www.deepdyve.com/lp/wiley/a-new-empirical-automated-mmpi-interpretive-program-the-6-9-9-6-code-HNa1Jhw0u2 SP - 60 EP - 61 VL - 29 IS - 1 DP - DeepDyve ER -