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Psychology Terms - Allport–Vernon–Lindzey Study of Values
A test intended to assess the comparative strengths of the six fundamental values delineated by German psychologist and educator Eduard Spranger (1882–1963) in his work Lebensformen (1914, English edition Types of Men, 1928), specifically theoretical, economic, artistic, social, political, and religious values. The assessment comprises a series of multiple-choice questions regarding various activities or occupations, from which the respondent selects those they find most intriguing. It is frequently seen as fundamentally a *interest inventory. Also referred to as the Study of Values. [The assessment is named after the American psychologist Gordon W. Allport (1897–1967), the English psychologist Philip E. Vernon (1905–87), and the American psychologist Gardner Lindzey (1920–2008), who collaboratively published its revised edition in 1951, following an initial version released by Allport and Vernon in 1931.]
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