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Main Authors: Dzega, Anton, Elyashar, Aviad, Slobodin, Ortal, Cohen, Odeya, Puzis, Rami
Format: Preprint
Published: 2026
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Online Access:https://arxiv.org/abs/2602.17108
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author Dzega, Anton
Elyashar, Aviad
Slobodin, Ortal
Cohen, Odeya
Puzis, Rami
author_facet Dzega, Anton
Elyashar, Aviad
Slobodin, Ortal
Cohen, Odeya
Puzis, Rami
contents Thematic Apperception Test (TAT) is a psychometrically grounded, multidimensional assessment framework that systematically differentiates between cognitive-representational and affective-relational components of personality-like functioning. This test is a projective psychological framework designed to uncover unconscious aspects of personality. This study examines whether the personality traits of Large Multimodal Models (LMMs) can be assessed through non-language-based modalities, using the Social Cognition and Object Relations Scale - Global (SCORS-G). LMMs are employed in two distinct roles: as subject models (SMs), which generate stories in response to TAT images, and as evaluator models (EMs), who assess these narratives using the SCORS-G framework. Evaluators demonstrated an excellent ability to understand and analyze TAT responses. Their interpretations are highly consistent with those of human experts. Assessment results highlight that all models understand interpersonal dynamics very well and have a good grasp of the concept of self. However, they consistently fail to perceive and regulate aggression. Performance varied systematically across model families, with larger and more recent models consistently outperforming smaller and earlier ones across SCORS-G dimensions.
format Preprint
id arxiv_https___arxiv_org_abs_2602_17108
institution arXiv
publishDate 2026
record_format arxiv
spellingShingle Projective Psychological Assessment of Large Multimodal Models Using Thematic Apperception Tests
Dzega, Anton
Elyashar, Aviad
Slobodin, Ortal
Cohen, Odeya
Puzis, Rami
Computation and Language
Thematic Apperception Test (TAT) is a psychometrically grounded, multidimensional assessment framework that systematically differentiates between cognitive-representational and affective-relational components of personality-like functioning. This test is a projective psychological framework designed to uncover unconscious aspects of personality. This study examines whether the personality traits of Large Multimodal Models (LMMs) can be assessed through non-language-based modalities, using the Social Cognition and Object Relations Scale - Global (SCORS-G). LMMs are employed in two distinct roles: as subject models (SMs), which generate stories in response to TAT images, and as evaluator models (EMs), who assess these narratives using the SCORS-G framework. Evaluators demonstrated an excellent ability to understand and analyze TAT responses. Their interpretations are highly consistent with those of human experts. Assessment results highlight that all models understand interpersonal dynamics very well and have a good grasp of the concept of self. However, they consistently fail to perceive and regulate aggression. Performance varied systematically across model families, with larger and more recent models consistently outperforming smaller and earlier ones across SCORS-G dimensions.
title Projective Psychological Assessment of Large Multimodal Models Using Thematic Apperception Tests
topic Computation and Language
url https://arxiv.org/abs/2602.17108