Introduction
PsyToolkit can run online surveys. Here you can find ready-to-run surveys of psychological scales.
This library has now over a 100 peer-reviewed scales that you can try yourself. Each scale comes with detailed background information! Scales are listed below with handy symbols.
Try them all and compare your own scores to those of
others.
For each survey in this library, you can do two types of things:
-
Learn about various psychological scales.
-
Try the test and see how you score
-
Background, links and references for further reading
-
-
Use the scales for your own research project
-
You can learn from looking at the scripts how to develop your own questionnaires, and collect data online
-
You can copy and paste the code to your own PsyToolkit surveys
-
You can change the questionnaires using the flexible PsyToolkit survey scripting language
-
You can embed reaction time experiments in your surveys. You can simply download (and modify if you wish) workable experiments from the experiment library. |
Using the code
You can learn about the questionnaires and test the questionnaires and see your own scores without having a PsyToolkit account. |
Here are the steps to take if you want to use the code in your own project:
-
Make sure you have registered a (free) PsyToolkit account via www.psytoolkit.org.
-
Go to your PsyToolkit account, and create a new survey (not an experiment, which is different!).
-
Copy the survey code (provided for each scale) and follow instructions.
-
If you want to use it, make sure you also enter information for participants, etc.
There is a complete lesson about how to set up an online PsyToolkit survey study. Click here to go to the lesson. |
Your responsibility
If you copy any of these surveys and use them for your own research, make sure that you read this:
|
Scales for …
Adults
Icon | Meaning (most relevant is indicated) | Icon | Meaning (most relevant is indicated) |
---|---|---|---|
Normal psychological traits |
Particularly negative traits |
||
Related to love, sex, affection |
Particularly positive traits |
||
Related to mental health issues |
Consumer psychology |
||
Related to religion/supernatural beliefs |
Education related |
||
Risk-taking |
Computer/Internet related |
||
Sleep related |
Environmental |
scale | features |
---|---|
Personality profiles |
|
Normal traits |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Difficulties in mental health |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Unusual traits |
|
Histrionic Personality Features (BHPS); attention seeking, etc |
|
Deception |
|
Cognitive self assessment |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Sleep |
|
|
|
Various |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Specific adult groups
scale | features | group |
---|---|---|
University students |
||
Applicants |
||
Teachers |
||
Mothers |
||
People working in Alcoholics Anonymous programmes |
||
People with diabetes |
Demographic questions
When you run your own (online) questionnaire study, you typically will need to ask some demographic questions. For example, how old is the participant and what is their gender. Because these questions come back in so many surveys, there is a short survey that has a whole bunch of these questions ready to run and to choose from. Most likely, you need to adapt these to your specific study.
Learn to develop your own scales
Reading the background articles can help you to learn how to develop your own scales.