REVIEWS COURTESY OF ZXSR

Know Your Own Personality
by Ivan Berg Software Ltd
Mirrorsoft Ltd
1985
Sinclair User Issue 34, Jan 1985   page(s) 37

EYSENCK, THE SHRINK

Memory: 48K
Price: £9.95

Professor Hans Eysenck is one of the gurus of modern psychology, renowned for outspoken and often controversial views on the nature of human thought.

His recent book of personality tests, published by Penguin, became a minor bestseller, and the tests have now been released in the form of a computer program.

It must be emphasised that the tests are not supposed to have any clinical value, but are simply an entertaining questionnaire of the type that appears in glossy magazines, but glorified by the authority of the good professor.

The questions include all the things that you might expect, such as 'Have you ever wished you were dead?' or 'Do you feel you are a failure?'. In amongst these depressing interrogations are more intriguing queries, such as 'Do you eat your meals faster than everybody else?' or 'Would you like to watch a pornographic movie?'

Each test comprises about 200 questions. There is a facility to SAVE the data from each completed test so as to produce a grand display of all your faults and virtues in one soul-destroying blitz.

Taken as entertainment, which is Mirrorsoft's purpose in releasing the program, Know Your Own Personality is good enough fun. One should not, however, believe everything the program says. Eysenck may be a leading authority, but even he cannot be expected to get it right with a silicon cushion between him and his patient.


REVIEW BY: Chris Bourne

Gilbert Factor6/10
Transcript by Chris Bourne

ZX Computing Issue 20, Aug 1985   page(s) 18

Mirrorsoft
£9.95

If you are one of those people who are into 'self analysis' then here's something just for you. It's the usual 'question and answer' thing you find inside magazines occasionally. You have to add up your score at the end and then you are told something you already knew in the first place.

There are three sets of questions to answer, each set having 70 questions. The first is labelled 'Extroversion/Introversion' the next, 'Emotional Stability' and the last is 'Tough/Tendermindedness'. There is a small booklist to assist you with introductory notes from Professor Hans Eysenck and Doctor Glenn Wilson. After each set of questions you can produce a bar graph of your results, either on screen or printer.


REVIEW BY: Clive Smith

Transcript by Chris Bourne

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