Deploy Psychological Assessments, Translate, and Validate
Collaborate with Drdeenz to deploy psychometric assessments, collect international research data, conduct reliability analyses, and generate professional assessment reports across multiple languages and populations.
How It Works
A streamlined workflow for psychometric assessment development and deployment.
1. Submit Assessment
Paste your assessment using the standard assessment format.
2. Review & Preparation
We review structure, scoring, dimensions, and reporting requirements.
3. Translation & Deployment
Assessments can be translated and deployed across multiple languages.
4. Data Collection
Collect anonymous participant responses from international audiences.
5. Psychometric Analysis
Generate reliability metrics, scoring models, and validation data.
6. Research Reporting
Receive datasets, reports, and psychometric findings.
Submit Your Assessment
Researchers, clinicians, educators, and assessment developers may submit psychometric instruments for translation, validation, deployment, and research collaboration.
Assessment Format Guide
To ensure accurate scoring, multilingual translation, psychometric reporting, and automated assessment deployment, please submit assessments using the standard Drdeenz Psychometric Assessment Format.
Quick Start Template
Copy the template below and replace the example content with your own assessment.
Title: Example Assessment Short Description: A brief description of the assessment. Category: Personality Type: clinical Background: Procedure: Participation: Scoring: Source: Authors: License: Scale Labels: 0=Never 1=Rarely 2=Sometimes 3=Often 4=Very Often Scale Groups: Dimension One Dimension Two Interpretations: Dimension One|Minimal|Interpretation text. Dimension One|Mild|Interpretation text. Dimension One|Moderate|Interpretation text. Dimension One|High|Interpretation text. Dimension One|Very High|Interpretation text. Overall Interpretations: Minimal|Overall interpretation. Mild|Overall interpretation. Moderate|Overall interpretation. High|Overall interpretation. Very High|Overall interpretation. Questions: Question 1?|Dimension One|0 Question 2?|Dimension Two|0
Parser Field Explanations
- Title → Full assessment name.
- Short Description → Brief assessment summary shown on assessment pages.
- Category → Personality, Clinical, Trauma, Neurodiversity, etc.
- Type → clinical, personality, educational, research, etc.
- Background → Research and theoretical background.
- Procedure → Participant instructions.
- Participation → Eligibility requirements.
- Scoring → Explanation of score calculation.
- Source → Original publication or assessment source.
- Authors → Original assessment authors.
- License → Copyright and usage permissions.
- Scale Labels → Response options displayed to participants.
- Scale Groups → Dimensions measured by the assessment.
- Interpretations → Dimension-level score interpretations.
- Overall Interpretations → Overall assessment score interpretations.
- Questions → Assessment items and scoring definitions.
Advanced Question Format
Basic question format:
Question Text|Dimension|Reverse Scored
Example: 0 = No Reverse Scoring and 1= Reverse Scoring
I often miss the person who died.|Separation Distress|0 I often miss the person who died.|Separation Distress|1 * Reverse
Advanced format with custom answer labels:
Question Text|Dimension|Reverse Scored|Scale Group|||Custom Labels
Examples:
Have you felt suddenly weak and warm?|Autonomic Distress|0|Autonomic Distress|||0=Not at all;;1=Once a week or less;;2=2-4 times a week;;3=5 or more times a week In the past month, have you felt numb or detached from people, activities, or your surroundings?|Emotional Numbing and Detachment|0|Emotional Numbing and Detachment|||0=No;;1=Yes I feel envious of others who have not lost someone close.|Social and Emotional Disconnection|0|Social and Emotional Disconnection|||0=Never;;1=Rarely;;2=Sometimes;;3=Often;;4=Always
Scale Groups Explained
Scale Groups define the major dimensions measured by the assessment. These dimensions are used for scoring, reporting, interpretation, and chart generation.
Example:
Scale Groups: Separation Distress Emotional Pain and Longing Difficulty Accepting the Loss Social and Emotional Disconnection Traumatic Grief Reactions Grief-Related Preoccupation
Each dimension listed in Scale Groups should also appear in:
- Questions
- Interpretations
- Charts and reports
Complete Assessment Example
Source: Prigerson, and colleagues https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/8771222/ Authors: Holly G. Prigerson and colleagues License: Used for educational and research purposes. Interpretations: Separation Distress|Minimal|Feelings of longing, emotional separation distress, and grief-related attachment difficulties generally appear limited or manageable. Separation Distress|Mild|Some emotional longing or separation-related distress may occasionally appear following bereavement. Separation Distress|Moderate|Noticeable emotional longing, attachment-related grief reactions, or separation distress are present. Separation Distress|High|Strong separation distress, yearning, emotional attachment pain, or persistent longing are consistently present. Separation Distress|Very High|Severe separation distress, overwhelming longing, and profound emotional attachment pain are strongly present and may significantly impair adjustment. Overall Interpretations: Minimal|Grief-related emotional distress, separation pain, and bereavement-related difficulties generally appear manageable or limited. Mild|Some grief-related emotional pain, longing, or adjustment difficulties may occasionally appear following bereavement. Moderate|Noticeable grief-related emotional distress, sadness, longing, loneliness, or difficulty adapting after loss are present. High|Strong prolonged grief reactions, emotional suffering, grief-related preoccupation, or emotional disconnection are consistently present across daily life. Very High|Severe prolonged grief reactions, overwhelming emotional pain, profound loneliness, grief-related preoccupation, and major adjustment difficulties are strongly present and may significantly impair functioning.
- Scale Groups
- Interpretations
- Questions
Separation Distressmust be written exactly the same way everywhere. Incorrect examples:
SeparationDistress Separation distress Distress of SeparationThese mismatches can break scoring, translations, reports, and dimension analysis.