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{{SocPsy}}
In 1970 '''Richard Christie''' and Florence L. Geis developed a test for measuring a person's level of [[Machiavellianism]]. This eventually became the MACH-IV test, a twenty-statement [[personality measure]] that is now the standard self-assessment tool of Machiavellianism.
 
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'''Richard Christie''' (1918-1992) was an American social psychologist.
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In 1970 '''Richard Christie''' and Florence L. Geis developed a test for measuring a person's level of [[Machiavellianism]]. This eventually became the [[MACH-IV test]], a twenty-statement [[personality measure]] that is now the standard self-assessment tool of Machiavellianism.
   
   
   
 
[[Category:Machiavellianism]]
 
[[Category:Machiavellianism]]
[[Category:Psychologists]]
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[[Category:American social psychologists]]

Latest revision as of 21:28, 12 April 2010

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Richard Christie (1918-1992) was an American social psychologist.

In 1970 Richard Christie and Florence L. Geis developed a test for measuring a person's level of Machiavellianism. This eventually became the MACH-IV test, a twenty-statement personality measure that is now the standard self-assessment tool of Machiavellianism.