Concept:The Rorschach Inkblot test is a type of projective technique used in psychology to assess personality by interpreting ambiguous stimuli.Explanation:The test was developed by Swiss psychiatrist Hermann Rorschach in 1921. It consists of a standard set of 10 cards with inkblot patterns (five black-and-white, two black-and-red, and three multicolored). During the test, subjects are shown each card and asked to describe what the inkblot looks like to them. Their responses are then scored by psychologists based on categories such as location, determinant, content, and popularity. This method is designed to uncover unconscious aspects of personality, as the ambiguous nature of the inkblots encourages individuals to project their own thoughts, feelings, and experiences onto them. Because it uses ambiguous stimuli and relies on the subject's free interpretation, the Rorschach test is classified as a projective test—not an interview, personality inventory, or behavioral assessment.Answer:A. Projective test