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Chapter Preview. Psychodynamic PerspectivesHumanistic PerspectivesTrait PerspectivesPersonological and Life Story PerspectivesSocial Cognitive PerspectivesBiological PerspectivesPersonality Assessment. Personality . Pattern of enduring, distinctive . . . ThoughtsEmotionsBehaviors. . . that characterize how an individual adapts to the world.
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1. Chapter 10
Personality
3. Personality Pattern of enduring, distinctive . . .
Thoughts
Emotions
Behaviors
. . . that characterize how an individual adapts to the world
4. Psychodynamic Perspectives Emphasize that personality is primarily unconscious, or beyond awareness
Freud’s Psychoanalytic Theory
Sexual Drive
Most important human motivator
Main determinant of personality
Hysteria
Physical symptoms that have no physical cause
Hysterical symptoms as overdetermined, or having multitude of causes in unconscious
5. Structures of Personality Id
Consists of unconscious drives
Reservoir of sexual energy
Works according to pleasure principle
Ego
Deals with demands of reality
Abides by reality principle
Superego
Evaluates morality of behavior
Reflected in “conscience”
6. Iceberg Model
7. Defense Mechanisms Tactics ego uses to reduce anxiety by unconsciously distorting reality
Displacement
Directs unacceptable impulses at less threatening target
Repression
Pushes unacceptable back into unconscious mind
Foundation for all psychological defense mechanisms
Sublimation
Transforms unconscious impulses into beneficial activities
8. Psychosexual Stages Universal stages of personality development
Erogenous Zones
Parts of body that have especially strong pleasure-giving qualities at particular developmental stages
Adult personality as determined by way conflicts resolved between early sources of pleasure and demands of reality
9. Psychosexual Stages Oral Stage (first 18 months)
Pleasure centers around mouth
Chewing, sucking, biting reduce tension
Anal Stage (18 to 36 months)
Pleasure centers around anus and urethra and their functions
Toilet training
Phallic Stage (3 to 6 years)
10. Phallic Stage Pleasure focuses on genitals
Discovery that self-stimulation is enjoyable
Oedipus Complex
Boy’s intense desire to replace father and enjoy affections of mother
Castration Anxiety
Boy’s intense fear of being mutilated by father
Identifying with father and adopting male gender role to reduce conflict, as foundation for superego
Without experience of castration anxiety, girls cannot develop superego like boys
11. Psychosexual Stages Latency Period (6 years to puberty)
Setting aside all interest in sexuality
No real development, according to Freud
Genital Stage (puberty to adulthood)
Sexual reawakening
Source of sexual pleasure outside family
Fixation
Particular psychosexual stage colors adult personality
12. Defense Mechanisms & Freudian Stages
13. Critics & Revisionists Sexuality not pervasive force behind personality
Oedipal complex not universal
First five years not as powerful in shaping adult personality
Ego and conscious thought more dominant
Ego with separate line of development from id
Sociocultural factors more important
14. Horney’s Sociocultural Approach Freud’s hypotheses lacking support of observable data
Sociocultural influences on personality development
Both sexes envy attributes of other
Women ? Status bestowed upon men
Men ? Reproductive capabilities of women
Need for security, not sex, as prime motive
15. Jung’s Analytical Theory Collective Unconscious
Impersonal, deepest layer of unconscious mind
Shared by all human beings because of ancestral past
Archetypes
Emotionally-laden ideas and images that have rich and symbolic meaning for all people
Anima & Animus
Mandala
Persona
16. Adler’s Individual Psychology People motivated by purposes, goals
Perfection, not pleasure, as key motivator
Compensation
Attempt to overcome inferiorities by developing abilities
Style of Life
Each person’s unique striving for superiority
Birth order
Could influence success of striving for superiority
17. Psychodynamic Perspectives Personality determined by current and early life experiences
Personality as developmental (stages)
Mental transformation of experiences for meaning
Mind as not all conscious
Inner world conflicting with outer demands of reality, creating anxiety
Personality and adjustment as psychology topics
18. Psychodynamic Perspectives Criticisms
Overly negative and pessimistic views
Too much faith in unconscious mind
Too much importance on sexuality
Not a theory that can be tested empirically
Contributions
Childhood as crucial to later functioning
Development understood in terms of stages
Unconscious processes playing a significant role
19. Humanistic Perspectives Person’s capacity for personal growth
Positive human qualities
Ability to . . . .
control our lives
achieve what we desire
Abraham Maslow (1908-1870)
Carl Rogers (1902-1987)
20. Maslow’s Approach Humanistic psychology as ‘third force’
Focus on very best examples of human beings: Self-actualizers
Motivated to develop full potential as human beings
At optimal level of existence
Capacity for ‘peak experiences’
Maslow’s list of self-actualized individuals as biased, in terms of gender and culture
21. Rogers’ Approach Unconditional positive regard
Being accepted, valued, and treated positively
Conditions of worth
Standards to meet to receive positive regard from others
Self-concept
Representation of who we are and who we wish to be
Healthy human relations
Unconditional positive regard
Empathy
Genuineness
22. Humanistic Perspectives Perceiving self and world as essential element of personality
Consider whole person and positive bent of human nature
Emphasis on conscious experience
Criticisms
Too optimistic, overestimating freedom and rationality
Promoting excessive self-love and narcissism
Not holding people accountable for behaviors
23. Trait Perspectives Broad, enduring dispositions (traits) that tend to lead to characteristic responses
Gordon Allport (1897-1967)
Focus on healthy, well-adjusted individuals
Uniqueness of each person and capacity to adapt
Traits
Mental structures that make different situations same
Lexical approach & factor analysis
24. Five-Factor Model Supertraits thought to describe main dimensions of personality
Neuroticism (Emotional Instability)
Extraversion
Openness to Experience
Agreeableness
Conscientiousness
25. Five-Factor Model
26. Five-Factor Model Evidence of five factors of personality in . . .
Different cultures
Animals
Strong relationship between personality traits and well-being
Extraversion ? Higher levels of well-being
Neuroticism ? Lower levels of well-being
27. Five-Factor Model Subjective well-being
Person’s assessment of own level of positive affect
Traits, as enduring characteristics
States, as briefer experiences, such as mood
Enhancing positive mood
Spending more time with loved others
Savoring
Attending to positive experiences and appreciating them
28. Trait Perspectives Practical value of personality traits
Connections between personality traits and . . .
Health
Ways of thinking
Career success
Relations with others
Criticisms
Missing importance of situational factors
Painting personality with very broad strokes
29. Personological Approach Henry Murray (1893-1988)
Personology
Study of the whole person
“The history of the organism is the organism.”
Analysis of Hitler as first “offender profile”
Thematic Appercetion Test (TAT)
Measure of motives, which are largely unknown
30. Life Story Approach Dan McAdams
Our life stories are our identities.
Life Story Interviews
Coded for themes relevant to life stages and transitions
Intimacy Motive
Enduring concern for warm interpersonal encounters
Psychobiography
Means of inquiry that applies personality theory to single person’s life
31. Life Story Approach Extraordinarily rich opportunity for researcher
Criticisms
Difficult and time-consuming
Collecting interviews and narratives
Extensive coding and content analysis
Psychobiographical inquiries . . .
More prone to biases
May not serve scientific goal of generalizability
32. Social Cognitive Perspectives Emphasize . . .
conscious awareness
beliefs
expectations
goals
Incorporate principles from behaviorism
Explore ability . . .
to reason
to think about past, present, and future
to reflect on self
33. Bandura’s Social Cognitive Theory Reciprocal Determinism
Interaction of behavior, environment, and person/cognitive factors to create personality
Observational Learning
Personal Control
Internal Locus of Control
External Locus of Control
Self-Efficacy
Belief that one can master situation and produce positive change
34. Reciprocal Determinism
35. Mischel’s Contributions Critique of consistency in behavior
No evidence of cross-situational consistency
Situationism
Personality and behavior often vary from one context to another
Controversial among personality psychologists
CAPS Theory
Cognitive Affective Processing Systems
Thoughts and emotions about self/world affect behavior
Concerned with how personality works: “It depends”
36. Social Cognitive Perspective Focuses on interactions of person with environment
Highlights observation of behavior
Emphasizes influence of cognitive processes
Criticisms
Too concerned with change and situational influences, rather than enduring qualities of personality
Ignores role of biology in personality
Tends to lead to very specific predictions, making generalizations impossible
37. Biological Perspectives Hippocrates
Personality based on bodily fluids, or humours
Freud
Connection between mind (personality) and body
Allport
Traits as “neuro-psychic,” personality as “psychophysical”
Murray
“No brain, no personality”
38. Eysenck’s RAS Theory Reticular Activating System (RAS)
Located in brain stem
Plays role in wakefulness or arousal
Eysenck’s Theory
All share optimal arousal level
RAS of extraverts and introverts may differ in baseline levels of arousal, with behaviors aimed at regulating arousal around these baselines
But introverts may just be more sensitive to stimuli
39. Eysenck’s RAS Theory Reticular Activating System (RAS)
Located in brain stem
Plays role in wakefulness or arousal
Eysenck’s Theory
All share optimal arousal level
RAS of extraverts and introverts may differ in baseline levels of arousal, with behaviors aimed at regulating arousal around these baselines
But introverts may just be more sensitive to stimuli
40. Gray’s Reinforcement Sensitivity Behavioral approach system (BAS) and behavioral inhibition system (BIS) underlie personality
Differences in sensitivity to rewards and punishers
BAS
Sensitive to rewards
Predisposition to positive emotion
Underlies extraversion
BIS
Sensitive to punishers
Predisposition to fear
Underlies neuroticism
41. Role of Neurotransmitters Dopamine
Function in experience of reward
Factor in BAS or extraversion
Serotonin
Related to neuroticism
Less serotonin ? More negative mood
Inhibition of serotonin reuptake . . .
Decreases negative mood
Enhances feelings of sociability
Does not tell us about potential causal pathways
42. Behavior Genetics Study of inherited underpinnings of behavioral characteristics
Twin Studies
Genetic factors explain differences in big five traits
Autobiographical memories influenced by genetics
Role of genetic factors enormously complex
Genes and environments intertwined
Traits influenced by multiple genes
43. Biological Perspectives Tie personality to . . .
Animal learning models
Advances in brain imaging
Evolutionary theory
Cautions
Biology can be effect, not cause, of personality
Issue of whether personality can change throughout life
44. Personality Assessment Rigorous methods for measuring mental processes
Assess personality for different reasons
Self-Report Tests
Projective Tests
Other Assessment Methods
45. Self-Report Tests Directly ask people whether different items describe their personality traits
Social Desirability
Motivates individuals to respond in ways that make them look better
To address social desirability . . .
Give questionnaire designed to tap into tendency
Design scales so it is impossible to tell what is being measured
Use empirically-keyed test to distinguish known groups
46. Self-Report Tests MMPI
Most widely used and researched empirically-keyed self-report personality test
Used to assess personality and predict outcomes
NEO-PI-R
Geared toward assessing five-factor model
Includes items with face validity
47. Projective Tests Present individuals with ambiguous stimulus
Ask them to describe it, or tell a story about it
Especially designed to elicit unconscious feelings and conflicts
Theoretically aligned with psychodynamic perspectives on personality
48. Projective Tests Rorschach Inkblot Test
Ten inkblots, when described, scored for indicating underlying psychological characteristics
Reliability and validity criticized
Thematic Apperception Test (TAT)
Designed to elicit stories that reveal personality
Higher reliability and validity
49. Rorschach Inkblot Test
50. Thematic Apperception Test
51. Other Assessment Methods Measuring behavior directly
Cognitive assessments
Friend or peer ratings
Psychophysiological measures
Choice depends greatly on theoretical perspective