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Trait Approach. Introduction Common Characteristics Gordon Allport Henry Murray Raymond Cattell The Big Five Model The Interpersonal Circumplex Modern Applications of the Trait Approach Criticisms & Limitations Strengths. I. Introduction. II. Common Characteristics.
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Trait Approach • Introduction • Common Characteristics • Gordon Allport • Henry Murray • Raymond Cattell • The Big Five Model • The Interpersonal Circumplex • Modern Applications of the Trait Approach • Criticisms & Limitations • Strengths
II. Common Characteristics • Focus on average behavior • Less concerned with underlying mechanisms • Less to say about personality change
III. Gordon Allport • Nomothetic versus ideographic approaches to personality • Central traits • Secondary traits • Cardinal traits • The proprium
IV. Henry Murray • Personology • Psychogenic needs • Some examples: • Achievement • Affiliation • Dominance • Nurturance • Play
V. Raymond Cattell • Factor analysis • The 16 Personality Factor Inventory
Interpersonal Dimensions Forceful Assertive Dominant Hostile Friendly Cold Cruel Kind Agreeable Submissive Meek Timid
Laws of Complementarity • Dominance pulls submission • Submission pulls dominance • Friendliness pulls friendliness • Hostility pulls hostility
Interpersonal Circumplex Types • Hostile-Submissive Types: • Rebellious Distrustful Personality • Self-effacing Masochistic Personality • Friendly-Submissive Types • Docile Dependent Personality • Cooperative Overconventional Personality
Interpersonal Circumplex Types • Friendly-Dominant Types: • Responsible Hypernormal Personality • Managerial Autocratic Personality • Hostile-Dominant Types • Competitive Narcissistic Personality • Aggressive Sadistic Personality
VIII. Modern Applications of the Trait Approach • Type A Behavior • The MMPI
MMPI • Example of an “empirically derived” test • Questions “earn” their way onto the final test by statistically differentiating different groups of people (people with and without depression, people with and without schizophrenia, people with and without alcohol problems, etc…)
The Biological Perspective • Introduction • Genetic Factors in Personality • Eysenck’s Theory of Personality • Temperament • Cerebral Activation Patterns • Evolutionary Personality Theory
Eysenck’sSupertraits or Types • Extraversion • Neuroticism • Psychoticism
Eysenck’s Hierarchical Model Extraversion Activity Liveliness Sociability Impulsiveness Excitability HR1 HR2 HR3 ……………………………………………………………………………………………………………………. SR1 SR2 SR3 SR4
Extraversion & Mood Positive Mood Score
Buss & Plomin’s Temperament Factors • Activity • Vigor, tempo • Emotionality • Fear, anger, distress • Sociability • Attention of others, share activities, interaction • (Impulsivity)
Temperament and Genetics Degree of Correlation
What if Charles Darwin had been a psychologist? “So, tell me about your mother…”
The Humanistic Approach • Introduction • The Personality Theory of Carl Rogers • Modern Humanistic Concepts
Roots of the Humanistic Movement • Existential philosophy • The ideas of Carl Rogers & Abraham Maslow