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Trait. A relatively context-independent pattern of behavior, emotion and interpretation. The trait: definition (Gordon Allport). Traits have more than nominal existenceTraits are more generalized than particular habitsTraits are dynamic, and determine behaviorTraits may be identified empirically.
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1. Trait Theory: The Big 3 or 5
2. Trait A relatively context-independent pattern of behavior, emotion and interpretation
3. The trait: definition (Gordon Allport) Traits have more than nominal existence
Traits are more generalized than particular habits
Traits are dynamic, and determine behavior
Traits may be identified empirically
4. Trait definition, continued. Traits are relatively independent of other traits
Traits are not synonymous with moral or social judgements
Traits may either be viewed idiographically (in the light of the personality that contains them) or nomothetically (on the basis of their distribution in the population)
Acts, and even habits, that are inconsistent with a trait are not proof of the nonexistence of the trait
5. Measurement techniques Self-report questionnaires and rating scales
6. Stages in Test Construction: The construct approach
7. 1. Conceptual definition
8. Conscientiousness is that disposition governing “persevering, unselfish behavior and impelling the individual to duty as conceived by his [or her] culture.” A conscientious person is “honest; know what is right and generally does it, even if no one is watching him [or her]; does not tell lies or attempt to deceive others; respects other’s property. An unconscientious person is “somewhat unscrupulous; not too careful about standards of right and wrong where personal desires are concerned; tells lies and is given to little deceits; does not respect others’ property.”Cattell, R. (1965).The scientific analysis of personality. Baltimore: Penguin.p. 63.
9. 2. Construction of items Do you usually keep emotions under control?
Are you a person who is scrupulously correct in manners and social obligations and likes others to be the same?
Are you cautious and considerate that you do not hurt people’s feelings by unconsidered conversational remarks?
from Cattell, R. (1965).The scientific analysis of personality. Baltimore: Penguin.
10. 2.1. General recommendations for item construction Cover a broader domain than theoretically optimal
Write questions in yes positive and no positive format
11. 3.0. Administer test to large subject population
12. 4.0. Complete item analysis Correlation of scores on each item with total scores
Do the people who score highly on the whole scale also tend to score in the positive direction on a particular theoretically relevant item? (and vice versa)
13. 5.0. Factor analysis Every item is correlated with every other item to produce clusters
“clumps” of correlated measures
14. 6.0. Assess behavior in accordance with scale
15. 7.0. Assessment of convergent and discriminant validity What does the scale measure, that other things (scales, perhaps) measure?
What does the scale measure uniquely?
16. Criteria of a good measure Construct validity (Cronbach and Meehl, 1955) (interrelationship of measure and phenomena in question)
Reliability
Test/retest
Split half
Utility, economy, communicability
Freedom from social desirability bias
17. A Lexical/Statistical Approach
18. Allport and Odbert (1936) 18,000 trait terms in English, mostly adjectives
Reduced to 4500 descriptors of stable traits
19. Cattell (1942) Further restriction to 171 by judgement
Restriction to 16 by factor analysis
20. Cattell’s 16 traits (first three most important) Reserved/Outgoing Less/More Intelligent Emotional/Stable
Humble/Assertive Sober/Happy-go-lucky Expedient/Conscientious
Shy/Venturesome Tough/Tender-minded Trusting/Suspicious
Practical/Imaginative Forthright/Shrewd Placid/Apprehensive
Conserv/Experiment Group/Self-sufficient Casual/Controlled
Relaxed/Tense
21. A Biological/Statistical Approach
22. Eysenck’s Type Approach: Extraversion, Neuroticism and Psychoticism Cattell has too many traits
23. Extraversion Sociability, Impulsivity, Activity, Liveliness, Excitability
24. Characteristics of Extraverts: More talkative
More eye contact on first meeting
Drawn to sales, personnel work, nursing, teaching
More impulsive; more gambling
More sexually active
Higher levels of positive affect
Less affected by punishment
25. Characteristics of Introverts More likely artists, research scientists, engineers
Harder to sedate
More aroused at baseline
More sensitive to affectively relevant stimuli
26. Neuroticism (anxiety)
27. Sample questions: Do you sometimes feel happy, sometimes depressed, without any apparent reason?\
Does your mind often wander while you are trying to concentrate?
Are you inclined to be moody?
Are you frequently “lost in thought” even when you are supposed to be taking part in a conversation?
Are you sometimes bubbling over with energcy and sometimes very sluggish?
28. Characteristics of Neuroticism Emotional instability
Higher levels of negative affect
Increased complaints of poor health
Higher levels of divorce
More awkward social behavior
29. Psychoticism Solitary, troublesome, cruel, insensitive, underaroused, aggressive, likes odd things, foolhardy, upsetting, opposes social custom, impersonal during sex
30. Normal distribution (at least in case of E and N)
31. Heritability Rose et al. (1988) studied 14000 twin pairs in Finland:
Monozygotic r for extraversion: .48; Dizygotic: .15
Monozygotic r for neuroticism: .40; Dizygotic: .12
32. Biological basis
33. Extraverts “tend to have a level of arousal which is too low much of the time, unless their environment can provide excitement and stimulation; hence they tend to be stimulus hungry and sensation seeking.” (Brain stem/cortex arousal system) (Eysenck, H.J. (1975). The Inequality of Man. San Diego.
34. Individuals high in neuroticism tend to have arousable autonomic nervous systems.
35. The Big Five: Lexical/Statistical, updated
36. More sophisticated factor analysis reveals five traits
37. I. Extraversion/Introversion Sociable-Retiring
Fun loving-Sober
Affectionate-Reserved
Friendly-Aloof
Spontaneous-Inhibited
Talkative-Quiet
38. II. Neuroticism Worrying-Calm
Nervous-At ease
Highstrung-Relaxed
Insecure-Secure
Selfpitying-Selfsatisfied
Vulnerable-Hardy
39. III. Openness to experience Original-Conventional
Imaginative-Down to earth
Creative-Uncreative
Broad interests-Narrow interests
Complex-Simple
Curious-Incurious
40. Sample Questions OE I enjoy concentrating on a fantasy or daydream and exploring all its possibilities, letting it grow and develop.
I am sometimes completely absorbed in music I am listening too.
Without strong emotions, life would be uninteresting.
I enjoy trying new and foreign foods.
I find philosophical arguments boring (R).
The different ideas of right and wrong that people in other societies have may be valid for them.
41. Characteristics of those Open to Experience Imaginative, creative, complex, curious, daring
Independent, analytical, untraditional, liberal, broadly interested
42. Characteristics of those Closed to Experience Conventional, down-to-earth, uncreative, simple, incurious, nonadventurous
Conforming, nonanalytical, traditional, conservative
43. IV. Agreeableness/Antagonism Good natured-Irritable
Soft hearted-Ruthless
Courteous-Rude
Forgiving-Vengeful
Sympathetic-Callous
Agreeable-Disagreeable
44. V. Conscientiousness/Undirectedness Conscientious-Negligent
Careful-Careless
Reliable-Undependable
Well organized-Disorganized
Self disciplined-Weak-willed
Persevering-Quitting
45. Childhood
46. The Big Five is also applicable in childhood Agreeableness
negative with conduct disorder
positive with good classroom behavior
Conscientiousness
negative with attention problems
Shiner, R.L. (1998). How Shall We Speak of Children's Personalities in Middle Childhood? A Preliminary Taxonomy. Psychological Bulletin, 124, 308-332
47. Childhood Temperament: EASI (Buss and Plomin, 1975)
48. Emotionality (Neuroticism?) Upset easily
Cry easily
Frightened easily
Easy-going or happy (RI)
Quick Temper
49. Activity Always on the go
Off and running on awakening
Cannot sit still
Prefers quiet games (R)
Fidgets at meals
50. Sociability Likes to be with others
Makes friends easily
Tends to be shy (reverse)
Tends towards independenc (reverse)
Plays by himself (reverse)
51. Impulsivity (revised in 1995) emotional and behavioral control,
discipline and persistence
mental reflection and planfulness.
Buss,A. H. (1995). Personality: Temperament, social behavior, and the self. Boston: Allyn & Bacon
52. Rothbart’s Psychobiological Model of Temperament Three factors
Positive Emotionality
Negative Emotionality
Constraint
Rothbart,M. K., Ahadi,S. A., Hershey,K. L. & Fisher,P. (1996). Temperament in children 4-7 years as assessed in the Children's Behavior Questionnaire. Manuscript submitted for publication.
53. Positive Emotionality approach
high-intensity pleasure
smiling
activity level
impulsivity Gray’s Behavioral Activation System
54. Negative Emotionality discomfort
fear
anger
sadness
shyness
soothability (RI) Gray’s Behavioral Inhibition System
55. Constraint inhibitory control
attentional focus
low-intensity pleasure
perceptual sensitivity Serotonergic function (?)
Spoont
56. Developmental course (Rothbart and Ahadi, 1994) Newborn infant: general distress
frustration emerges at 2 months
fear several months later
2 to 3 months, positive affect: 4 to 6 months: stable differences in surgency/extraversion
smiling, laughing (to novelty and to others) and approach behavior/activity level
57. 7 to 8 months, fear: 10 months, both fear and caution
“shows the beginnings of the inhibition of approach and emotional expressiveness that will constitute one of two powerful temperamental control mechanisms. Development of fear control is followed by effortful inhibitory control emerging late in the first year and developing across the preschool years and beyond.”
Effortful control emerges later in development (after two years?)
sosicalized control (integration of primary affect), correlated with guilt/shame and empathy
58. Approach behavior vs inhibition Inhibited vs uninhibited children:
Kagan, J., Reznick, J.S., Snidman, N., Gibbons, J., and Johnson, M.O. (1988). Childhood derivatives of inhibition and lack of inhibition to the unfamiliar. Child Development, 59, 1580-1589.
59. COHORT DERIVATION 305 caucasian children (21 months old) whose mothers described their children as shy or sociable
117 children assessed in laboratory for behavioral response to unfamiliar people, rooms and objects
60. Major signs of inhibition: long latencies to interact with unfamiliar adults, retreat from unfamiliar objects, cessation of play and vocalization, and long periods of proximity to the mother
Scores reflecting inhibited behaviors were combined to form a continuous index of inhibited behavior ranging from 1 to 56
Most inhibited children (N=28) and least inhibited children selected (N=30). Former scored mean 35 on continuous index, latter 18.
61. Assessment of 43 children at 4 years of age revealed preservation of behavioral differences between groups
as at 21 months, positive relationship between inhibited behavior and high stable heart rate (during solution of difficult cognitive task)
better preservation of behavioral inhibition among inhibited children with high and stable heart-rate than among those with low and variable heart rate
62. Assessment of 46 children at 5 1/2 years: laboratory testing situation, play with single unfamiliar peer, child’s school setting
formerly inhibited children were less talkative and less interactive across all three settings
had higher heart rates, lower heart rate variability, more pupillary dilation (during cognitive tasks), higher salivary cortisol levels, more indication of vocal tension, more urinary norepinephrine activity
aggregate index correlated with index of inhibited behavior at all ages
63. Assessment of 41 children at 7 1/2 years: 22 inhibited; 19 uninhibited exposure to groups of 8-10 unfamiliar children of same age and sex, evaluation for frequency of vocalization and social interaction
exposure to unfamiliar female examiner, evaluation for vocalization and interaction
evaluation of psychophysiological response: heart-rate and salivary cortisol levels
evaluation of memory performance following cognitive stress
assessment of relationship between behavioral inhibition and reflection/impulsivity
64. Group differences Testing situation
latency to sixth spontaneous comment: inhibited, 27.1 minutes, uninhibited, 11.5
number of spontaneous comments: inhibited, 35.8; uninhibited, 70.3
Peer play
proportion of time distant from peers: inhibited, 38.0; uninhiibted, 28.0
total talking time: inhibited, 19.2 minutes, uninhibited, 45.4 minutes
65. Heart rate and HR variability
significant differences between the two groups vanished; however, inhibited children reached their highest heart rate earlier in the battery
reclassification of inhibition, based on current behavior, re-established significant differences in mean heart-rate (inhibited higher)
Cortisol
no differences
66. Prediction of behavior and physiology at age 7 1/2 from earlier indices
aggregate index of behavioral inhibition at 7 1/2 correlated with aggregate indcx at .67 (21 months); .54 (4 years); .57 (5 1/2 years); all p’s < 0.001
aggregate index correlated with mother ratings at all three years (all r > .63; all p’s < 0.001
aggregate index correlated with aggregate physiological index at age 5 1/2 (r= .64, p < 0.001)
67. What does inhibited vs noninhibited mean? unsociable vs sociable?
fearful vs nonfearful?
noncurious vs curious?
68. Patterns of brain electrical activity associated with inhibition/noninhibition Fox, N., and Davidson, R.J. (1987). Electroencephalogram asymmetry in response to the approach of a stranger and maternal separation in 10-month old infants. Developmental Psychology, 23, 233-240.
69. “Recent evidence from the adult neuropsychological literature indicates that the cerebral hemispheres are differentially lateralized for the expression of certain positive and negative emotions...
70. “Evidence both from normal and from brain damaged subjects indicates that it is specifically the frontal region that shows this differential lateralization, with left-sided activation observed during certain positive emotions and right-sided activation associated with certain negative emotions.”
Fox, N., and Davidson, R.J. (1988). Patterns of brain electrical activity during facial signs of emotion in 10-momnth old infants. Developmental Psychology, 24, 230-236.
71. “A number of workers have speculated that the essential continuum along which the hemispheres are lateralized for emotion is approach/withdrawal.”
Fox, N.A., and Davidson, R.J. (1986). Taste-elicited changes in facial signs of emotion and the asymmetry of brain electrical activity in human newborns. Neuropsychologia, 24, 417-422.
72. “... individual differences in patterns of EEG symmetry have been related to depressive affective style in adults... with depressed subjects showing greater relative right-frontal activation during rest when compared with non-depressed subjects.”
Fox and Davidson, 234.
73. “During the fourth quarter of the first year of life, infants display an increased frequency of negative affect in response to certain events. The two most widely investigated stimulus events that elicit this type of emotional response are the approach of an unfamiliar person and the abrupt departure of the mother from the infant’s sight.
74. “Although the behavioral and autonomic responses to these events have been investigated previously, no data are available on the central nervous system manifestations of these emotional reactions.
The principal goal of this study was to examine changes in EEG activity and asymmetry associated with responses to these stimulus events.
75. “A secondary purpose was to identify related changes in the pattern of brain electrical activity to individual differences in behavioral responses elicited by these situations.
Fox and Davidson, p. 233.
76. Subjects 35 ten month old female infants; 19 with usable data
77. Methodology Subjects were presented with
stranger approach, with mother present
mother approach
maternal separation
second stranger approach, with mother absent
while EEG from left and right frontal/left-right parietal scalp regions was recorded
other behavioral responses were videotaped
78. How do babies (last quarter of first year) respond to stranger approach? wide individual differences
common: wariness
less common, negative affect, avoidance of the stranger, crying, cardiac acceleration
79. How do babies (last quarter of first year) respond to maternal separation? wide individual differences
some protest and cry; many display signs of anger (almost always during crying)
response to punishment: aggression and hurt
more sadness indicates more insecurity of attachment?
80. Variable construction videotaped displays of facial emotion, coded using Izard’s Maximally Discriminative Facial Action Coding System; describes 27 facial-movement units that in specific combinations identify 10 affect expressions.
behaviors coded for vocalization, gaze aversion, crying, motor movement, frowning, and avoidance
81. Results: Facial and behavioral high incidence of facial joy to stranger approach, in maternal presence, and mother approach
mother absence provoked anger, and decreased incidence of joy
anger as response to punishment
stranger approach in absence of mother provoked sadness and anger
not fear
82. Results: EEG mother enter produced more left frontal activation than right frontal
mother reach produced more left frontal activation than mother entrance
vocalization in the mother approach condition correlated positively with left-frontal activation
83. Results, EEG, continued 6/14 infants cried during maternal separation, 8 did not
infants who cried in response to maternal separation showed a large increase in relative right-frontal activation during this condition, compared to the condition immediately before
84. Patterns of brain electrical activity during facial signs of emotion Fox, N., and Davidson, R.J. (1988). Patterns of brain electrical activity during facial signs of emotion in 10-momnth old infants. Developmental Psychology, 24, 230-236.
85. Subjects: 35 10-month old infants
86. Methodology: EEG analysis and facial coding stranger approach, mother present
mother approach
mother separation
stranger approach, mother absent
87. Results joy to mother approach included activation of zygomatic and orbicularis oculi
“joy” to stranger did not involve orbicularis oculi
former smile was associated with relative left frontal activation; latter with right frontal.
Facial expressions of anger and sadness exhibited in the absence of crying were associated with left frontal activation; in presence of crying, with right frontal activation
88. Taste-elicited changes Fox, N.A., and Davidson, R.J. (1986). Taste-elicited changes in facial signs of emotion and the asymettry of brain electrical activity in human newborns. Neuropsychologia, 24, 417-422.
89. Methodology and subjects application of water, sucrose, and citric acid solutions to 16 newborn infants
measurement of facial emotion and EEG
90. Results: facial emotion water elicits interest and some disgust
sugar elicits more interest, less disgust
citric acid elicits as much interest as sugar, and more disgust than water
91. Results: EEG sucrose produced left-sided activation
92. Comments: consideration of cues of reward, cues of punishment, reward and punishment
93. Left frontal cortex, exploration, and affect dexterity of hands
mediation of language by hands
localization of language
activation of left frontal cortex and pleasure
94. Right frontal cortex deactivation of right frontal cortex as satiating or otherwise calming
95. Left hemisphere: exploration, and the known
96. Right hemisphere: the unknown the appearance of the unexpected
the comprehension of affect
the comprehension of melody and the emotional content of speech
affect emerges where adaptation is the weakest
the comprehension of imagery, metaphor, analogy and humour
97. “Goldberg and Costa conclude that... the right hemisphere has a greater capacity for dealing with informational complexity and for processing many modes of representation within a single task, whereas the left hemisphere is superior at tasks requiring detailed fixation on a single, often repetitive, mode of representation or execution...
there appears to be “a gradient of relative hemispheric involvement in a wide range of cognitive processes, reflecting their degree of routinization.
Springer, S.P., and Deutsch, G. (1989). Left Brain, Right Brain. New York: W.H. Freeman, p. 311.
98. Extreme levels of negative affect may predispose to avoidant adaptation (maladaptation) By contrast, absence of anxiety may impair internalization of moral standards for behavior
99. “Child temperament and parental socialization practices are again show to interact developmentally.
Parents may find that less coercive discipline techniques, such as appeals to the child’s ability to experience distress in response to antisocial behavior, may be required to regulate moral behavior in the more fearful or inhibited child.
However, such appeals will be less effective if they are not used by the parent, and may be less effective for less inhibited children.”
100. Environmental fit, and intelligence “Although a child may be behaviorally inhibited, parents may work to minimize separation, to regulate exposure to novel objects, people and situations, and to adapt situations to their child’s distress and objections to such exposure.”
graduated exposure as cure
the capacity to regulate the environment through creative action (a good definition of intelligence)
Also: Martin (1989) reported (a) negative longitudinal relation betwen temperamental activity and distractibility and subsequent reading and math achievement and (b) positive relations between temperamental persistence and subsequent achievement.”
the problems with extraversion in school
101. Constraint
102. “Kochanska (1991) found that children’s self-regulation, as indicated by their compliance with maternal demands at age two, predicted their performance on measures of conscience at age 8 to 10.”
103. Self-imposed delay of gratification 4 year old child seated at table with bell; offered
one marshmallow or two
“I am leaving. If you wait, you can have two. If you ring bell, I will come back, but you only get one.”
delay up to 15-20 min
Shoda, Y., Mischel, W., Peake, P.K. (1990). Predicting Adolescent Cognitive and Self-Regulatory Competencies From Preschool Delay of Gratification Identifying Diagnostic Conditions. Developmental Psychology, 26, 978-986.
104. Predicts In a recent follow-up study, preschool children who delayed gratification longer in the self-imposed delay paradigm were described more than 10 years later by their parents as adolescents who were significantly more competent
Specifically, when these children became adolescents, their parents rated them as more academically and socially competent, verbally fluent, rational, attentive, planful, and able to deal well with frustration and stress.
105. Constraint and Executive Control? Seguin, Tremblay, Pihl
EF and aggression
Emotional Intelligence
Goleman, 1998 Serotonergic Function (?)