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Personality Psychology
Psych 02
Why is personality psychology important?
• Personality shown to be a good predictor of behavior
• Knowing someone’s personality helps us understand one’s behavior
• Personality associated with personal, interpersonal and societal outcomes (Ozer & Benet-­‐Martinez)
• I/O applications
Career choice
Employers/ Companies selecting workers
Different perspectives of personality
• Psychoanalytic
• Cognitive
• Traits
• Biological
• Humanistic
• Evolutionary
• Behaviorism
• Cross-­‐cultural
Major Questions Concerning personality
• Is personality stable?
• Does it remain the same over the lifespan or does it change overtime?
• Is personality global?
• Are personality traits similar across different cultures?
• Is personality hardwired?
• Can we change our personality or are we stuck with these traits?
Psychoanalysis
• Think Freud!
• Unconscious • Id – uninhibited drives
• Ego – realistic drives; • Superego – morality * Psychic determinism
Psychoanalysis
Thinking and consciousness
* Dual processing
primary process thinking (fast, effortless, automatic)
secondary process thinking (slow, conscious, controlled)
• Dream interpretation
• Manifest content vs latent content
Defense Mechanisms
• Serve to alleviate anxiety; psychic conflict
• Denial
à
• Repression à
refusing to accept real events because they are unpleasant
suppressing painful memories and thoughts
• Reaction formation à adopting beliefs contrary to your own beliefs
Defense Mechanisms
• Projection à
attributing unacceptable desires to others
• Rationalization à
creating acceptable justifications for one’s behaviors
• Displacement à
transferring inappropriate energy to a more acceptable target
• Sublimation à redirecting unacceptable desires through social acceptable channels
Parapraxes (aka Freudian Slips)
Traits Perspective
• The Big 5 (McCrae & Costa)
• Conscientiousness
• Agreeableness
• CANOE
• Openness to Experience
• Neuroticism
• Extraversion
• OCEAN
Humanism
• Based on two assumptions:
1. People are basically good
2. Drive to self-­‐actualize
• Carl Rogers
• Abraham Maslow
Humanism
• Carl Rogers
• Unconditional positive regard
Empathy
Being genuine Active listening
Humanism
• Abraham Maslow
Behaviorism
• Behavior is all you can know about; it’s all that matters
• Sources of behavior are in the “environment”, not the “mind”
• Personality traits cannot be seen or measured
Behaviorism
• Personality can be shaped through learning:
• Classical conditioning
• Operant conditioning
• Social learning theory (Bandura)
• We learn how to behave by observing others
Socio-­‐Cognitive Perspective
• Cognitive “process” approaches to personality
• Interaction between our traits and the environment
• Combines principles of learning, Cognition and social behavior to personality
Cognitive Approaches and the Self
• William James and the self
• The “I” vs “me”
I – experiential self
Me – declarative-­‐self
• Actual-­‐ideal discrepancy – depression
• Actual-­‐ought discrepancy -­‐ anxiety
Biological Perspective
• Anatomical
• The human brain
• lobes (e.g., Phineas Gage)
Biological Perspective
• Physiological • Neurotransmitters – dopamine, serotonin
• Hormones – testosterone, cortisol
• Genetic
• Monozygotic vs fraternal twins
• Heritability
Evolutionary Perspective
• Variation in traits essential for survival in the EEA (Environment of evolutionary adaptation)
• Sex differences in mating behavior
• Sexual vs emotional jealousy
• Universal implications
Cross-­‐Cultural Perspective
• Cross-­‐cultural differences; possible conflicts?
• Limits to generalizability – WEIRD (Western, Educated, Industrialized, Rich, Democratic)
• Universals
• Universal human experiences and emotions
vs
• Specifics
• Individualism vs collectivism
• Language barriers
Are Mexicans more or less Sociable than Americans?
Self-­‐reported extraversion, sociability and talkativeness
Behaviors observed in time spend with others, socializing and talking
What are the results?
Do Mexicans and Americans differ in how they are social?
• Mexicans spent more time in:
• Dyadic conversations
• Group conversations
• Public conversations
• Americans spent more time in:
• Phone conversations
• On computer
• Private conversations
Take home messages?