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Murray - Personology Personality is located in the brain: "No brain, no personality." - the person is an organic whole - the parts can be studied separately, but "reconstruction" must follow analysis - the "field," the environmental context, must be understood - early childhood events are crucial in shaping adult behavior - committed to "depth psychology" – unconscious determinants of behavior Needs: - determinants of behavior within the person "A need is a construct (a convenient fiction…) which stands for a force…in the brain region, a force which organizes perception, apperception, intellection, conation and action in such a way as to transform in a certain direction an existing, unsatisfying situation….It may be weak or intense, momentary or enduring. But usually it persists and gives rise to a certain course of overt behavior (or fantasy), which…changes the initiating circumstance in such a way as to bring about an end situation which stills…the organism." (Murray, 1938, --. 123-124) (See pp. 234 – 239 in Hall, Lindzey and Campbell's 1978 text, on Reserve in Cameron, for a fuller discussion of needs.) Primary needs – viscerogenic - based in our physical being: needs for air, water, food, etc. Secondary needs – psychogenic - based in our psychological being: needs for recognition, achievement, autonomy etc. Overt (manifest) needs – needs that are allowed more or less direct and immediate expression - expressed in motor behavior Covert (latent) needs – needs that are generally restrained or repressed - expressed in fantasy or dreams - exist covertly because of internal standards for acceptable conduct (superego) Motives (Aim): – the specific goal adopted by a person as an expression of a need - need is a physical condition - motive is the subjective experience The terms "Needs" and "Motives" are often used interchangeably. 1 Press – determinants of behavior in the environment Press is an external condition that creates a desire to obtain or avoid something. alpha press – the way the environment exists in reality beta press - the way in which the person views or interprets their environment Behavior is most closely correlated with beta press. Examples of Press: Poverty Parental rejection Prolonged or frequent illness Thema – an interactive behavioral unit - deals with the interaction between needs and press; both the person and situation must be considered - can involve single subject-object interactions E.g., someone is snubbed and responds in kind: rejection press triggered a rejection need/motive - can involve an individuals' characteristic reaction to a particular press the person may repeatedly try harder after a failure: failure press triggers an achievement need Murray emphasized both the person and the situation must be unde "…the biography of a [person] may be portrayed abstractly as an historic route of themas…For an individual displays a tendency to react in a similar way to similar situations, and increasingly so with age. Thus there is sameness (consistency) as well as change (Murray, 1938, p. 43). Assessing Needs (Motives) Thematic Apperception Test "…when a person interprets an ambiguous social situation he is apt to expose his own personality as much as the phenomenon to which he is attending" (Murray, 1938, p. 531). Apperception – projecting onto an outside (neutral) stimulus 2 - assesses implicit motives (McClelland) - good predictors of broad behavioral tendencies Self-report – assesses motives related to specific goals - predict how a person will act in a specific situation Need for Achievement Need for Affiliation Need for Power Need for Intimacy 3