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PLEASE REMEMBER… TURN OFF YOUR CELL PHONES! DON’T TALK DURING THE LECTURE. I HAVE BEEN GETTING COMPLAINTS AGAIN. IF I HAVE TO STOP LECTURING I WILL, BUT YOU’LL STILL BE RESPONSIBLE FOR THE MATERIAL I WOULD HAVE COVERED! Copyright © 2005 Pearson Education Inc. Personality and Its Assessment Chapter 12 Copyright © 2005 Pearson Education Inc. What Is Personality? LOBJ 12.1 • Personality is a pattern of relatively permanent traits, dispositions, or characteristics that leads to some consistency in a person’s behaviour – – – – – It is the result of both genetics and experience Nature and nurture Why do you “know” some people? Consistency/predictability over time and circumstance What are some “personality” words? Copyright © 2005 Pearson Education Inc. Psychodynamic Theories • Psychodynamic theories focus on how unconscious processes direct day-to-day behavior • The most famous of these approaches was the psychoanalytic theory of Sigmund Freud • Freud was an Austrian physician who developed his theory while treating people with physical and mental problems Copyright © 2005 Pearson Education Inc. Psychodynamic Theories • From his work with these patients, Freud began to formulate a theory that centered on early childhood experiences and fantasies – Psychoanalysis • Approach to therapy – Psychodynamic Theory • Explanation for behavior and personality Copyright © 2005 Pearson Education Inc. Psychodynamic Theories LOBJ 12.3 Freud’s psychoanalytic theory rests on several assumptions: 1. Human experience takes place on three • levels of consciousness Preconscious, conscious, unconscious 2. Human functioning is influenced by three basic structures of the mind Id, Ego, and Superego 3. The foundation of personality is shaped by early childhood experiences Copyright © 2005 Pearson Education Inc. Psychodynamic Theories 4. Parental punishment of a child’s LOBJ 12.3 sexual and aggressive behaviours results in repression of part of these experiences and leads to psychological conflict 5. Conflict creates anxiety, and people protect themselves against anxiety with defence mechanisms (will cover in lab next week; take your book to lab! LOBJ 12.5) Copyright © 2005 Pearson Education Inc. Freud: Structures of the Mind • The id is the source of a person’s instinctual energy either sexual or aggressive and works by the pleasure principle • The ego seeks to satisfy an individual’s instinctual needs in accordance with reality • The superego provides an conscience ego ideal and a Copyright © 2005 Pearson Education Inc. The Id, the Ego, and the Superego Copyright © 2005 Pearson Education Inc. Development of Personality LOBJ 12.4 • Freud argued that people pass through five stages of personality development that are associated with conflicts with erogenous zones Copyright © 2005 Pearson Education Inc. Development of Personality • First stage is the oral stage • From birth to age 2, the infant’s instincts focus on the mouth as the primary pleasure center • Adults who remain attached to the oral stage or revert to it during intense anxiety display traits of an “oral” personality that include biting objects, smoking, or overeating Copyright © 2005 Pearson Education Inc. Development of Personality • Stage two is the anal stage (age 2 to 3) • Children learn to control the immediate gratification they obtain through defecation • They learn to respond to some of parents’ and society’s demands • Adults who had difficulty in the stage tend to have problems with orderliness (or lack of it) – Anal retentive – Anal expulsive Copyright © 2005 Pearson Education Inc. Development of Personality • The third stage is the phallic stage (age 4 – 7) • During this stage children pass through what Freud termed the Oedipus complex that involves unconscious wishes to have sexual intercourse with one parent • During the Oedipus complex the child wants to replace the other parent • This rivalry produces castration anxiety • During the same stage girls develop penis envy – Where’s mine? • The Oedipus complex is resolved by identifying with the same sex parent – If you can’t beat ‘em, join ‘em. • This leads to acquisition of a superego Copyright © 2005 Pearson Education Inc. Development of Personality • The fourth stage is latency (from age 7 to puberty) • During latency, sexual urges are inactive (latent) • Energy devoted to other things – School – Sports • Stage five is the genital stage • Begins with the onset of puberty • Failure to pass through earlier stages successfully may lead to unresolved conflicts throughout adulthood – Skills Copyright © 2005 Pearson Education Inc. Sex and Aggression LOBJ 12.4 • Freud felt behaviour was energized by two basic instinctual drives • The drive toward life, expressed through sexual energy (eros) • The drive toward death, expressed through aggression (thanatos) • Freud’s theory focused mainly on the energy of the sexual instinct, libido Copyright © 2005 Pearson Education Inc. Relevant today? • • • • • LOBJ 12.6 The father of psychoanalytical theory. Major ground breaking ideas for the 1900s Became popular in the 20s and 30s Hitchcock was fascinated with Freud’s theory Some of his ideas stand today – Parent/child relationships – Defence mechanisms – Unconscious processes • Controversial today, many don’t consider his • theory to be valid, others are hard core Freudians Have to know about it to understand society, culture, and where psychology has come from Copyright © 2005 Pearson Education Inc. Adler and Individual Psychology • Alfred Adler was one of the original members of Freud’s Vienna Psychoanalytic Society before having a falling out with Freud • Adler acknowledged the role of heredity and environment in furnishing the building materials of personality • Adler called the ability to shape our own personality creative power • Humans are motivated by feelings of inferiority; we need to overcome and achieve success. LOBJ 12.7 • We are by nature selfish • • • • • and social. We are also conscious, not mainly unconscious. We need not be the victims of primitive drives. We are self-conscious and capable of improving ourselves and the world around us. Our main concerns in life are a vocation, communal living, and love. We are by nature unified. Copyright © 2005 Pearson Education Inc. Adler and Feminism • Maybe the first “feminist” • • • theorist (early 1900s) He deplored the inferior status of women and blamed men’s aggressiveness Men force inferior roles on women There is no biological inferiority to justify women’s inferior status – Penis envy! Ha! • “All our institutions, our traditional attitudes, our laws, our morals, our customs, give evidence of the fact that they are determined and maintained by privileged males for the glory of male domination…Nobody can bear a positon of inferiority without anger and disgust…That women must be submissive is…(a) superstition…. (Adler, 1927) Copyright © 2005 Pearson Education Inc. Jung and Analytical Psychology • Another important • • • • theorist to break from Freud was Carl Jung Jung believed people are motivated to attain selfrealization or perfection It’s not about sex, it’s about finding meaning in life. We have what Jung called, the collective unconscious :a shared storehouse of primitive ideas and images a Archetypes –come to grips with LOBJ 12.8 • Tests of Courage: • Shadow – the dark side • • • • • of our personality; deal with it! Anima (for males) Animus (for females) Great Mother Wise Old Man Self Copyright © 2005 Pearson Education Inc. Behavioral Theory of Personality • I can’t see inside your mind, so why even consider that? LOBJ 12.9 & 12.10 • VERY different from the psychodynamic theories! • Behaviourists believe personality is acquired through – Reinforcement (operant conditioning) – Natural selection • Need to survive – Cultural evolution • Language & technology Copyright © 2005 Pearson Education Inc. Traits and Type Theories • A trait is any readily- identifiable, stable quality that characterizes an individual from other individuals (continuum) – Cheerful – Shy • Types are personality categories in which broad collections of traits are loosely tied together and interrelated – Level-headed • Calm - LOBJ 12.11, 12.12, & 12.13 • Gordon Allport – Personal Disposition – Cardinal, central, secondary traits = you • Raymond B. Cattell – Factor analysis (gps variables) – Trait sets or clusters – Surface & source • Hans Eysenck – Types, traits, habits • Extraversion- Introversion (E) • Neuroticism-Stability (N) • Psychoticism-Superego Function (P) • Makes rational decisions Copyright © 2005 Pearson Education Inc. The Five Factor Model • Five broad categories of traits – Five Factor Model – The Big Five • Researchers think of the five factors as “supertraits” Genetics of personality? Read pg. 431 LOBJ 12.14 & 12.15 • Extraversion- • • • • introversion Agreeablenessantagonism Conscientiousnessundirectedness Neuroticism-stability Openness to experience • Description not explanation • http://similarminds.com/bigfive .html Copyright © 2005 Pearson Education Inc. Humanistic Psychology LOBJ 12.16 • Reaction to Psychodynamic, Behaviouristic, & Type views • Abraham Maslow and Carl Rogers • People are motivated to achieve personal goals by internal forces – Phenomenological Approach – Self-determination Copyright © 2005 Pearson Education Inc. Maslow and Self-Actualization LOBJ 12.17 • Maslow conceives of motives as forming a hierarchy • Lower needs, such as those for food and water, are at the bottom of the hierarchy • Self-actualization is the final level of psychological development – Self-actualized individuals accept themselves, others, and nature Copyright © 2005 Pearson Education Inc. Freud v. Maslow Copyright © 2005 Pearson Education Inc. Rogers and Self Theory Carl Rogers made three basic assumptions about behaviour: • – – – Behaviour is goaldirected People have the potential for growth How individuals see the world determines how they behave LOBJ 12.18 • Inborn tendency toward fulfillment, a tendency toward actualizing one’s essential nature attained only if certain conditions are met – Empathy – Unconditional positive regard – Congruence People who receive empathy and unconditional positive regard from a congruent partner become a “fully-functioning person” Copyright © 2005 Pearson Education Inc. Freud v. Rogers Copyright © 2005 Pearson Education Inc. Personality Assessment LOBJ 12.25 • Assessment is the process of evaluating individual differences through tests, interviews, observations, and recording physiological processes – Projective tests – Personality Inventories Copyright © 2005 Pearson Education Inc. Projective Tests LOBJ 12.26 • The basic idea: • – the unconscious directs daily behaviour and thoughts Projective tests are used to uncover unconscious motives • The Rorschach Inkblot Test • is a classic projective test Examinees say what they see in a series of 10 inkblots, shown one at a time Copyright © 2005 Pearson Education Inc. Thematic Apperception Test LOBJ 12.26 • The Thematic Apperception Test (TAT) is more structured than the Rorschach • It consists of a series of black-and-white pictures that depict at least one person in an ambiguous situation • People taking the TAT are asked to tell a story describing the situation Copyright © 2005 Pearson Education Inc. Personality Inventories • Personality inventories generally consist of true/false or multiple choice items to which people respond – objective • Well-constructed inventories tend to be valid predictors of performance in a wide array of situations LOBJ 12.27 • One of the most widely used personality tests is the Minnesota Multiphasic Personality Inventory2nd Edition (MMPI-2) • The norms of the MMPI-2 are based on profiles of normal people and groups of psychiatric patients Copyright © 2005 Pearson Education Inc.