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Chapter 12 Personality: Theory, Research, and Assessment Defining Some Terms • Personality: A person’s unique pattern of thinking, emotion, and behavior; the consistency of who you are, have been, and will become • Character: Personal characteristics that have been judged or evaluated • Temperament: Hereditary aspects of personality, including sensitivity, moods, irritability, and distractibility • Personality Traits: Stable qualities that a person shows in most situations • Personality Type: People who have several traits in common Raymond Cattell and Early Trait Theory • Cattell created 16 Personality Factor, personality test • Surface Traits: Features that make up the visible areas of personality • Source Traits: Underlying characteristics of a personality • By measuring the 16 trait scores, we could develop an assessment of personality McCrae and Costa:The “Big Five” Personality Factors • A “Five Factor” model of personality. Most traits are derived from these 5. – Extraversion – Agreeableness – Conscientiousness – Neuroticism – Openness to Experience The Big Five. According to the five-factor model, basic differences in personality can be “boiled down” to the dimensions shown here. The fivefactor model answers these essential questions about a person: Is she or he extroverted or introverted? Agreeable or difficult? Conscientious or irresponsible? Emotionally stable or unstable? Smart or unintelligent? These questions cover a large measure of what we might want to know about someone’s personality. Personality Theories: An Overview • Personality Theory: System of concepts, assumptions, ideas, and principles proposed to explain personality; includes five perspectives or theories: – Trait Theories: Attempt to learn what traits make up personality and how they relate to actual behavior – Psychodynamic Theories: Focus on the inner workings of personality, especially internal conflicts and struggles – Behavioristic Theories: Focus on external environment and on effects of conditioning and learning • Social Learning Theory: Observational learning. – Humanistic Theories: Focus on private, subjective experience and personal growth – Biological Theories: personality is largely inherited Psychoanalytic Theory and Sigmund Freud, M.D. • Psychoanalytic Theorists: Freud, Adler, Jung, Karen Horney (pronounced “horni”) • Freud was a Viennese physician who thought his patients’ problems were more emotional than physical • Freud began his work by using hypnosis and eventually switched to psychoanalysis • Freud used cocaine and tobacco and died from oral cancer • More than 100 years later, his work is still influential and very controversial The approximate relationship between the id, ego, and superego, and the levels of awareness. The Three Structures of Personality: The Id • Innate biological instincts and urges; selfserving, irrational, and totally unconscious – Works on Pleasure Principle: Wishes to have its desires (pleasurable) satisfied NOW, without waiting and regardless of the consequences The Three Structures of Personality: The Ego • Executive; directs id energies – The decision making component – Partially conscious and partially unconscious – Works on Reality Principle: Delays action until it is practical and/or appropriate The Three Structures of Personality: The Superego • Judge or censor for thoughts and actions of the ego – It is the moral component of our personality – Superego comes from our parents or caregivers; guilt comes from the superego – Our “conscience” Freudian Dynamics of Personality and Anxieties • Ego is always caught in the middle of battles between superego’s desires for moral behavior and the id’s desires for immediate gratification • Neurotic Anxiety: Caused by id impulses that the ego can barely control • Moral Anxiety: Comes from threats of punishment from the superego Freud: Levels of Awareness • Unconscious: Holds repressed memories and emotions and the id’s instinctual drives • Conscious: Everything you are aware of at a given moment including thoughts, perceptions, feelings, and memories • Preconscious: Material that can easily be brought into awareness Freudian Personality Development • Develops in stages (psychosexual stages). Everyone goes through same stages in same order • Majority of personality is formed before age 6 • Fixation: Unresolved conflict or emotional hang-up caused by overindulgence or frustration at one of the stages of development. Freudian Personality Development: Oral Stage • Oral Stage: Ages 0-1. Most of infants’ pleasure comes from stimulation of the mouth. If a child is overfed or frustrated, oral traits will develop – Oral Dependent Personality: Gullible, passive, and need lots of attention. Fixations create oral-aggressive adults who like to argue and exploit others Freudian Personality Development: Anal Stage • Anal Stage: Ages 1-3. Attention turns to process of elimination. Child can gain approval or express aggression by letting go or holding on. Ego develops. Harsh or lenient toilet training can make a child: – Anal Retentive: Stubborn, stingy, orderly, and compulsively clean – Anal Expulsive: Disorderly, messy, destructive, or cruel Freudian Personality Development: Phallic Stage • Phallic Stage: Ages 3-6. Child now notices and is physically attracted to opposite sex parent • Can lead to: – Oedipus Conflict: For boys only. Boy feels rivalry with his father for his mother’s affection. Boy may feel threatened by father (castration anxiety). To resolve, boy must identify with his father (i.e., become more like him and adopt his heterosexual beliefs) – Electra Conflict: Girl loves her father and competes with her mother. Girl identifies with her mother more slowly because she already feels castrated (penis envy) • Both Oedipus and Electra Conflicts are widely rejected today by most psychologists (and probably by most people in this classroom) Freudian Personality Development: Latency and Genital Stages • Latency: Ages 6-Puberty. Psychosexual development is dormant. Same sex friendships and play occur here • Genital Stage: Puberty-on. Realization of full adult sexuality occurs here; sexual urges re-awaken Freud’s Defense Mechanisms • Defense mechanisms are unconscious reactions which protect a person from unpleasant emotions such as anxiety and guilt. – Repression: keeps unpleasant thoughts in the unconscious – Projection: attributing one’s thoughts and feelings onto another person – Displacement: diverts feelings from original source to a substitute target. Defense Mechanisms (contd.) – Reaction Formation: behaving in a way that is opposite to one’s true feelings – Regression: a reversion to immature patterns of behavior – Rationalization: creating false, but plausible excuses to justify unacceptable behavior – Identification: boosting self-esteem by forming real or imaginary alliance with some person or group. Behavioral Theories and Some Key Terms • Behaviorists: Watson, Skinner. • Behavioral Personality Theory: Model of personality that emphasizes learning and observable behavior • Learning Theorist: Believes that learning shapes our behavior and explains personality • Situational Determinants: External (environmental) causes of our behaviors B. F. Skinner’s Theory • Personality is developed generally through the principles of “operant conditioning”. It is a continuous lifelong journey, not through stages. • Rewards, punishment, negative consequences, etc., shape the behaviors we incorporate into our personality. • Skinner dismissed cognitive processes and unconscious forces in personality development. Social Learning Theory • Bandura, Rotter, Mischel. • Social, or Observational, Learning suggests our personality is influenced by observing others, or models. • Some “models” are more influential in our development, such as people we consider more attractive or powerful. Mischel’s Social Learning • Mischel agrees in the basic concepts of social learning theory, but adds that situational factors influence our behaviors. • This theory has come under criticism because it suggests that our personality may be determined by a situation, rather than being determined by an inner structure. Our behaviors are situational specific. Evaluating Behavioral Theories • Critics suggests that Behaviorist Theories: – Have depended strongly upon animal research – Dehumanized personal choice and denied the existence of free will – Relied too heavily upon the StimulusResponse Model. Humanistic Theories • Approach that focuses on the unique qualities of human experience, especially freedom of choice. • Human Nature: Traits, qualities, potentials, and behavior patterns most characteristic of humans • Free Choice: Ability to choose that is NOT controlled by genetics, learning, or unconscious forces • Subjective Experience: Private perceptions of reality • Self-Actualization (Maslow): Process of fully developing personal potentials • Peak Experiences: Temporary moments of selfactualization Carl Rogers’ Person Centered Theory • The Self is a collection of beliefs about one’s own nature, unique qualities, and typical behaviors. • Fully Functioning Person: Lives in harmony with his/ her deepest feelings and impulses • Self concept: Flexible and changing perception of one’s identity • Self-Image: Total subjective perception of your body and personality • Incongruence: Exists when there is a discrepancy between one’s experiences and self-image • Ideal Self: Idealized image of oneself (the person one would like to be) Incongruence occurs when there is a mismatch between any of these three entities: the ideal self (the person you would like to be), your self-image (the person you think you are), and the true self (the person you actually are). Self-esteem suffers when there is a large difference between one’s ideal self and self-image. Anxiety and defensiveness are common when the self-image does not match the true self. More Rogerian Concepts • Conditions of Worth: Internal standards of evaluation • Positive Self-Regard: Thinking of oneself as a good, lovable, worthwhile person • Real Self vs. Ideal Self: a discrepancy in how we perceive our “self” and others perceive us may lead to “incongruence” • Unconditional Positive Regard: Unshakable love and approval Abraham Maslow and Needs • Hierarchy of Human Needs: Maslow’s ordering of needs based on presumed strength or potency; some needs are more powerful than others and thus will influence your behavior to a greater degree • Basic Needs: First four levels of needs in Maslow’s hierarchy – Lower needs tend to be more potent (“prepotent”) than higher needs • Growth Needs: Higher-level needs associated with self-actualization • Meta-Needs: Needs associated with impulses for selfactualization Fig. 12.12 Maslow believed that lower needs in the hierarchy are dominant. Basic needs must be satisfied before growth motives are fully expressed. Desires for self-actualization are reflected in various metaneeds. Characteristics of Self-Actualizers • Efficient perceptions of reality • Comfortable acceptance of self, others, and nature • Spontaneity • Task Centering • Autonomy •Continued freshness of appreciation •Fellowship with humanity •Profound interpersonal relationships •Comfort with solitude •Non-hostile sense of humor •Peak experiences Criticisms of Humanistic Theories • Concepts are difficult to define and measure • Unrealistic view of human nature. Maslow could identify very few “self actualized” people (maybe Oprah) • Not supported by a large body of research Biological Theories Hans Eysenck • A large body of research on Identical Twins, Fraternal Twins, siblings, etc., suggests that personality traits are evidenced by these relations. • Environmental influences played a lesser role. How to Assess Personality (Pg 519-523) • Interview: Face-to-face meeting designed to gain information about someone’s personality, current psychological state, or personal history – Unstructured Interview: Conversation is informal, and topics are discussed as they arise – Structured Interview: Follows a prearranged plan, using a series of planned questions • Halo Effect: Tendency to generalize a favorable or unfavorable first impression to unrelated details of personality (make a good first impression) • Direct Observation: Assessing behavior through direct surveillance Other Types of Personality Assessments • Behavioral Assessment: Recording the frequency of specific behaviors • Situational Test: Real life situations are simulated so that someone’s spontaneous reactions can be observed and recorded More Types of Personality Assessments! • Personality Questionnaire: Paper-and-pencil test consisting of questions that reveal personality aspects – Minnesota Multiphasic Personality Inventory-2 (MMPI-2): Widely used objective personality questionnaire – #1-75 of MMPI Test • Reliability: Does a test give close to the same score each time it is given to the same person? • Validity: Does the test measure what it claims to measure? • Honesty (Integrity) Test: Assumes that poor attitudes toward dishonest acts predispose a person to dishonest behavior An MMPI-2 profile showing hypothetical scores indicating normality, depression, and psychosis. High scores begin at 66 and very high scores at 76. An unusually low score (40 and below) may also reveal personality characteristics or problems. Projective Tests • Psychological tests that use ambiguous or unstructured stimuli; person needs to describe the stimuli or make up stories about them – Rorschach Technique: Developed by Swiss psychologist Hermann Rorschach; contains 10 standardized inkblots (the “inkblot” test) – Thematic Apperception Test (TAT): Developed by Henry Murray, personality theorist; projective device consisting of 20 drawings (black and white cards) of various situations; people must make up stories about the drawings