1 / 52

Chapter 12 Personality

Chapter 12 Personality. Chapter Preview. Psychodynamic Perspectives Humanistic Perspectives Trait Perspectives Personological and Life Story Perspectives Social Cognitive Perspectives Biological Perspectives Personality Assessment Personality and Health and Wellness. Personality.

jacoblong
Download Presentation

Chapter 12 Personality

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Chapter 12 Personality

  2. Chapter Preview Psychodynamic Perspectives Humanistic Perspectives Trait Perspectives Personological and Life Story Perspectives Social Cognitive Perspectives Biological Perspectives Personality Assessment Personality and Health and Wellness

  3. Personality …a pattern of enduring distinctive thoughts, emotions, and behaviors that characterize the way an individual adapts to the world

  4. Psychodynamic Perspectives personality is primarily unconscious understanding personality involves exploring the symbolic meanings of behavior and the unconscious mind early childhood experiences sculpt the individual’s personality

  5. Freud’s Psychoanalytic Theory Freud and Psychoanalysis • sex drive – main determinant of personality development Hysteria • physical symptoms without physical cause • overdetermined – multiple unconscious causes Iceberg Analogy of Human Personality

  6. Personality Structure

  7. Personality Structure Id • instincts and reservoir of psychic energy • pleasure principle Ego • deals with the demands of reality • reality principle Superego • moral branch of personality; “conscience”

  8. Defense Mechanisms • conflict between the id, ego, and superego results in anxiety • defense mechanisms reduce anxiety by unconsciously distorting reality – not necessarily unhealthy • repression • foundation for all defense mechanisms • push unacceptable impulses out of awareness

  9. Defense Mechanisms repression rationalization displacement sublimation projection reaction formation denial regression

  10. Defense Mechanisms

  11. Defense Mechanisms

  12. Psychosexual Stages Oral Stage: 0-18 Months • infant’s pleasure centers on the mouth Anal Stage: 18-36 Months • child’s pleasure involves eliminative functions Phallic Stage: 3-6 Years • child’s pleasure focuses on the genitals • Oedipal complex • castration anxiety

  13. Psychosexual Stages

  14. Psychosexual Stages (cont’d) Latency Stage: 6 Years - Puberty • psychic “time-out” • interest in sexuality is repressed Genital Stage: Adolescence and Adulthood • sexual reawakening • source of sexual pleasure is someone else Fixation - remain locked in particular developmental stage (e.g., anal retentive)

  15. Dissenters and Revisionists sexuality – not pervasive force behind personality early experience –not as powerful as Freud thought importance of conscious thought sociocultural influences

  16. Dissenters and Revisionists Horney’s Sociocultural Approach • both sexes envy the attributes of the other • need for security, not sex, is primary motivator Jung’s Analytical Theory • collective unconscious and archetypes Adler’s Individual Psychology • perfection, not pleasure, is key motivator

  17. Evaluating Psychodynamic Theory Criticisms • too much emphasis on early experiences • too much faith in unconscious mind’s control • too much emphasis on sexual instincts • theory can not be tested Contributions • importance of childhood experiences • development proceeds in stages • role of unconscious processes

  18. Humanistic Perspectives …emphasis on a person’s capacity for personal growth and positive human qualities

  19. Humanistic Perspectives Abraham Maslow • third force psychology • self-actualization • peak experiences • biased since focus was on highly successful individuals

  20. Humanistic Perspectives Carl Rogers • personal growth and self-determination • unconditional positive regard - conditions of worth - self-concept • empathy • genuineness

  21. Evaluating Humanistic Perspectives Contributions • self-perception is key to personality • consider the positive aspects of human nature • emphasize conscious experience Criticisms • too optimistic about human nature • promotes self-love and narcissism

  22. Trait Perspectives Trait • an enduring disposition that leads to characteristic responses • traits are the building blocks of personality Trait Theories • people can be described by their typical behavior • strong versus weak tendencies

  23. Trait Perspectives Gordon Allport • personality understood through traits • behavior consistent across situations • lexical approach  4500 traits W. T. Norman • five factor model • broad traits – main dimensions of personality

  24. Five Factor Model of Personality

  25. Five Factor Model of Personality Do the big five show up in the assessment of personality in cultures around the world?

  26. Five Factor Model of Personality Do the big five personality traits show up in animals?

  27. Evaluating Trait Perspectives Contributions • traits influence health, cognitions, career success, and interpersonal relations Criticisms • ignores the role of the situation in behavior • ignores nuances of an individual’s personality

  28. Personological Perspectives …focusing on an individual’s life history or life story Henry Murray • personology: the study of the whole person • motives are largely unconscious • thematic apperception test (TAT) - need for achievement, affiliation, and power

  29. Life Story Approach Dan McAdams • our life story is our identity • intimacy motivation Psychobiography • applying personality theory to one person’s life

  30. Evaluating Life Story Approach Contributions • rich record of an individual’s experience Criticisms • difficult and time-consuming - extensive coding and content analysis • prone to bias • not easily generalized

  31. Social Cognitive Perspectives • emphasize conscious awareness, beliefs, expectations, and goals • incorporates principles from behaviorism when exploring: - reasoning - beliefs - self reflection - interpretation of situation

  32. Social Cognitive Perspectives Albert Bandura • reciprocal determinism - behavior, environment, and cognitive factors interact to create personality Key Processes and Variables • observational learning • personal control • self-efficacy

  33. Reciprocal Determinism

  34. Social Cognitive Perspectives Walter Mischel Situationalism - behavior and personality vary considerably across context CAPS Model of Personality - stability over time rather than across situations - interconnections among cognitions and emotions affect our behavior

  35. Evaluating Social Cognitive Theory Contributions • focuses on interactions of individuals with their environments • suggests people can control their environment Criticisms • too concerned with change and the situation • ignores the role of biology • very specific predictions hinder generalization

  36. Biological Perspectives Personality and the Brain • brain damage alters personality • brain responses correlate with personality Eysenk’s Reticular Activation System Theory • extraverts and introverts have different base-line levels of arousal Gray’s Reinforcement Sensitivity Theory • behavioral activation system and behavioral inhibition system

  37. Biological Perspectives Role of Neurotransmitters • growth of dopamine receptors stimulated by warm care-givers • disposes person to reward-sensitivity (extraversion) • less serotonin in circulation leads to negative mood (neuroticism)

  38. Biological Perspectives Behavioral Genetics • twin studies reveal substantial genetic influence on Big Five traits • most traits influenced by multiple genes Evaluating the Biological Perspective • ties personality to animal learning, brain imaging, and evolutionary theory • criticisms (e.g., biology may be the affect, not the cause, of personality)

  39. Personality –Stability vs Change Traits are stable by definition yet positive traits increase across adulthood (social maturity).

  40. Personality Assessment Self-Report Tests • beware social desirability • empirically-keyed tests used to get around social desirability problem - test takers do not know what is being measured - test items not related to purpose of test - MMPI is an example

  41. Personality Assessment Minnesota Multiphasic Personality Inventory • 567 items • controls for social desirability • assesses mental health and used to make hiring decisions and to determine criminal risk Neuroticism Extraversion Openness Personality Inventory-Revised • assesses the big five factors and 6 subdimensions

  42. Personality Assessment Myers Briggs Type Indicator • four dimensions used to make personnel decisions: - extraversion-introversion - sensing-intuiting - thinking-feeling - judgment-perception • not empirically supported • Barnum effect

  43. Personality Assessment Projective Tests …psychodynamic approach …project own meaning on ambiguous stimuli Rorschach inkblot test • personality score based on description of inkblots • questionable reliability and validity Thematic Apperception Test (TAT) • series of ambiguous pictures viewed one at a time • elicited stories reveal an individual’s personality

  44. Rorschach Inkblot Test

  45. Thematic Apperception Test

  46. Other Assessment Methods direct behavioral observation cognitive assessment of attention and memory peer ratings psychophysiological measures (e.g., polygraph) brain imaging

  47. Personality and Health and Wellness Personality traits correlated with health • conscientiousness • personal control • self efficacy • optimism • type A/type B behavior pattern

  48. Personality and Health and Wellness Subjective Well-Being …person’s assessment of own positive affect relative to negative affect, and evaluation of own life in general

  49. Chapter Summary • Define personality. • Discuss the following perspectives on personality • psychodynamic • humanistic • trait • personological and life story • social cognitive • biological • Characterize the main methods of personality assessment. • Summarize how personality relates to health and wellness.

  50. Chapter Summary Psychodynamic Perspectives • focus on unconscious determinants • personality structure and defense mechanisms • psychosexual stages of development Humanistic Perspectives • Maslow and self-actualization • Rogers and unconditional positive regard

More Related