Title: Interactionist Aspects of Personality
1Interactionist Aspects of Personality
- PSY 230 Theories of Personality
2Interactionist Theorists
- They look at how personality interacts in social
situations - Harry Stack Sullivan
- Henry Murray
- Walter Mischel
- Mark Snyder
- Jack and Jeanne Block
- Avshalom Caspi
- Konrad Lorenz
- They try to explicitly understand the social
situation
3Harry Stack Sullivan 1892-1949
- Born in Norwich, NY to Irish immigrants
- Only child-Catholic-in Protestant prejudice area
- Raised on farm-area of high rate or suicide among
isolated farm wives - Stacks-greatly exaggerated accomplishments-Mother
s influence to achieve - Sullivans-fresh off the boat- working class
- Identity confusion Sullivan in College-Stack
after-never married - Lonely, isolated, used alcohol-reduce anxiety
- Sexual identity issues in adolescence-bouts of
schizophrenia in college - like cures like residential treatment founded
on interpersonal trust-St. Elizabeths in D.C.
4Sullivans 6 Developmental Epochs
5Chumship
- Close same-sex relations with peers
- Pre-adolescent puts distance between self and
parents seek acceptance by peers - To reduce the anxiety coming from threats to
psychosocial well being of loneliness, isolation
rejection-inherently social factors
6Sullivans Interpersonal Theory of Psychiatry
- Personality is tied to social situations
- Relatively enduring pattern of recurrent
interpersonal situations - Focused on the recurring social situations people
face
7Social SelfGeorge Mead (1968)
- Who we are and how we think of ourselves arises
from our interactions with those around us - A social-psychological concept coming from the
Chicago School of sociology philosophy
8Illusion of Individuality-Sullivan
- Idea that a person has a single fixed personality
- According to Sullivan we may have as many
personalities as we have interpersonal situations - Conclusion positive interpersonal relationships
can help others overcome their own problems
9Henry A. Murray 1893-1988
- Born New York City of wealthy family mother
daughter of owner of bank father worked in the
bank, no close relationship to either parent - Middle child of three, stutter, cross-eyed
- Ongoing 40 year open affair with research
associate Christina Morgan, co-author of TAT - Close to his wife Jo and Christinas husband Will
- Groton, Harvard, MD, Ph.D. Biochemistry
Cambridge-pioneer in Biochemistry - Saw Jung to resolve his relationship with
Morgan-solution same as Jung-open affair - In WW II-lead psychological testing for selection
for spies and dangerous mission teams
10Development of Interactionist Approach by Murray
- Combine unconscious motivation of Freud, Jung
Adler, environmental pressures of Lewin, trait
concept of Allport - Defined Personality branch of psychology which
concerns itself with study of human lives and
factors which influence their life course and
which investigates individual differences
11Personological System
- Focus on the process of personality rather than
rely on the static concepts such as - Enduring structures of the mind
- System-dynamic influences with feedback
- Emphasis integrated, dynamic nature of individual
as complex organism responding to specific
environment - Importance of needs and motivations
12Environmental Press
- push of the situation-from other people or events
in the environment-get out of rain, get enough to
eat, deal with rejection or competition - Where concept of Peer Pressure arises
- Accept of unconscious fantasies instinctual
drives - Emphasis of social roles and situational
determinants e.g. need to excel leads to
cheating - Combination of internal motivations external
demands
13NeedsMurray 1962
- Needs are internal (but can be provoked by
environmental press) - Necessitate taking action in social environment
- Readiness to respond in a certain way under given
circumstances Need to achieve, for affection,
dominance exhibition
14Need for Achievement n Ach
- If identity closely identified with success
- Persistent and driven to succeed
- Quantity of success more important than quality
- Shrewdness persistence needed to win
- Less skillful in diplomacy cooperation
15Need for Affiliation n Aff
- Gregarious instinct-wanting to come together in
groups - Sentiment-instinct-socialized to be attached to
an individual - Motivation to have lots of friends
- Need to draw near to win affection of others
16Need for Dominance or Power n Power
- Need for dominance
- Seek positions and offices which are controlling
over others
17Need for Exhibition
- Need for emotional communication
- Need to show self before others and amuse,
entertain, excite or even shock others - Colorful, spellbinding, noticeable, dramatic
showy - Expressive style is the clue to this need
18Murrays Needs
- Affiliation
- Autonomy
- Dominance
- Exhibition
- Harm-avoidance
- Nurturance
- Order
- Play
- Sex
- Succorance
- Understanding
19Thema-Murray
- Combinations of Needs and Environmental Presses
- Thematic Apperception Test (TAT)
- Client gives narrative or imaginary
interpretation of what picture represents - Late in life Murray admitted that Christina
Morgan was the true author of the TAT
20Narrative Approach-McAdams 1991
- Studying motivations of individuals through
biographies-life stories - Story of ones life becomes ones identity
- At each stage of life, internal inclinations lead
us to seek out and respond to certain situations
which in turn help to further shape our
inclinations and identity, e.g. generative
livesloving, caring community identities
21Contemporaneous Causation-Lewins influence on
Murray
- Behavior is the function of the person and the
environment - Behavior is caused at that moment as a function
of a variety of influences-which may be residues
of past behavior and previous events
22Walter Mischel 1930-present
- Born in Vienna came to USA when young
- Graduate Ph.D. Clinical Psychology Ohio State
University - Worked at Stanford-influence by Bandura
23Walter Mischel-Critique of current Personality
Theories
- A Persons behavior varies so much from situation
to situation that it simply did not make sense to
think in terms of broad personality traits - Consider SIZE of relation between persons
behavior across situations and their variability - No correlation between personality trait
behavior what is more important is situation
24Delay of Gratification-Mischel
- An individual chooses to forgo an immediate
reinforcer to wait for a later, better reinforcer
based on - Modeling (see another person delay)
- Visibility of desired object (out of sight-out of
mind) - Cognitive strategies to think about other things
(distraction)
25Personal Strategies-Styles Mischel
- Individual differences in the meanings people
give to stimuli and reinforcements - Learned during experiences with situations and
their rewards
26Personality Variables of Mischel
- Competencies persons abilities knowledge
- Encoding Strategies schemas and mechanisms one
uses to process and encode information - Expectancies of ones own behavior
self-efficacy - Plans combining competencies, strategies,
expectancies into a plan
27Behavioral Signatures of Personality
- Consistency of personality due to similarity of
the perceived features of situations - people
identify situation-behavior relationships that
become behavioral signatures - Interaction-intersection of person
characteristics and environment
28Personality as Transaction
- Personality seen as a transaction that occurs
when a persons unique personal strategies and
styles interact with the particular style of
others (Thorne, 1987)
29Attribution Theories
- Traits are in the mind of the observer
- Attribution theories examine ways we draw
inferences about other peoples behavior - Influenced by biases which may result in errors
when judging others - Falling back on stereotypes to explain how we see
the world - Closer people are to you more valid are their
attributions about you
30Personality of Situations
- Way to systematically classify situations-place
people into carefully controlled situations and
see who behaves as expected - Capture recognizable patterns and regularities
and take into account changes that occur over
time US families 1950 vs today
31Self-Monitoring-Mark Snyder (1974, 1987)
- High self-monitors People are especially
motivated and able to read the demands of others,
monitor their self-presentations to make a good
impression to respond to the expectations of
others - Low self-monitors less in tune with and less
concerned with the expectations of
others-personalities less variable as function of
the situation
32Social Identity vs Personal Identity-Jonathan
Cheek (1990)
- Low in social identity-High in personal Identity
act independently and try to get ahead may
prefer to be unique and uninhibited-personal
personality - Low in personal identity-High in social identity
sociable and involved with others - reads social
cues, motivated to conform to social demands
social personality
33Longitudinal Study-Jack Block (1993) Jeanne
Block
- The close, comprehensive, systematic, objective,
sustained study of individuals over significant
portions of the life span. - Following people over time
- Began study in 1968 of children
- Ego-resilient early age for boys same when older
but not for girls 20 years later
34Life Course Approach-Avshalom Caspi (1990)
- Study of personality across the life span or life
path - Patterns of behavior change as a function of age,
culture, social groups, life events, as well as
internal drives, motives, abilities, and traits - Individuals create their own person-situation
interactions by varying how they interpret
situations by eliciting reactions from others and
seeking out certain situations
35Readiness-Konrad Lorenz 1937
- We are more affected by certain environments at
certain times in our lives - More prone to learn languages prior to 10 years
of age - More prone to react to sexy object when we are in
our prime
36Impact of Emotions on Interactions
- Interactions of people in small groups have two
types of interactions - Affiliation-warmth, harmony vs rejection
hostility - Assertiveness-dominance task orientation versus
submission deference
37Circumplex Model- Focuses on interpersonal
emotional aspects of personality
- Task-Oriented, dominant
- Competitive, arrogant
- Cold, hostile, rejecting
- Aloof, inhibited
- Deferent Submissive
- Sociable, nurturant
- Warm, friendly, harmonious
- Modest, trusting
38Ego Development-Jane Loevinger (1966)
- Undeveloped egosimpulsive, self-protective,
conformists, focused on self, manipulative or
blindly loyal - Highly developed egosindividualistic, broad
minded, autonomous, self-fulfilled respectful
of others, integrated - IntegratedMaslows self-actualization