Title: QUIZ 2
1QUIZ 2
- ID pleaseanyone not have?
- Pencil Student ID bubbles on Scantron NOW
- Name and ID on all three items
- Your Section is?
- Remove temptation eyes ahead
- Return 1 hr from start time Stay put in last 5
min - Leave by front doorsone trip only to leave
- PENS DOWN when stop time is announced.
- Put question and scantron sheet inside booklet
- Wait until TA or me appears at your row to
collect - Stay quietly in seats until all quizzes are
collected
22130 Personality Psychology Know Thyself
- Professor Ian McGregor
- Lecture 5 Goal Dynamics
- http//www.youtube.com/watch?vupenR6n7xWY
3Lecture Overview
- PxE of Aggression
- Priming and Frustration
- Experimental Evidence
- Goal Theory
- Approach-Avoid dispositions and states
- Goal Conflict
- Displacement behaviors, ideals, anger
- Automatic goals, displacement, transference,
mystery moods, preocc.
4Exampes of Aggression
5Person P of Aggression
6Environment E of Aggression
- Situational Priming
- Of aggressive responses
- Of aggressive goals?
- Frustration to Aggression
- Motivated belief about the target of aggression
(deserve it) - Motivated belief about need for aggression (teach
lesson) - Why does aggression feel good after frustration?
7Aggressive P x E Prime(Idealized results
from Bushman, 1995 Anderson Dill, 2000)
P x E interaction
P (Personality)
8Aggressive P x E Frustration (Idealized
results from Bushman Baumeister, 1998)
P x E interaction
P
9HECTOR Approach Approach
10OSCAR Approach Avoidance
11Pavlov (1927)Classical Conditioning US, UR, CS,
CR
12Pavlov (1927)Motivational Ambiguity Caused
Distress
13Lewin (1935)Goal Conflict Made Toddlers Stubborn
and Angry
14Goal Theory
Murray
From drives and motives, to approach and
avoidance goals
Ivan Pavlov
Kurt Lewin
15Definition of a Goal
- Not merely a stimulus, nor a response. Rather, it
is the combination of a stimulus and a motivated
behavioural orientation to respond by approaching
or avoiding that stimulus. - Rats do not learn responses, they learn goals.
Block their original response to a stimulus, and
they will immediately adopt a new means of
achieving the same goal.
16Ideals As Abstract Goals (Carver Scheier
Powers Higgins Vallacher Wegner)
Ideals, Meanings, Values, Worldviews, Self-Guides
Concrete Goals
17Approach and Avoidance Personalities and States
- Extraversion vs. Neuroticism (Eysenck)
- Promotion-focus for approach goals
- Orientation toward positive incentives to
approach - Focus on ideal states to be attained
- Excitatory tendencies go for itpositive
feelings - Goal Shieldingnarrow focus of attention
locked and loaded - Relative left cerebral hemisphericity (early
lesion studies) - Prevention-focus and avoidance goals
- Orientation toward negative states to be avoided
- Focus on responsibilities, duties, and what one
ought to do to avoid distress - Inhibitory tendencies be carefulnegative
feelings - Vigilanceand rumination about threats and
vulnerabilities - Relative right cerebral hemisphericity (early
lesion studies)
18Goal Conflict and Uncertainty
- Jeffrey Gray Neuropsych of Anxiety
- Inhibition of focal goal
- Anxiety to discourage persistence
- Vigilance for alternatives
19Goal RegulationApproach
Uh-Oh! Oh No! Approach /Avoid Anxious
vigilance Scans for viable alternatives Resume
eager absorption in approach
20Eager Displacement Goals
Eager Displacement Ideals?
21Ideals As Abstract Goals (Carver Scheier
Powers Higgins Vallacher Wegner)
Ideals, Meanings, Values, Worldviews, Self-Guides
Concrete Goals
22Angry Approach
- Recall the avoidance is associated with
- Anxious vigilanceand rumination about threats
and vulnerabilities (feels bad) - But approach is associated with goal shielding
and positive affectonly notice things related to
goal - Strongly engaging an approach goal may be one way
to protect self from anxiety of threats - Aggression is approach-orientedi.e., one must
move toward something to hit it - This can explain the dog and toddler tantrums,
and aggressive responses to frustration - Angry approach (i.e., of anger) shields one from
distress of conflict, uncertainty, and
frustration
23Automatic Goal Priming with Friendlyvs.
Achievement Theme Puzzles
Achieve, Building, Turtle, Compete, Win, Green,
Succeed, Staple, Plant, Strive, Attain, Lamp,
Master
Accepted, Building, Turtle, Affection, Caring,
Green, Included, Staple, Plant, Liked, Loved,
Lamp, Supported
24Automatic (i.e., Unconscious) Goals
- Automaticity of everyday life (Bargh)
- schemas and goal priming
- Early priming studies
- Shock a learner, rude in conversation, prof.
performance - Goal Activation and Persistence
- Lewins students Zeigarnik and Ovsiankina
effects over time - Cooperation vs. achievement primes and playing to
win - Cheating on 2-minute scrabble task
- Goal resumption after blown bulb (instead of
reviewing jokes) - Mystery moods
- Goal Shielding
- Automatic Inhibition of Fulfilled Goals (see next
slide) - Watch for aggression word (reward for noting when
it appears) - Lexical Decision Task
25Automatic Inhibition of Stimuli Related to
Fulfilled Goals(from Forster, Liberman,
Higgins, 2005)
Fast
Goal Shielding
Slow
This is the most important finding. After the
goal is completed, stimuli related to the
completed goal are shielded or inhibited (i.e.,
slow to be recognized).