Title: Introduction to Personality Theory
1Introduction to Personality Theory
- Dr. Kelley Kline
- FSU-Panama City
2I. What is meant by personality??
3Personality
- The underlying causes within the person of
individual behavior experience. - A consistent pattern of behavior across the
life-span.
4Three questions in personality
- 1. How can personality be described?
- 2. How can we understand personality dynamics?
(contextual cultural) - 3. How does personality develop?
5II. Describing personality
- A. Differences between people
- Approaches to describing individual differences
- --Type approach
- --Trait approach
- --Factors approach
61. Type approach
- -personality appears in a limited of distinct
categories. - According to this view, a person will belong to
only one category. - A small number of categories are used to describe
everyone. - Are qualitative!!!
7Types examples
- Political liberals conservatives
- Jung introverts extroverts
- May be useful on a simple level of analysis.
82. Trait approach
- Traits are characteristics used to distinguish
one individual from another (consistent over
time). - We can measure how much (from low to high) a
person possesses a given trait (shyness,
extraversion). Are quantitative!! - There are many traits to describe a single
person.
93. Factor approach-
- Similar to trait approach, except that factors
are broader categories for describe personality
than traits. - A small of factors can be used to describe
everyone.
10B. Nomothetic vs. Idiographic
- The nomothetic approach we compare one person
with another. - Groups of individuals are studied relative to
others on the same concepts (traits). - Approach measures individual differences among
others.
11The idiographic approach-studies one individual
at a time, without making comparisons to others.
- This method focuses on an individual case.
12Consistency of personality
- One theory is that an individuals behavior may
be consistent across changing situations. - However, Mischel argued that research failed to
support this assumption. - The situation may or may not play a greater role
in determining behavior than personality.
13III. Personality Dynamics
- What are mechanisms by which personality is
expressed? - Focuses on the motivations underlying why
behavior occurs. - Includes individuals adaptation or adjustment to
the demands of life.
14A. Adaptation Adjustment
- How we adapt adjust to situations events is
based on our personality.
15B. Cognitive Processes
- Our thought processes (cognitions, beliefs) play
a large role in the formation expression of our
personality. - Unconscious thoughts or beliefs have an influence
on our behaviors (Zajoncs Mere- Exposure
Effect).
16C. Culture
- When examining the concept of personality
development, formation, expression, cultural
influences need to be examined.
17IV. Personality Development
- Examines the extent to which biological
environmental factors contribute to the formation
of our personalities.
18A. Biological Influences
- To some extent our personalities are determined
by genetic factors. - Our temperament as children significantly
predicts our behavior in adulthood. - E.g., Some forms of psychopathology are
heritable.
19B. Environmental Influences
- Environmental factors (family, culture) influence
our personality development. - E.g., Freud Skinner both emphasized childhood
experiences.
20V. Theory
- A comprehensive explanation of natural phenomena
that leads to accurate predictions.
21Advantages of theories
- 1. Theories allow us to summarize the results of
many research studies integrate numerous
principles of learning. - 2. Theories provide starting points for
conducting new research. - 3. Theories offer us a way for describing why
things happen.
22Disadvantages of Theories
- 1. No theory explains all that is known about a
given phenomenon. - 2. Theories affect what new information is
published, biasing the knowledge we have about
personality.
23Judging Scientific Theories
- 1. Testability
- 2. Simplicity
- 3. Generality
- 4. Fruitfullness
- 5. Agreement with the data
24Scientific concepts
- 1. Operational Definitions
- We describe a concept by defining the operations
used to measure something. - (e.g., memory may be defined by the of items
recalled on a memory test).
252. Theoretical Constructs
- --The concepts of a theory
- Traits (intelligence, athleticism) are considered
theoretical constructs. - These need to be operationally defined to be
examined in research.