Title: Personality
1Personality
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3Defining personality
- An individuals unique pattern of thoughts,
feelings, and behaviors that persist over time
and across situations
4Major categories of theories
- Psychodynamic theories
- Place the origin of personality in unconscious
motivations and conflicts. - Humanistic theories
- Spotlight positive growth motives and the
realization of potential in shaping personality.
5Major categories of theories
- Trait theories
- Categorize and describe the ways in which
peoples personalities differ. - Cognitive-social learning theories
- Find the roots of personality in the ways people
think about, action, and respond to their
environment.
6Psychodynamic theories
- Personality is the result of unconscious
- motivations and conflicts.
- Sigmund Freud
- Alfred Adler
- Erik Erikson
7Freuds 3 Levels of Consciousness
- conscious Ideas, thoughts, and
- feelings of which we are aware.
- preconscious material that can be easily
recalled. - unconscious All the ideas, thoughts, and
feelings of which we are not and normally cannot
become aware.
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9Freuds Structure of Personality
- Id
- The collection of unconscious urges and desires
that continually seek expression - The only structure that is present at birth and
that is completely unconscious - Works on pleasure principle (seeks immediate
pleasure and avoid pain) - Since it has no direct contact with real world so
it either seeks gratification in following two
forms - Reflex action
- Wish fulfillment
- Or it get a link with reality through ego for its
expression
10Freuds Structure of Personality
- Ego
- Part of personality that mediates between
environmental demands (reality), conscious
(superego), and instinct needs (id) - Operates partly consciously, partly
pre-consciously, and partly unconsciously - Works on reality principle (by means of
intelligent reasoning) - Superego
- The social and parental standards that the
individual has internalized the conscious and
the ego ideal - Not present at birth and is learned afterwards
- Works at both conscious and unconscious level
- Works on morality principle
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12Alfred Adler
- Humans possess innate positive motives that
strive for personal and social perfection - Compensation
- Personality develops through the individuals
attempt to overcome imagined or real weakness. - Inferiority complex
- The fixation on feelings of personal inferiority
that results into emotional and social paralysis - Striving for superiority and perfection
13Psychodynamic theories continued..
- Erik Erikson
- Presented eight stage theory of personality
development - Trust vs mistrust (first year of life)
- Autonomy vs shame and doubt (first three years)
- Initiative vs guilt (between ages 3 to 6)
- Industry vs inferiority (during 6 to 12)
- Identity vs role confusion (at puberty)
- Intimacy vs isolation (during young adulthood)
- Generativity vs stagnation (during middle
adulthood) - Ego integrity vs despair (at maturity with onset
of old age)
14Differences Between Freud and Adler
- Freud
- We are controlled by our environment
- View of individual selfish Eternally in
conflict with society - Adler
- We can control our own fate
- View of individual striving for perfection
Develops socially constructive goals
15- Evaluation of Psychodynamics Theories
- Psychodynamic views are based largely on
retrospective accounts of people seeking
treatment rather than experimental research with
healthy individuals - More focus on negative relation ship between self
and society
16Humanistic Personality Theories
- Any personality theory that asserts the
fundamental goodness of people and their striving
toward higher levels of functioning. - Human beings are responsible for their lives and
their outcomes. - Given reasonable life conditions, people will
develop in desirable directions
17Humanistic Personality Theories continued. Carl
Rogers
- Every organism is born with certain innate
capacities, capabilities, or potentials a sort
of blue print. The goal of life is to fulfill
this genetic blue print. - Actualizing tendency
- The drive of every organism to fulfill its
biological potential and become the best of what
it is inherently capable of becoming. - Self-actualizing tendency
- The drive of human beings to fulfill their
self-concepts (conscious images of ones self)
18Humanistic Personality Theories continued. Carl
Rogers
- Fully functioning person
- An individual whose self-concept closely
resembles his/her inborn potentials. - Determinants of a Fully Functioning Person
- Unconditional positive regard
- Fully functioning person not fully functioning
person
19Humanistic Personality Theories continued..
- Evaluation of humanistic theories
- The assumptions are difficult to verify
scientifically - Fail to take into account the evil in human nature
20Trait theories
- Trait theories focus on describing ones current
personality with less emphasis on how the
personality developed. - Personality traits
- Dimensions or characteristics on which people
differ in distinctive ways such as anxiety,
aggressiveness, sociability. - Traits can not be observed directly. They can be
inferred from behavior
21Trait theories continued.
- Eysencks three dimensions of personality
- Emotional stability
- Introversion-extroversion
- Psychoticism
22Trait theories continued.
- The Big Five Dimensions of Personality by Tupes
and Christal - Extroversion
- Agreeableness
- Conscientiousness/dependability
- Emotional stability
- Openness to experience/culture/intellect
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24Trait theories continued.
- Evaluation of Trait theories
- Relatively easy to test experimentally
- More descriptive, less explanatory
- Does not explain inconsistencies in personality
25Cognitive-Social Learning Theories
- Behavior is viewed as the product of the
interaction of cognitions, learning and past
experiences, and the immediate environment.
26Cognitive-Social Learning Theories
continued.Albert Bandura
- People evaluate the situation according to
certain internal expectancies, and this
evaluation affects their behavior. The feedback
of actual behavior shapes expectancies in future
situations. - Expectancies
- What a person anticipates in a situation or as a
result of behaving in certain ways. - Self-efficacy
- The expectancy that ones efforts will be
successful. - Performance standards
- Standards that people develop to rate the
adequacy of their own behavior in a variety of
situations.
27Cognitive-Social Learning Theories
continued.Rotter
- Locus of control
- An expectancy about whether reinforcement is
under internal or external control. - Internal locus of control
- One can control his/her own fate.
- External locus of control
- Ones fate is determined by chance, luck, or the
behavior of others.
28Cognitive-Social Learning Theories continued.
- Evaluation of Cognitive-Social Learning Theories
- Can be studied scientifically
- Explain why people behave inconsistently
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30Methods of Personality Assessment
- Personal interview
- Unstructured
- Structured
- Observation
- Effect of being watched
- Observer bias
- Objective tests
- tests that are administered and scored in a
standard way
31Methods of Personality Assessment
- Projective tests (tests consisting of ambiguous
or unstructured material) - Rorschach test
- A test composed of ambiguous inkblots the way
people interpret the blots is thought to reveal
aspects of their personality. - Thematic Apperception Test (TAT)
- A test composed of ambiguous pictures about which
a person is asked to write a complete story.
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