Title: A Point Can Be Defined By
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2Roommates
3Conclusion
- What we want
- What we get
- What works
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5Applying the Interpersonal Circumplex to the
Behavior of Children
- Can a circle be used to model the behavior of
children? - Can a circle predict important childhood
experiences?
Markey, Markey, Tinsley, 2005
6Method
- Participates
- 117 preadolescent children
- 52 girls, and 65 boys
- All were in the 4th grade (M 9.88).
- Each child was videotaped interacting with his or
her parent(s).
7Coding Behaviors
- For each interaction, 64 social behaviors were
coded by two different judges using a Revised
version of the RBQ - Judges only watched the first 5 minutes
- e.g., Speaks quickly
- Displays ambition
- Offers advice
8Coding Behaviors
- Three RBQ items were then used to define each
octant.
9Aim 1
- Do the behaviors of children occur in a manner
predicted by the interpersonal circumplex?
10Aim 1
- Kids CI .97, p lt.00001
- Adult self-repot CI .97
- Adult other-report .93
- Adults BQ .84
11Aim 2
- Does the interpersonal circumplex predict
important childhood experiences?
12Method
- One year after study 1 children were asked to
complete the Risk Behavior Assessment - 94 completed the assessment (M 10.87 years)
13Method
- Asked if they had participated in the following
behaviors - Smoked a cigarette (9 had)
- Consumed alcohol (22 had)
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15Conclusion
- Do the behaviors of children occur in a manner
predicted by the interpersonal circumplex?
16Conclusion
- Do the behaviors of children occur in a manner
predicted by the interpersonal circumplex? - Yes the pattern of childrens behaviors are
strongly related to the IC
17Conclusion
- Does the interpersonal circumplex predict
important childhood experiences? - Yes longitudinally predicts both smoking and
alcohol consumption
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19Internet Love
All 28-year-old Trevor Tasker wanted to do was
fly to South Carolina, meet up with his Internet
love and get married. Instead, he finds himself
still single. It turns out the 30-something
woman he met and wooed over the Internet is
really
Associated Press (2000)
20Internet Love
a 65-year-old woman jailed earlier this month
after authorities found the body of her former
roommate in a freezer at her home.
Associated Press (2000)
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22Internet Use
- In the United States, over 100 million people
have access to the Internet - Frequent uses of the Internet
- Conduct business
- Keep in touch with friends
- Seek emotional support
- Search for romantic partners
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24Cyberspace Culture(Markey, Wells, Markey,
2001 2003)
- Affords the opportunity to be completely
anonymous - Physical appearances and non-verbal cues are
virtually non-existent
25Cyberspace Culture(Markey, Wells, Markey,
2001 2003)
- Humans are still responsible for sending and
producing the text that others read - Traditional methods and models of personality and
social psychology should continue to find support
in this medium (Markey, 2000, Markey et al.,
2001 2003)
26Participants
- One-on-One Condition
- 84 participants
- 71 female 29 male
- Group Condition
- 72 participants
- 72 female 28 male
Markey Wells, 2002
27The Five-Factor Model of Personality
Extraversion sociability, excitement-seeking,
assertiveness Agreeableness altruism,
friendliness, kindness Conscientiousness
organization, responsibility, planfulness Neuroti
cism anxiety, hostility, depression Openness
aesthetic sense, curiosity, intellect
28One-on-One Condition
- Participants were run in groups of six
- Three participants in Room A
- Three participants in Room B
29One-on-One Condition
- Each participant in Room A interacted with each
participant in Room B - Each dyadic interaction lasted 15 minutes
- Participants were allowed to discuss anything
30 hey whats up Hi do your finger tips hurt yet?
) no im just really tire what about you Not much
going on here. I feel like a caged animal here
behind that curtain do you chat on line a lot No,
this is my first time. Im really slow with
typing so forgive me. its okay but this is
basically what it is like to chat online Is
it? except you have a lot of guys ask you to have
cyber sex with them
31One-on-One Condition
- Participants rated their interaction partners
using the Five-Factor Model of personality and a
measure of likeability
32Group Condition
- Participants were run in groups of six
- Three participants in room A
- Three participants in room B
- All six participants interacted in a single chat
room for 15 minutes
33Group Condition
34Examining Personality Judgments
- Assimilation - Does the same judge tend to see
different targets the same way? - Consensus - Do different judges tend to see the
same target in similar ways?
35Assimilation
.46
.38
.30
.29
.26
.21
.18
.14
.14
.00
p lt .05 One-on-One df 13 Group df 11
Extraversion
Conscientious
Neuroticism
Openness
Agreeableness
36Consensus
.23
.18
.16
.13
.11
.04
.01
.00
.00
.00
p lt .05 One-on-One df 13 Group df 11
Extraversion
Agreeableness
Conscientious
Neuroticism
Openness
37Self-Other Agreement
p lt .05
38Likeability
p lt .05
39Conclusions
- Accurate personality perception is possible in
Internet chat rooms - One-on-one interactions
- Extraversion and openness to experience
- However, personality does not strongly predict
who is liked the most in chat rooms - Experience is the best predictor
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41The Last Chapter!!
42Personality
- An individual's characteristic patterns of
thought, emotion, and behavior
43How can you figure out WHO a person is?
- Ask the person (S data)
- Ask others about the person (I data)
- Look at the persons life (L data)
- Look at what the person does (B data)
- BLIS
44A more structured way to find out who a person
is
- Standardized Tests!
- Rational Method
- Projective Tests
- Factor Analytic Method
- Empirical Method
- Combination of Methods
45First Question I asked
- What do we know when we know a person?
46Basic Approaches
- Trait Approach
- The Single-Trait Approach
- e.g., authoritarinsim, self-monitoring, etc.
- The Many-Trait Approach
- e.g., CAQ
- The Essential-Trait Approach
- e.g., The Big Five
- The Simultaneous-Trait Approach
- e.g., circumplex, sphere
47Basic Approaches
- Biological / Evolutionary Approach
- Behavior Genetics
- Twin Studies
- Evolutionary Psychology
- The blind watchmaker
- Jealousy
- Attraction
- Exotic becomes erotic
48Basic Approaches
- Psychoanalytic Approach
- Freud
- Psychosexual development
- Parts of the mind
- Defense mechanisms
- Subliminal Messages
- Slips of the tongue
- Humor
49Basic Approaches
- Psychoanalytic Approach
- Neo Freudians
- Carl Jung
- Collective UCS, Archetypes, Dreams
- Alfred Adler
- Striving for superiority, Birth order
- Karen Horney
- Basic anxiety, Coping with anxiety (moving
toward, away, against) - Erik Erickson
- Development across the lifespan
50Basic Approaches
- Phenomenological Approach
- Philosophical roots
- Free will, awareness, meaning
- Carl Rogers
- Self-Actualization, Conditions of worth
- Abraham Maslow
- Hierarcy or Needs, Self-Actualization and Flow
- George Kelly
- Constructs and perceptions
51Basic Approaches
- Behaviorism
- Philosophical roots
- Empericism, Associationism, Hedonism
- Habituation
- Classical Conditioning
- Operent Conditioning
52Basic Approaches
- Social Learning Theory
- Dollard and Miller
- Habit Hierarchy, Approach-Avoidance Conflict,
Defense Mechanisms - Rotter
- BP, Expectancy, Locus of Control, RV
- Bandura
- Efficacy, Observational Learning, Reciprocal
Determinism
53Basic Approaches
- Cognitive Approach
- Perceptual processes
- Priming, aggression, rejection sensitivity
- Self processes
- Self-schemas
- Strategic and motivational processes
- Optimistic vs. pessimistic, Nomothetic Goals,
Idiographic Goals
54First Question I asked
- What do we know when we know a person?
- Each approach presents a different way to think
about personality. - Each approach asks and answers different
questions. - You must decide which approach is most valid!
- This is what makes PERSONALITY PSYCHOLOGY fun!