Personality - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 24
About This Presentation
Title:

Personality

Description:

Attachment ... Personality – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:300
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 25
Provided by: David3148
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: Personality


1
Personality
2
(No Transcript)
3
Goals of Understanding Personality
  • To understand a depressed friend or troublesome
    child as developing, changing beings
  • To get a snapshot of their personality in the
    current moment
  • To understand the assumptions people make about
    one another

4
Personality across the lifespan
  • If you want to understand an individual as a
    developing, changing person (e.g., a depressed
    friend)
  • Psychodynamic (Freud)
  • Humanistic (Rogers)
  • Cognitive (Bandura)

5
Definition
  • According to Psychodynamic, Humanistic, and
    Cognitive Theories, personality
  • is a continuously changing process shaped by
  • our internal needs and cognitions and by
  • external pressures from the social environment

6
Psychodynamic Theory
  • Sigmund Freud (1856-1939)
  • Theory designed to explain mental disorder
  • Emphasized the unconscious mind
  • impulses, motives, and instincts that were too
    anxiety provoking to deal with consciously would
    leak out and cause symptoms of mental disorder

7
The Unconscious Mind
  • Two main drives
  • Eros ? lust and libidinal energy
  • Pleasure Principal
  • Thanatos ? death instinct

8
Freuds Model of the Mind
Ego
Conscious
Preconscious
Superego
Unconscious
Id
9
The ID
  • Unconscious
  • Primitive Mind
  • Basic motives, drives, and instinctive desires
  • Acts on Impulse, desires immediate gratification
  • especially for sexual, emotional and physical
    pleasures
  • Only part of personality present at birth

10
The Superego
  • Our conscience i.e., it is in charge of values
    and morals learned from parents and society
  • Individuals view of the kind of person s/he
    should strive to become
  • Frequently in conflict with the Id
  • Id wants to do want feels good (e.g., drinking
    with friends) and the superego wants to do whats
    right (e.g., studying for your exam)

11
The Ego
  • Conscious, rational portion of the mind
  • Resolves conflicts between the Id and the
    Superego
  • Must balance gratifying the Id without violating
    the moral principals of the superego
  • Pressures to satisfy the needs of the Id and
    superego can become increasingly difficult and
    thus lead to mental disorder

12
Psychosexual Stages
  • Oral Stage (1st year of life)
  • Oral stimulation from sucking, babbling, crying,
    eating
  • Anal Stage (years 1-3)
  • Anal stimulation through learning control of
    bodily functions
  • Phallic Stage (years 3-6)
  • Focus on stimulation of the genitals (i.e.,
    self-stimulation and sex play)

13
Psychosexual Stages
  • Latency (years 6-puberty)
  • Repression of sexual and aggressive desires
  • Learning of modesty and shame
  • Genital Stage (puberty ?)
  • Mature sexual relationship

14
Theory of Personality
  • Fixation at particular stage ?
  • Arrested psychological development
  • Development of specific types of problems
  • E.g., fixation at oral stage ? overeating,
    smoking
  • E.g., fixation at anal stage ? compulsive
    behavior, excessive neatness, stubbornness

15
Ego Defense Mechanisms
  • Repression ? unacceptable impulses are manifested
    in dreams or fantasies
  • Denial
  • Rationalization ? providing socially acceptable
    explanation for unacceptable behavior
  • Reaction Formation ? Act opposite to true feeling

16
Ego Defense Mechanisms
  • Displacement ? Shifting reaction from real source
    of distress to a safer source
  • Regression ? adopt juvenile behavior
  • Sublimation ? gratifying desires in ways that are
    acceptable in ones culture
  • Projection ? attribute our desires to other people

17
The Humanists
  • Personality is driven by the need to adapt,
    learn, grow, and excel
  • Mental disorders are caused by unhealthy
    situations rather than unhealthy people
  • E.g., Abusive relationships

18
The Humanists
  • Maslow Hierarchy of Needs
  • Strive for self-actualization
  • Those whose base needs are not met, are
    maladjusted
  • Rogers Fully Functioning Person
  • When self-concept is congruent with reality ?
    fully functioning person
  • Conditional love from parent ? low Self-esteem,
    mental problems, guilt
  • Unconditional Positive Regard

19
Social Learning Theory
  • Bandura
  • Modeling ? learn behaviors through observation
  • Vicarious reinforcement ? learn what behaviors
    are rewarded or punished
  • Mental problems arise when we observe poor role
    models or are rewarded in environments that are
    unhealthy
  • E.g., drug abuse

20
Personality in the current moment
  • If you want a snapshot of a persons current
    personality characteristics
  • A theory of their temperaments or traits (i.e.,
    the BIG Five)

21
Temperaments and Traits
  • Temperament inherited personality disposition
    (a single dominant theme e.g., moody depressed)
  • E.g., Hippocrates and the four humours
  • Sanguine (blood) cheerful
  • Choleric (yellow bile) angry
  • Melancholic (black bile) depressed
  • Phlegmatic (mucous) cool, aloof, unemotional

22
Traits
  • Traits ? the building blocks or components of
    the personality
  • E.g., The Big Five (OCEAN)
  • Openness to Experience
  • Conscientiousness
  • Extraversion
  • Agreeableness
  • Neuroticism

23
The Big Five
  • Each scale varies along a continuum (i.e., from
    less to more of a trait)

Openness to Experience Curiosity Closed- Indep
endence Mindedness Conscientiousness Dependabi
lity Impulsivity Constraint Carelessness P
erseverance Irresponsibility
24
The Big Five
  • Extraversion
  • Sociability Introversion
  • Assertiveness Shyness
  • Agreeableness
  • Conforming Coldness
  • Likeable Negativity
  • Neuroticism
  • Anxiety Emotional Stability
  • Emotionality Control
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com