Title: Trait and Social-Cognitive Perspectives on Personality
1Trait and Social-Cognitive Perspectives on
Personality
2Personality
- An individuals characteristic pattern of
thinking, feeling, and acting
3Trait
- A characteristic pattern of behavior or a
disposition to feel and act, as assessed by
self-report inventories and peer reports
4Trait Perspective
- To understand personality you must consider our
enduring patterns of behavior, those that were
born with and that stay fairly constant across
situations.
5Three important trait researchers
- Gordan Allport
- Raymond Carttell
- Hans Eysenck
6Gordon Allport (1897-1967)
- American psychologist who disagreed with Freud in
the following ways/areas - - played down the role of the unconscious in
healthy people - - current experiences more important than early
childhood experiences - - personality should only be studied in normal
adults
7- He believed that personalities are unique.
- This caused a problem. It made it difficult to
produce general ideas that could be tested by
others. - He came up with over 18,000 ways to describe
people.
8Raymond Cattell( 1905-1998)Factor Analysis
- English psychologist who reduced the traits down
to 16 key personality dimensions or factors to
describe personality - Each factor measured by using a questionnaire,
and plotted on a continuum.
9Hans Eysenck (1916-1997)
- German psychologist who reduced the traits down
even further, down to 2 dimensions. - Two major dimensions
- Introversion/Extraversion
- Emotionally Unstable/Stable
10Dimensions in Detail
- Extraverts outgoing and sociable
- Introverts keep to themselves and quiet
- Emotionally stable relaxed and calm
- Emotionally unstable anxious and tend to worry
11Eysencks Personality Factors
12The Big Five Traits (McCrae Costa)
- Openness
- Extraversion
- Agreeableness
- Emotional Stability
- Conscientiousness
13The Big Five Traits
14Personality Inventories
- Questionnaires on which people respond to items
designed to gauge a wide range of feelings and
behaviors - Used to assess selected personality traits
- Often true-false, agree-disagree, etc. types of
questions
15Personality Inventories(objective test) vs.
Projective Test (subjective test)
- Show greater validity (measures what it is
suppose to) - Offer greater reliability (yields consistent
results) - Scoring or interpreting
- Projective tests, months or years of training
- Personality Inventories, very simple and
uncomplicated
16Minnesota Multiphasic Personality Inventory (MMPI)
- Most widely used of all personality tests.
- Originally developed to identify abnormal
behavior. - 500 questions.
- MMPI-2, 2nd version assesses people on 10
clinical scales used to diagnose psychological
disorders and 15 additional content scales used
to measure the persons attributes such as anger,
anxiety, etc.
17Evaluating the Trait Perspective
- Criticisms
- 1. does not consider the situation
- 2. does not explain why
- 3. does not consider the effects of our thoughts
on our behavior
18Social-Cognitive Perspective
- Perspective stating that understanding
personality involves considering the situation
and thoughts before, during, and after an event
19Albert Bandura
- People learn by observing and modeling others or
through reinforced or rewarded.
20Reciprocal Determinism Three Factors Shape
Personality
- Bandura believed our personality is shaped by the
interaction between three factors, this model is
called reciprocal determinism. - The three factors are
- Thoughts or cognitions
- The environment
- A persons behaviors
21Reciprocal Determinism
22How do our feelings of personal control affect
our behavior?
- Locus of Control Two Types
- 1. External locus of control
- 2. Internal locus of control
23External Locus of Control
- The perception that chance, or forces beyond a
persons control, control ones fate - Example When you try to get a job, its not
what you know that matters, but who you know.
24Internal Locus of Control
- The perception that we control our own fate
- Example If you want to be a success, depend on
hard work, not luck.
25Internal vs. External Control
- People with an internal locus of control are
- - healthier
- - cope better with stress
- - are less likely to be depressed
26Learned Helplessness
- The hopelessness and passive resignation an
animal or human learns when unable to avoid
repeated bad events - Martin Seligman studied dogs that were unable to
escape a painful stimulus and eventually stopped
trying to escape.
27Learned Helplessness
28Positive Psychology
- Seligman leads the positive psychology movement,
which focuses on how we can function at optimal
levels and on the factors that help us to reach
those levels.
29Optimistic Explanatory Style
- When something goes wrong the person explains the
problem as - Temporary
- Not their fault
- Something limited to this situation
30Pessimistic Explanatory Style
- When something goes wrong the person tends to
- Blame themselves
- Catastrophize the event
- See the problem as beyond their control
31Assessing Personality
- Social-cognitive perspective would stress putting
people into simulated actual conditions to
determine how they would behave - They use experiments
- They look at the persons past behaviors to
predict the persons future behaviors.
32Evaluating Social-Cognitive Perspective
- Positive Objective and easily tested
- Negative - Fails to consider the influence of
emotions and motivation on behavior
33The End