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An individual

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Title: An individual


1
  • An individuals unique and relatively consistent
    patterns of thinking, feeling, and behaving

2
Personality
3
  • Sigmund Freuds theory of personality, which
    emphasizes unconscious determinants of behavior,
    sexual and aggressive instinctual drives, and the
    enduring effects of early childhood experiences
    on later personality development

4
Psychoanalysis

5
  • A psychoanalytic technique in which the patient
    spontaneously repots all thoughts,feelings, and
    mental images as they come to mind

6
Free association

7
  • In Freuds theory, a term used to describe
    thoughts, feelings, wishes, and drives that are
    operating below the level of conscious awareness

8
Unconscious

9
  • In Freuds theory, the completely unconscious,
    irrational component of personality that seeks
    immediate satisfaction or instinctual urges and
    drives ruled by the pleasure principle

10
Id

11
  • In Freuds theory, the motive to obtain pleasure
    and avoid tension or discomfort the most
    fundamental human motive and the guiding
    principle of the id

12
Pleasure Principle

13
  • In Freuds theory, the part of personality that
    mediates the demands of the id without going
    against the restraints of the superego
  • Follows the reality principle

14
Ego

15
  • In Freuds theory, ones conscience focuses on
    what the person should do.

16
Superego

17
  • Unconscious mental processes employed by the
    ego to reduce anxiety by unconsciously distorting
    reality.

18
defense mechanisms

19
  • Puts anxiety-producing thoughts, feelings, and
    memories into the unconscious mind

20
Repression

21
  • Shifts an unacceptable impulse toward a more
    acceptable or less threatening object or person

22
Displacement

23
  • Defense mechanism that involves redirecting
    sexual urges toward productive, socially
    acceptable, nonsexual activities

24
Sublimation

25
  • Allows an anxious person to retreat to a more
    comfortable, infantile stage of life

26
  • Regression

27
  • Replacing an unacceptable wish with its opposite

28
  • Reaction Formation

29
  • Reducing anxiety by attributing unacceptable
    impulses or problems about yourself to someone
    else

30
  • Projection

31
  • Displaces real, anxiety-provoking explanations
    with more comforting justifications for ones
    actions

32
  • Rationalization

33
  • In Freuds theory, age related developmental
    periods in which the childs sexual urges are
    expressed through different areas of the body and
    those activities associated with those areas

34
Psychosexual stages

35
  • In Freuds theory, a childs unconscious desire
    for the opposite-sex parent, usually by hostile
    feelings toward the same-sex parent

36
Oedipus complex

37
  • Stage where pleasure comes from chewing, biting,
    and sucking.

38
  • Oral

39
  • Gratification comes from bowel and bladders
    functions.

40
  • Anal

41
Psychosexual Stage that
  • Focus of pleasure shifts to the genitals
  • Sexual attraction for opposite sex parent
  • Child identifies with and tries to mimic the same
    sex parent to learn gender identity.

42
  • Phallic Stage

43
Psychosexual Stage where
  • Sexuality is repressed due to intense anxiety
    caused by Oedipus complex
  • Children participate in hobbies, school, and
    same-sex friendships that strengthen their sexual
    identity

44
  • Latency Stage

45
In this Psychosexual Stage
  • Incestuous sexual feelings re-emerge but being
    prohibited by the superego are redirected toward
    others who resemble the persons opposite sex
    parent.
  • Maturation of sexual interests

46
  • Genital Stage

47
  • In Jungs theory, the hypothesized part of the
    unconscious mind that is inherited from previous
    generations and that contains universally shared
    ancestral experiences and ideas.

48
collective unconscious

49
  • In Jungs theory, the inherited mental images of
    universal human instincts, themes, and
    preoccupations that are the main components of
    the collective unconscious
  • Examples powerful father, nurturing mother,
    witch, wise old man, innocent child, death
    rebirth, etc

50
Archetype

51
  • The theoretical viewpoint on personality that
    generally emphasizes the inherent goodness of
    people, human potential, self-actualization, the
    self-concept, and healthy personality development

52
Humanistic Psychology

53
  • In Rogers theory these are the set of
    perceptions and beliefs that you hold about
    yourself

54
Self-concept

55
  • in Rogers theory, the sense that you will be
    valued and loved only if you will behave in a way
    that is acceptable to others

56
Conditional positive regard

57
  • In Rogers theory, the sense that you will be
    valued and loved even if you dont conform to the
    standards and expectations of others

58
Unconditional Positive Regard

59
  • Banduras theory of personality, which emphasizes
    the importance of observational learning,
    conscious cognitive processes, social
    experiences, self- efficacy beliefs, and
    reciprocal determinations

60
Social Learning theory

61
  • A relatively stable, enduring predisposition to
    consistently behave in a certain way

62
trait

63
  • A theory of personality that focuses on
    identifying, describing, and measuring individual
    differences

64
Trait Theory

65
  • Personality characteristics or attributes that
    can easily be inferred from observation behavior

66
surface traits

67
  • The most fundamental dimension of personality
    the broad, basic traits that are hypothesized to
    be universal and relatively few in number

68
Source traits

69
  • A trait theory of personality that identifies
    five basic source traits as fundamental building
    blocks of personality
  • Extra-version,
  • Neuroticism
  • Agreeableness
  • Conscientiousness
  • Openness to experience

70
Five-Factor Model of Personality

71
  • A type of personality test that involves a
    persons interpreting an ambiguous image used to
    assess unconscious motives, conflicts,
    psychological defenses, and personality trait
  • Inkblot tests are examples of these.

72
Projective test

73
  • Austrian physician who broke up with Sigmund
    Freud and developed his own psychoanalytical
    theory of personality, which emphasized social
    factors and the motivation toward
    self-improvement and self-realization key ideas
    include inferiority complex and superiority
    complex

74
Alfred Adler

75
  • Contemporary American psychologist who is best
    known for his research on observational learning
    and his social learning theory of personality

76
Albert Bandura
77
  • British-born American psychologist who developed
    a trait theory that identifies 16 essential
    source traits or personality factors also
    developed the widely used self-report personality
    test, the sixteen Personality Factor Questionnaire

78
Raymond Cattell

79
  • German-born British psychologist who developed
    a trait theory of personality as neuroticism,
    extraversion, and psychoticism
  • Said there were 3 different source traits

80
Hans Eysenek

81
  • Austrian neurologist who founded psychoanalysis,
    which is both a comprehensive theory of
    personality and a form of psychotherapy
    emphasized the role of unconscious determinants
    of behavior and early childhood experiences in
    the developmental of personality and
    psychological problems key ideas include id,
    ego, and superego the psychosexual stages of
    development and the ego defense mechanism

82
Sigmund Freud

83
  • German-born American psychoanalysist who
    emphasized the rule of social relationships and
    culture in personality sharply disagreed with
    Freuds theory characterization of female
    psychological development, especially his notion
    that women suffer penis envy key ideas include
    basic anxiety

84
Karen Horney

85
  • Swiss psychiatrist who broke with Sigmund Freud
    to develop his own psychoanalytical theory of
    personality, which stressed striving toward
    psychological harmony key ideas include the
    collective unconscious and archetype

86
Carl G. Jung

87
  • American psychologist who was on of the founders
    of humanistic psychology and emphasized the study
    of healthy personality development developed a
    theory of motivation based on the idea that
    people will strive for self-actualization, the
    highest motive, only after more basic needs have
    been met

88
Abraham Maslow
89
  • Developed theory of personality and form of
    psychotherapy that emphasized the inherent
  • worth of people, the innate tendency to strive
    for ones potential, and the importance of the
    self-concept on personality development

90
Carl Rogers

91
  • Studied the English dictionary and found more
    than 4,000 words describing specific personality
    traits.
  • Assumed traits are inherited and fixed in the
    nervous system.

92
  • Gordon Allport

93
  • Theorist who said your body type determines your
    personality

94
  • William Sheldon

95
  • Two Learning Theorists who said
  • External factors shape our behaviors and
    personality.
  • Our personality is molded by reinforcements given
    to us.

96
  • John B. Watson
  • B.F. Skinner

97
  • Cultures where people define themselves according
    to their personal identity give priority to
    personal goals.

98
  • Individualism

99
  • Cultures where people define themselves according
    to the group they belong to. Their goals are the
    goals of the group.

100
  • Collectivism

101
  • Process of adapting to a new or different culture.

102
  • Acculturation
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