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Title: Unit Ten:


1
Unit Ten
  • Personality

2
What is Personality?
  • Definition
  • A relatively enduring set of behavioral,
    emotional and mental characteristics
  • remains relatively stable over time
  • makes each of us unique

Begin Lec. 1 Guide
3
Enduring Issues in Psychology
  • Nature vs. Nurture
  • Is personality genetically encoded or learned?

4
Enduring Issues in Psychology
  • Unconscious or Conscious?
  • Do you know why you do what you do?

5
Enduring Issues in Psychology
  • Fixed vs. Situational
  • Is personality stable or does it change from
    situation to situation?

6
Sigmund Freud Background
Hot.
  • Victorian Era
  • A time of repression
  • Rigid gender roles - separate spheres for males
    and females
  • Clothing restricted movement and covered head to
    toe
  • Rumors said people were even scandalized by bare
    table and piano legs!

Queen Victoria of England
7
Sigmund Freud Background
  • Personal History
  • Remarriage of his father
  • Older half-brothers
  • Young, doting mother
  • Golden Sigi
  • Favored over his other siblings

ABOVE Freud and his Dad. BELOW Freud and his
Mom
8
Sigmund Freud Three Main Beliefs
  • Childhood experiences determine the adult
    personality
  • Unconscious mental processes influence everyday
    behavior
  • Conflict causes most human behavior

9
Sigmund Freud 3-Part Theory of Personality
Structure
  • Part 1 The Id
  • Born with this intact
  • Governed by Pleasure Principle
  • Houses unconscious drives of sex (libido) and
    aggression
  • Selfish, irrational, seeks instant gratification

DO IT NOW!
10
Sigmund Freud 3-Part Theory of Personality
Structure
  • Part 2 The Superego
  • Develops during childhood (6 years)
  • Governed by Judicial or Moral Principle
  • The internalized parent
  • Seeks to do what is right and good (conscience)
  • Causes us to feel guilty for our desires/id
    impulses

Behave!
11
Sigmund Freud 3-Part Theory of Personality
Structure
  • Part 3 The Ego
  • Develops during childhood (6 months)
  • Governed by Reality Principle
  • Seeks to gratify Id urges at an appropriate time
  • Inherits inevitable anxiety produced by
    Id-Superego conflict

?
12
Sigmund Freud Evidence for Existence of the
Unconscious
  • Dream Interpretation
  • Dreams allow unconscious urges to leak out
  • Dreams allow unconscious wishes to be fulfilled
    in a safe way
  • Dreams are symbolic and may be interpreted

13
Sigmund Freud Evidence for Existence of the
Unconscious
  • Slip of the tongue
  • AKA Freudian Slip
  • Your unconscious thoughts leak out and you say
    something you did not mean to

14
Sigmund Freud Evidence for Existence of the
Unconscious
  • Free Association
  • Freudian therapeutic technique
  • Say whatever comes to mind without censorship
  • Unconscious comes to the surface

15
Sigmund Freud Evidence for Existence of the
Unconscious
Sup.
  • Tip of the Iceberg
  • Freudian saying that implies we are unaware of
    most of what motivates us
  • What is conscious is just the tip of the
    iceberg
  • A LOT more is beneath the surface

What we are aware of at any given time.
What we can easily retrieve
What we are unaware of and is deeply buried
16
Sigmund Freud The Psychosexual Stages
  • Oral Stage (0-1.5)
  • Erogenous ZoneMouth
  • Libido satisfied by breast feeding
  • Major conflict weaning
  • Failure to resolve the issue leads to an oral
    fixation
  • Suck/chew things for security
  • Smoking, obsessive eating, nail biting, pen
    chewing, drinking
  • Sarcasm, aggressiveness

17
Sigmund Freud The Psychosexual Stages
  • Anal Stage (1.5-3)
  • Erogenous ZoneAnus
  • Libido satisfied by defecating
  • Major conflict toilet training
  • Failure to resolve the issue leads to an anal
    fixation
  • Anal Retentive - tightly controlled, OCD, fear of
    dirt, obsessed with punctuality
  • Anal Expulsive - messy, disorganized, rebellious,
    overly giving, obsession with bathroom humor

I refuse!
18
Sigmund Freud The Psychosexual Stages
HA!
  • Phallic Stage (4-6) BOYS
  • Erogenous ZonePenis
  • Libido satisfied by genital stimulation
  • Oedipus Complex
  • Boy desires mother, wants to eliminate father
  • Resolved through castration anxiety, where boy
    fears father will find out about his plan and cut
    it off
  • Boy relinquishes desire for mom and befriends dad
    out of fear

WT!!
AHA!!
Uh-oh
19
Sigmund Freud The Psychosexual Stages
  • Phallic Stage (4-6) GIRLS
  • Erogenous ZoneClitoris
  • Libido satisfied by genital stimulation
  • Oedipus Complex
  • Resolved FAST due to PENIS ENVY
  • Girl then seeks penis through father during
    Electra Complex
  • Girl resolves this by replacing her desire for a
    penis with her desire for a baby and plays with
    dolls

MUAHAHAHA HAHAHAHA!
WHAT!? Take That!
Nope. You dont have one.
20
Sigmund Freud The Psychosexual Stages
  • Phallic Stage (4-6)
  • Major conflict relinquishing desire for opposite
    sex parent
  • Failure to resolve the issue leads to fixation
  • Excessive masturbation, overly flirtatious
  • Excessive modesty, or excessively timid
  • Overly proud
  • Promiscuous
  • Fetishes

21
Sigmund Freud The Psychosexual Stages
  • Latency (7-11)
  • Erogenous ZoneNONE
  • Child goes to school
  • Sexual feelings repressed
  • Child develops academic, social and
    extracurricular skills
  • Typically plays in same-sex play groups

22
Sigmund Freud The Psychosexual Stages
  • Genital (puberty on)
  • Erogenous ZonePenis/Vagina
  • Libido satisfied through sex
  • Begins when child hits puberty/sexual maturity
  • Normal sexual relationships occur at this stage

Hi, Im your dad!
No hes not.
23
Sigmund Freud The Defense Mechanisms
  • The inevitable conflict between id and superego
    produces anxiety.
  • This anxiety is inherited by the ego, which uses
    the defense mechanisms to better manage it.

24
Sigmund Freud The Defense Mechanisms
  • Denial (Negation)
  • Refusal to acknowledge a painful reality
  • Repression
  • Unpleasant thoughts are excluded from
    consciousness motivated forgetting
  • Projection
  • Attributing ones own feelings, motives, or
    wishes to others
  • Identification
  • Taking on the characteristics of other to avoid
    feeling incompetent
  • Regression
  • Reverting to childlike behavior
  • Rationalization
  • Making up a logical explanation for an
    emotionally painful event rather than dealing
    with the pain

25
Sigmund Freud The Defense Mechanisms
  • Intellectualization
  • Thinking about stressful problems in an abstract
    way to detach oneself from them
  • Reaction formation
  • Expression of exaggerated ideas and emotions that
    are opposite of true feelings
  • Displacement
  • Shift repressed motives from an original object
    to a substitute object
  • Sublimation
  • Redirecting repressed motives and feelings into
    socially acceptable activities
  • Undoing
  • After-the-fact defense mechanism involving
    making up for guilt-producing actions

26
Neo Freudians General Themes
  • The Neo-Freudians were a group of psychologists
    who followed Freuds teachings and were often his
    best and brightest students.
  • They eventually had some minor disagreements with
    Freud about his theory, and developed theories of
    their own.
  • Freud had little patience for these dissenters,
    and quickly kicked them to the curb.

Begin Lec. 2 Guide
27
Neo Freudians Alfred Adler
  • He was the younger, weaker son in his family
  • Inferiority was the key to understanding
    personality
  • Inferiority complex
  • Fixation on feelings of personal inferiority that
    can lead to emotional and social paralysis
  • Fictional Finalism
  • Setting long-term goals that may never be
    reached, but help you to achieve a sense of
    satisfaction along the way

28
Neo Freudians Alfred Adler
  • Birth Order
  • Oldest
  • Middle
  • Youngest
  • Only
  • Dethronement
  • When the next child is born, the older one is
    forced to share parental attention
  • Compensation
  • Our efforts to win back parental love after
    dethronement

29
Neo Freudians Karen Horney (Horn-EYE!)
  • One of the first female psychoanalysts to study
    with Freud.
  • Got divorced to pursue her career rare at the
    time!
  • Viewed anxiety as a powerful motivating force
  • Environmental and social factors important seen
    as being as important as unconscious sexual
    conflict

30
Neo Freudians Karen Horney
  • Developed Coping Mechanisms to deal with
    insecurity
  • Compliance moving toward others
  • Aggression moving against others
  • Withdrawal moving away from others
  • Neurotic trends
  • Irrational strategies for coping with emotional
    problems

31
Neo Freudians Carl Jung
  • One of Freuds best students his surrogate
    son
  • Freud was said to have fainted in his presence
    several times!
  • Believed in the collective unconscious, in
    addition to the personal unconscious
  • Collective unconscious was comprised of
    archetypes
  • Anima and Animus?

32
Neo Freudians Erik Erikson
  • Another of Freuds best students and biggest
    advocates
  • Strayed from Freuds theory due to disagreement
    with the psychosexual stages
  • Erikson believed in the psychosocial stages which
    involved a series of conflicts that lasted
    throughout the entire lifespan
  • Trust vs. mistrust
  • Autonomy vs. shame and doubt
  • Initiative vs. guilt
  • Industry vs. inferiority
  • Identity vs. role confusion
  • Intimacy vs. isolation
  • Generativity vs. stagnation
  • Ego integrity vs. despair

33
Personality AssessmentPsychodynamic Theories
  • Projective tests
  • Ambiguous stimuli presented to subject/client
  • Open-ended no correct answer
  • Answers are interpreted by therapist for
    underlying meaning
  • Preferred by psychodynamic theorists to unleash
    the unconscious
  • Examples
  • Rorschach test
  • Thematic Apperception Test (TAT)

34
Personality AssessmentThematic Apperception
Test (TAT)
  • Developed by Henry Murray in 1935
  • Examiner chooses 10 cards with ambiguous
    black-and-white drawings of people in various
    situations
  • Subjects must tell a story about each card
  • Results analyzed based on need for achievement,
    affiliation, and aggression
  • Heroes, needs, themes and outcomes of the stories
    provide insight
  • Relies too much on the examiners interpretation
    little reliability/validity

35
Personality AssessmentRorschachTest
  • Developed by Hermann Rorschach in 1921
  • 10 inkblots 5 color, 5 bw
  • Subjects describe all 10 inkblots
  • Examiner then goes through cards again and asks
    questions for clarification/detail
  • Provides subject with considerable freedom to
    respond, but lacks reliability and validity.

36
Assessing Psychodynamic Theories of Personality
  • Criticisms
  • Not testable
  • Data to support this theory comes primarily from
    case studies based on the memories of clients,
    which we know can be flawed
  • Pessimistic outlook on human nature
  • Sexist/biased against women
  • Strengths
  • Early experiences shape personality and these
    should be studied from a developmental
    perspective
  • Human emotion and motivation are important in
    understanding personality
  • Concept of the unconscious
  • Therapeutic techniques

37
Humanistic Theories
  • As you already know, these theories stress the
    potential for human goodness and the natural
    desire to achieve personal goals
  • Unlike psychodynamic theories, humanistic
    theories
  • give individuals the power to control their own
    destiny (self determinism)
  • Are much more optimistic about human nature
  • Emphasize immediate subjective experiences that
    are unique to each of us
  • Representatives include Abraham Maslow and Carl
    Rogers

Begin Lec. 3 Guide
38
Humanistic TheoriesAbraham Maslows Theory of
Self Actualization
  • Self-actualized people
  • use their ability to their fullest potential
  • accurately perceive reality
  • accept themselves and others
  • have a good sense of humor
  • have frequent peak experiences (insightful,
    meaningful)

39
Humanistic TheoriesCarl Rogers Person-Centered
Approach
  • Behavior is goal-directed and worthwhile
  • Positive Regard
  • Conditional you are only loved when you conform
    to others wishes
  • Unconditional you are loved no matter what
    choices you make
  • Positive regard impacts personality and happiness
  • Real self who we are based on our experiences
  • Ideal self who we truly want to be
  • Should have some overlap you will if you get
    unconditional positive regard!
  • Maladjustment results from discrepancy between
    real and ideal selves

REAL SELF
IDEAL SELF
REAL SELF
IDEAL SELF
40
Humanistic TheoriesAn Evaluation
  • Strengths
  • Impact of these ideas on understanding happiness
    and fulfillment
  • Positive self-concept, empathy, optimistic
    outlook on human nature are things most agree are
    important in finding happiness
  • Weaknesses
  • Subjective concepts not scientific
  • Individualism encouraged by humanistic theorists
    can lead to self-indulgence and selfishness
  • Does not explain real examples of evil in humans

41
Trait and Type Theories
  • Personality is best explained in terms of
    descriptive adjectives and categories comprised
    of related qualities
  • Earliest of all types of personality theories
  • Representatives include Hippocrates, Eysenck and
    Allport

42
Trait and Type TheoriesThe Four Humors
  • The oldest theory of personality structure dating
    back to the Classical period (400 BCE)
  • Personality can be explained by the amounts of
    the four body fluids you have at a given time
  • A healthy personality meant a balance of these
    body fluids (humors)

43
Trait and Type TheoriesThe Four Humors
  • Image from the Middle Ages depicting the
    personality types associated with the four
    humors.
  • Top Left (A) Melancholic (Black Bile) moody,
    glum
  • Top Right (B) Choleric (Yellow Bile) irritable
    and hot tempered
  • Bottom Right (C) Phlegmatic (Phlegm) slow and
    droopy
  • Bottom Left (D) Sanguine (Red Bile) happy,
    energetic, passionate

A
B
D
C
44
Trait and Type TheoriesHans Eysenck
  • Eysenck evaluated personality based on 3 major
    dimensions
  • Stable vs. Unstable (Neurotic)
  • Are you predictable?
  • Are you sponteneous?
  • Introverted vs. Extroverted
  • Are you social and outgoing?
  • Are you reserved?
  • Psychoticism
  • Are you EXTREMELY stable, unstable, introverted
    or extroverted?

45
Trait and Type TheoriesGordon Allport
  • Allport perused the dictionary to extract every
    possible adjective that could be used to describe
    personality
  • After finding several thousand words, he decided
    this task wasoverwhelming
  • He decided to describe personality in terms of
    three types of traits
  • Cardinal Traits DEFINING trait
  • Central Traits top 8-10 descriptives
  • Secondary Traits situational descriptives

46
Trait and Type TheoriesBig Five
  • The Big Five traits currently thought to be
    central to describing personality (OCEAN)
  • Openness
  • Will you try new things? Do you keep an open
    mind? Are you intelligent?
  • Conscientiousness
  • Are you goal directed and driven?
  • Extroversion
  • Are you outgoing?
  • Agreeableness
  • Are you a peace-maker or a trouble-maker?
  • Neuroticism/stability
  • Are you predictable? Do you enjoy routine?

47
Trait and Type TheoriesBig Five
Why not try eating spiders?
  • Open to new experiences
  • NOT open

Im not eating that! Hmpf!
48
Trait and Type TheoriesBig Five
I am working til its DONE!
  • Conscientious
  • Undirected

Whatever
49
Trait and Type TheoriesBig Five
I hate people.
  • Introvert!
  • Extrovert!

Yeeeehaw!
50
Trait and Type TheoriesBig Five
Break it up!
  • Agreeable
  • Antagonistic

I am gonna kick your a!
51
Trait and Type TheoriesBig Five
Did someone touch my book!?!?!?!
  • Stable, Predictable
  • Unpredictable, Neurotic

I may fetchthen again, I may maul you to death
52
Personality Assessment and Evaluation of Trait
and Type Theories
  • Objective tests are preferred by trait and type
    theorists
  • Standardized, closed-ended questions
  • Sixteen Personality Factor Questionnaire
    (Cattells 16PF)
  • Minnesota Multiphasic Personality Inventory
    (MMPI-2)
  • Myers-Briggs Personality Inventory
  • Factor Analysis statistical procedure used to
    identify clusters of intercorrelated traits for
    example, someone may possess the related traits
    of being spontaneous, friendly, and outgoing and
    be labeled extroverted.
  • Neuropsychological Assessments such as PET scans
    may be used to identify brain activity associated
    with certain traits as well!
  • Strength is that TT theories provide simple,
    empirically-based assessment techniques and
    simple ways to organize peoples traits and types
  • Weakness is that they do not account for
    situational factors

53
Behaviorist Theories
  • Behaviorist theories claim that personality is
    formed through environmental stimuli
    reinforcement and punishment.
  • Example psychologists include Albert Bandura,
    John Watson and B.F. Skinner

54
Behaviorist TheoriesAlbert Bandura
  • Bandura believed people will imitate what they
    see others doing without being directly
    reinforced.
  • He called this theory observational learning
    theory
  • His famous study was called the Bobo Doll Study
    pictured here

55
Behaviorist TheoriesClassical Conditioning
  • Some behaviorists like Watson and Pavlov believed
    aspects of personality could be learned simply by
    pairing stimuli together
  • Watson proved this in his Baby Albert experiment

56
Behaviorist TheoriesOperant Conditioning
You will NOT swear, Johnny!
  • Some behaviorists like Skinner believed that
    personality could be learned by being reinforced
    or punished for certain behaviors.

!_at_!
57
Behaviorist TheoriesAn Assessment
  • Strength is that they account for environmental
    influence upon how we turn out we do, on some
    level, learn to be who we are
  • Weaknesses
  • Take individual control out of the personality
    equation we are only a product of our
    environment
  • Do not account for underlying causes of behavior
    that are not observable and measurable

58
Socio-Cognitive Theories
  • Cognitive theorists believe that personality is
    primarily a function of thoughts and thought
    processes as well as how situations influence our
    behavior
  • Example cognitive theorists include Bandura,
    Rotter and Mischel

59
Cognitive TheoriesJulian Rotter
  • Rotter was a cognitive theorist who developed the
    concept of locus of control.
  • People tend to have either an internal or
    external locus of control.
  • Internal Locus of Control things that happen in
    your life are a result of your own actions.
  • E.g. I made varsity because I spent the whole
    off-season training to do so!
  • External Locus of Control things that happen in
    your life are a result of forces beyond your
    control.
  • E.g. I made varsity because my horoscope said I
    would have a lucky day!

60
Cognitive TheoriesAlbert Bandura
  • Bandura, who also could be considered a
    socio-cognitive theorist, believed that self
    efficacy was important in understanding
    personality.
  • Self efficacy is defined as ones belief that
    they will be successful in the things they do.
  • Individuals with a higher sense of self efficacy
    tend to be happier and more successful.
  • Interestingly, girls sense of self efficacy
    tends to drop when they hit puberty. Why?

61
Cognitive TheoriesAlbert Bandura
  • Also believed in reciprocal determinism, where
    personality is determines by the interaction of
    our traits, our environment and our behaviors

62
Cognitive TheoriesWalter Mischel
  • Mischel believed in the concept of
    self-regulation.
  • This accounts for the fact that people often
    change their personality depending on the
    situation they are in.
  • In the process of self-regulation, people change
    their actions and responses on the basis of past
    experiences as well as an assessment of the
    current situation.

63
Socio-Cognitive Personality Assessment
  • The personal interview/Assessment interview
  • 1 to 1 direct questioning
  • Direct observation/Naturalistic Observation
  • As previously discussed, can get very honest
    information
  • Self Monitoring
  • Method of personality regulation used when you
    want to change an aspect of your personality
  • Record all thoughts and behaviors surrounding a
    behavioral pattern you want to change to try to
    eliminate triggers

64
Socio-Cognitive TheoriesEvaluation
  • Strength is that they take into consideration the
    dual influence of personal and environmental
    factors
  • Weakness is that they place too much emphasis on
    the situation and not enough on the persistence
    of certain personal traits across situations

65
Exploring the Self
  • In summary, the self can be defined as the center
    of personality all characteristics, conscious
    and unconscious, mental and physical.
  • We tend to be very self-focused, leading to the
    spotlight effect, overestimation of others
    noticing and focusing on us
  • Having a high self-esteem is important for our
    mental (and physical) health, but we can be blind
    to the reality of our shortcomings, resulting in
    a self-serving bias
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