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Personality

1. Structure of Personality Freud’s Theory 2. Personality Assessment. Personality. What is Personality?. How people differ at the individual level Personality An individual’s characteristic pattern of thinking, feeling, and acting. The Psychoanalytic Perspective. Freud’s Theory

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Personality

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  1. 1. Structure of Personality Freud’s Theory 2. Personality Assessment Personality

  2. What is Personality? • How people differ at the individual level • Personality • An individual’s characteristic pattern of thinking, feeling, and acting

  3. The Psychoanalytic Perspective Freud’s Theory Unconscious motivations influence personality

  4. The Psychoanalytic Perspective • Psychoanalysis - Freud • Theory of personality that attributes our thoughts and actions to unconscious motives and conflicts • People are motivated by unacceptable passions for sex and aggression, so we repress those motivations from consciousness, causing conflict • Techniques used in treating psychological disorders that seek to expose and interpret unconscious conflicts

  5. The Psychoanalytic Perspective • Free Association • Dream Interpretation • Jokes

  6. Psychoanalytic Structure of the Mind • The mind is divided into 3 parts: • Conscious mind contains things that occupy one’s current attention • Preconscious mind contains things that aren’t currently in consciousness, but can be accessed • Unconsciousmostly unacceptable thoughts, wishes, feelings and memoriesthat are beyond awareness

  7. Psychoanalytic Personality Structure • Personality is also divided into 3 structures: • Id: Governed by inborn instinctual drives, especially those related to sex and aggression • Obeys the pleasure principle • Superego: Motivates people to act in an ideal fashion, according to moral customs of parents and culture • Obeys the idealistic principle • Ego: Induces people to act with reason and deliberation, and to conform to the requirements of the outside world • Obeys the reality principle • Id is entirely in unconscious mind • superego and ego are divided between conscious and unconscious mind

  8. Psychoanalytic Personality Structure • Freud’s “iceberg” idea of the mind’s structure • Abstract concepts for understanding the mind’s conflicts between pleasure-seeking and social restraint Preconscious

  9. Psychoanalytic Personality Structure • Id (unconscious psychic energy) • strives to satisfy basic sexual and aggressive drives • operates on the pleasure principle, demanding immediate gratification (think of an infant) • Must be restrained by reality • “id-dominated” people more often use tobacco, alcohol, drugs

  10. Psychoanalytic Personality Structure • Superego (conscience) • Internalized ideals (how we ought to behave) • The conscience • Idealized Self • Internalized Parent • At odds with the id

  11. Psychoanalytic Personality Structure • Ego (personality executive) • the largely conscious, “executive mediator” part of personality • In charge of coping with reality by constraining our perceptions, thoughts, judgments and memories • Struggles to reconcile the id and the superego • operates on the reality principle, satisfying the id’s desires in ways that will realistically bring long-term pleasure rather than pain

  12. Psychoanalytic Defense Mechanisms • Some Defense Mechanisms • Ego’s protective methods of reducing anxiety by unconsciously distorting reality • Different parts of personality are in constant conflict, especially with regard to the id • Defense mechanisms ward off the resulting anxiety from these conflicts, often through self-deception • Repression • Denial • Reaction formation • Projection • Rationalization • Displacement • Sublimation

  13. Psychoanalytic Defense Mechanisms • Repression • Cornerstone of psychoanalytic theory • the basic defense mechanism that banishes anxiety-arousing thoughts, feelings, and memories from consciousness • Incomplete repression when urges seep out in dream symbols and “Freudian slips”

  14. Psychoanalytic Defense Mechanisms • Denial • defense mechanism in which an individual faced with anxiety denies the source of the anxiety

  15. Psychoanalytic Defense Mechanisms • Reaction Formation • defense mechanism by which the ego unconsciously switches unacceptable impulses into their opposites • people may express feelings that are the opposite of their anxiety-arousing unconscious feelings • e.g., if you are jealous of someone, you may try to become their friend to suppress the jealousy

  16. Psychoanalytic Defense Mechanisms • Projection • defense mechanism by which people disguise their own threatening impulses by attributing them to others • You accuse your mate of cheating on you because you have been fantasizing about another person

  17. Psychoanalytic Defense Mechanisms • Rationalization • defense mechanism that offers self-justifying explanations in place of the real, more threatening, unconscious reasons for one’s actions • “It’s okay for me not to vote, because one vote doesn’t matter anyway” • Disguises “I’d rather sleep late/hang out with my friends”, “I haven’t bothered to find out where to vote or the issues or candidates on the ballot” etc.

  18. Psychoanalytic Defense Mechanisms • Displacement • defense mechanism that shifts sexual or aggressive impulses toward a more acceptable or less threatening object or person • as when redirecting anger toward a safer outlet • You’re mad at your boss, so you punch the wall/kick the dog/yell at your friend, etc.

  19. Psychoanalytic Defense Mechanisms • Sublimation • defense mechanism similar to displacement, but has positive (pro-social) consequences

  20. Assessing the Unconscious • If personality emerges from the unconscious, how can we measure it? • Projective Test • a personality test, such as the Rorschach, that provides ambiguous stimuli designed to trigger projection of one’s inner dynamics • People interpret unstructured or ambiguous stimuli • Idea is that you “project” true thoughts, feelings into the interpretation, revealing your personality

  21. Assessing the Unconscious • Rorschach Inkblot Test • the most widely used projective test • a set of 10 inkblots designed by Hermann Rorschach • seeks to identify people’s inner feelings by analyzing their interpretations of the blots

  22. Assessing the Unconscious • Is the Rorschach a good test of personality? • Most scientists say no • Subjective • Not reliable (consistency of results) • Different raters may interpret a patient’s response quite differently • Not valid (do not predict accurately) • Cannot identify who is suicidal and who isn’t • However, some therapists still use these tests today

  23. Problems with Freud • Extremely influential on Western culture, but not accepted by many modern psychologists • Criticisms: • Ideas are not testable, nor do they predict behavior • His observations were not scientific • Over-reliance on case studies of disturbed individuals • Biased against women • Freud attributed women’s reports of childhood sexual abuse to unconscious conflicts and a weak superego

  24. Neo-Freudians • They Accept: • notions of id, ego, superego • dynamics of anxiety and defense mechanisms • importance of unconscious • shaping of personality in childhood • In addition, they recognize: • the importance of conscious motivations and social interaction • Instead of strictly sex and aggression, highermotives also underlie motivation

  25. TAT: Thematic Apperception Test • Who are these people? • What are they doing? • What are they thinking & feeling? • What will happen?

  26. Eysenck’s Trait Dimensions

  27. Humanistic Perspective • Maslow (1908-70) • studied self-actualization processes of productive and healthy people (e.g., Lincoln) • Focuses on people’s unique capacity for choice, responsibility and growth

  28. Humanistic Perspective • Personality reflects where you are in the hierarchy of needs • if your physiological needs are met, you become concerned with personal safety, then love, and so on… • Problems arise from failure to satisfy needs

  29. Humanistic Perspective • Self-Actualization • the ultimate psychological need that arises after basic physical and psychological needs are met and self-esteem is achieved • the motivation to fulfill one’s potential

  30. Humanistic Perspective • Rogers’ Person-Centered Humanistic Approach • Unconditional Positive Regard • an attitude of total acceptance toward another person • Conditions of growth • People nurture our growth by being • Genuine, accepting, empathic • Self-Concept • all our thoughts and feelings about ourselves, in an answer to the question, “Who am I?” • Positive when ideal self and actual self are similar • Problems when ideal and actual are incongruent • Personality comes from self-concept

  31. Were the humanists right? • Also influential on western culture • Emphasizes individuality • Optimistic view of human potential for positive growth • Criticisms: • Too optimistic? Drives for growth and self-actualization are sometimes expressed and sometimes not • Focus on self can lead to self-indulgence, selfishness, erosion of moral restraints

  32. Contemporary Research - The Trait Perspective • Descriptive approach to personality • Contrasts with the explanatory psychoanalytic and humanistic approaches • Classifies personality according to “types” • Uses objective questions to identify personality traits that determine a type profile

  33. Contemporary Research - The Trait Perspective • Trait • a characteristic pattern of behavior • a disposition to feel and act, as assessed by self-report inventories and peer reports • Personality Inventory • a questionnaire (often with true-false or agree-disagree items) on which people respond to items designed to gauge a wide range of feelings and behaviors • used to assess selected personality traits

  34. UNSTABLE Moody Touchy Anxious Restless Rigid Aggressive Sober Excitable Pessimistic Changeable Reserved Impulsive Unsociable Optimistic Quiet Active choleric melancholic INTROVERTED EXTRAVERTED Passive phlegmatic sanguine Sociable Careful Outgoing Thoughtful Talkative Peaceful Responsive Controlled Easygoing Reliable Lively Even-tempered Carefree Calm Leadership STABLE The Trait Perspective • Eysenck – uses two primary personality factors to describe personality variation • Stable-unstable • Introverted-extroverted

  35. The Trait Perspective • Minnesota Multiphasic Personality Inventory (MMPI) • the most widely researched and clinically used of all personality tests • People answer groups of questions about how they typically think, act, and feel • Responses compared to averages compiled from large groups of prior test takers (standardized!) • originally developed to identify emotional disorders (still its most appropriate use) • now used for many other screening purposes, such as job placement – hmmm…

  36. The Trait Perspective • Empirically Derived Test • a test developed by testing a pool of items and then selecting those that discriminate between groups (e.g., suicidal and not) • such as the MMPI • Have you stopped beating your wife?

  37. The Trait Perspective MMPI • Example MMPI test profiles • Higher T scores indicate problems • Group differences are evident

  38. The “Big Five” Personality Factors Trait Dimension Description Emotional Stability Calm versus anxious Secure versus insecure Self-satisfied versus self-pitying Extraversion Sociable versus retiring Fun-loving versus sober Affectionate versus reserved Openness Imaginative versus practical Preference for variety versus preference for routine Independent versus conforming Extraversion Soft-hearted versus ruthless Trusting versus suspicious Helpful versus uncooperative Conscientiousness Organized versus disorganized Careful versus careless Disciplined versus impulsive The Trait Perspective

  39. The Big Five The best (so far) index of personality Big 5 traits are stable*, 50% heritable, culturally generalizable Outcomes are reasonably valid and reliable

  40. Social-Cognitive Perspective Views behavior as influenced by the interaction between persons and their social context Experience, plus how people interpret experience, determine personality growth and development Emphasizes learned behaviors over innate nature

  41. Social-Cognitive Perspective • Reciprocal Determinism • the interacting influences between personality and environmental factors • Beliefs, behavior, and environment interact to shape what you learn from experience

  42. Social-Cognitive Perspective

  43. Social-Cognitive Perspective • Personal Control • our sense of controlling our environments rather than feeling helpless • External Locus of Control • the perception that chance or outside forces beyond one’s personal control determine one’s fate

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