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Raymond Cattell’s Factor Analytical Trait Theory

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Raymond Cattell’s Factor Analytical Trait Theory

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  1. This presentation will probably involve audience discussion, which will create action items. Use PowerPoint to keep track of these action items during your presentation • In Slide Show, click on the right mouse button • Select “Meeting Minder” • Select the “Action Items” tab • Type in action items as they come up • Click OK to dismiss this box • This will automatically create an Action Item slide at the end of your presentation with your points entered. Raymond Cattell’s Factor Analytical Trait Theory

  2. Factor Analysis • Thousands of variables exist distinguishing individuals • Dozen of theories of personality have been proposed to explain personality • Theories studied so far have, at best, presented a subjective view of human behavior & relied on the theorist’s explanation of its etiology

  3. Factor Analysis • A method that attempts to determine the degree of covariation among a large set of variables as they are measured across a large group of subjects

  4. Basic Assumption of FA • Certain characteristics correlate, or covary, in such a way as to define a separate psychological dimension, or “factor.”

  5. What is Factor Analysis • a statistical means to recognize the regularity and order in phenomena . • when phenomena occur, they occur independently of each other • patterns exist in these independent phenomena • all constructs consist of a pattern of interaction between phenomena

  6. Usefulness of Factor Analysis • ...can simultaneously manage over a hundred variables • …can compensate for random error and invalidity • …can untangle complex interrelationships between variables • …can pin-point regularities in those interrelationships

  7. Steps in Factor Analysis • 1. Obtain measures of several variables from a large sample • 2. Determine the degree of relationship of every variable with every other variable in the total set (Yields a correlation matrix) • 3. Determine whether there are clusters of variables within the matrix that go together to form dimensions (factor extraction)

  8. Steps in Factor Analysis (cont.) • 5. Determine factor loadings – correlations between the factor as a whole and the specific item measures that comprise the factor – indicates the degree to which an item measure goes along with the underlying dimension that constitutes the factor • 6. Name or label the factor, based on the content of the item measures that load on the factor (inherently subjective)

  9. Factor Analysis (example) • “Traits” of humans: outgoing, friendly, shy, mean, sarcastic, nice, sociable • If we rate others, then correlate, we find that outgoing, shy, withdrawn and sociable all correlate (some negatively), while friendly, mean, sarcastic, and nice correlate. • These eight words comprise two separate, unrelated (orthogonal) factors, which we might label as “extraversion” and “agreeableness”

  10. Costs of Factor Analysis • Complicated mathematical procedure • Difficult to explain • Requiring considerable explanation in scientific articles • Not usually learned by students, even in their statistics courses

  11. Cattell & Factor Analysis • Measured people in different ways • L-data or “life” data, e.g., # accidents, # social organizations they belong to, # social contacts • Q-data - “questionnaire” data, e.g., individuals rated themselves on different issues • T-data - “objective” data, e.g., collected via TAT, Rorschach, etc.

  12. Cattell & F.A. • Analyze collected data & produce cluster matrix • After clusters analyzed, any correlation noted • Highly correlated tests assume to measure same characteristics • These called factors because they were identified via “factor analysis”

  13. Categories of Traits • Cattell argued traits are elements of personality • Two major types of trait • surface traits - groups of observations that are correlated • source traits - actual traits that determine behavior

  14. Source Traits • • Temperament trait • – How • • Dynamic trait (motivation) • –Why • • Ability trait • – Kind of response

  15. 16 PF • – Warmth (Sizia – Affectia) • – Reasoning • – Emotional stability • – Dominance • – Liveliness • – Rule-consciousness • – Social boldness

  16. • 16 PF continued • – Sensitivity (Threctia – Parmia) • – Vigilance (Harria – Premsia) • – Abstractedness (Alaxia – Protension) • – Privateness (Praxernia – Autia) • – Apprehension • – Openness to change • – Self-reliance • – Perfectionism • – tension

  17. Nature/Nurture • Cattell’s theory differentiates between environmental and genetic source of traits • “constitutional source traits” determined by heredity • “environmental-mold traits” determined by environment • Ability traits - source traits determine how efficiently one works towards goal

  18. Nature/Nurture • Temperament traits - source traits governing emotional expression • Dynamic traits - 2 types of trait motivate person towards goal • “erg”  inherited and similar to “instinct, drive, need” • “metaerg”  environmentally-molded, e.g., opportunity

  19. “Specific Equation” • Illustrates Cattell’s deterministic view of human behavior • He argues behavior can be predicted if variables known • Since all variables cannot be know, prediction is “probabilistic”

  20. “Specific Equation” (cont.) • R = f(S,P) • A person’s specific response (R) is a function (f) of the stimulus situation (S) at a given moment in time, and of the existing personality structure (P)

  21. Evaluation of Cattell’s Theory • Highly praised because of its attention to empirical detail, I.e., “scientific method” • Cattell focused on precise measures to study personality structure • Most critics not concerned with “tough minded” study of personality

  22. Critics of Theory • suggest some of Cattell’s findings not replicated • Cattell’s 16 factors really 5 factors, I.e., “Big Five” • suggest that the “naming” of identified factors was ‘subjective’

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