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Introduction to Personality & Research Methods

Introduction to Personality & Research Methods. What Is Personality? Why Do We Use a Concept of Personality? Personality Defined Major Perspectives Understanding Human Aggression Constructs & Operational Definitions Personality Assessment & Measurement. I. What Is Personality?.

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Introduction to Personality & Research Methods

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  1. Introduction to Personality & Research Methods • What Is Personality? • Why Do We Use a Concept of Personality? • Personality Defined • Major Perspectives • Understanding Human Aggression • Constructs & Operational Definitions • Personality Assessment & Measurement

  2. I. What Is Personality?

  3. II. Why Do We Use a Concept of Personality?

  4. III. PersonalityDefined • As a construct… • Personality refers to 1) consistent behavioral patterns and 2) intrapersonal processes originating within the individual.

  5. III. Personality Defined • As a field of study… • Personality is the scientific study of cognitive, affect, and behavioral individual difference variables and the ways in which these variables interact with situational variables to influence behavior. • Personality psychology is concerned with the measurement of such variables and with the factors responsible for their development, behavioral expression, and change.

  6. IV. Major Perspectives • Psychodynamic • Biological • Trait • Humanistic/Existential • Behavioral/Social Learning • Cognitive

  7. The Psychodynamic Approach • Internal personality dynamics • Unconscious conflicts • Impulses versus defenses • Importance of childhood

  8. The Biological Approach • The human animal • Brain & biochemical processes • Genetics • Evolutionary factors

  9. Trait Approach • Behaviors are trait driven • Traits as stable over time and across situations • Focus on identifying essential traits • Prediction of behavior from traits

  10. The Humanistic Approach • Freedom & inherent goodness • Self-actualization • Phenomenological emphasis • Centrality of the self

  11. The Behavioral Approach • Importance of past and present environment • Changeability of the individual • Humans as reactors • Centrality of learning

  12. The Cognitive Approach • Humans as information processors • Emphasize thinking, planning, & memory • Role of beliefs, expectations, & schemas • Mental construction of reality

  13. Interacting Causes B = f(P, E) • Translation: “Behavior is a function of the person and environment” - Kurt Lewin

  14. Interacting Causes • The Person: • Biological causes • Cognitive causes • Intra-psychic causes • Trait causes • The Environment • Behavioral causes • Trait causes

  15. V. Understanding Human Aggression

  16. Biological Approach

  17. Behavioral Approach • Classical conditioning • Operant conditioning • Modeling

  18. Relation Between Amount of Violent TV at Age 8 and Seriousness of Criminal Acts by Age 30(Eron, 1987) Seriousness of Criminal Acts

  19. Cognitive Processes in Aggression • Diabolical enemy image/moral self image • Appeal to moral principles • Displacement of responsibility • Diffusion of responsibility • Dehumanization of the enemy

  20. Psychodynamic Approach • Over-controlled hostility (Edwin Megargee) • The habitually violent (Hans Toch) • Self-defenders • Self-indulgers • Bullies and sadists • Self-image compensators

  21. Humanistic Approach

  22. Trait Approach

  23. VI. Constructs & Operational Definitions

  24. VII. Personality Assessment & Measurement

  25. Psychoanalytic Perspective • Introduction • Psychoanalytic Theory • Models of the Mind • Instincts & Tension Reduction • Psychosexual Development • Impulses & Defense • How the Unconscious Reveals Itself • Explanations for Psychopathology • Research & Applications

  26. I. Introduction

  27. II. Psychoanalytic Theory • Uses of the term “Psychoanalysis” • Theory of personality • Method for understanding the mind • Method for treating psychological disorders

  28. III. Models of the Mind • Levels of Awareness • Conscious • Preconscious • Un/Subconscious • Personality Structures • Id (pleasure principle) • Ego (reality principle • Superego (morality principle)

  29. Comparison of Personality Structures

  30. IV. Impulses & Tension Reduction • Libido: life energy • Thanatos: death or aggressive impulse

  31. V. Psychosexual Development • Each stage has a body area that is focused on for pleasure/gratification (erogenous zones)

  32. Psychosexual Stages • Oral Stage (birth – 18 months) • Anal Stage (18 months – 3 yeas) • Phallic Stage (3 – 6 years) • Latency Stage (6 – 13 years) • Genital Stage (13 years –)

  33. Fixation • Getting stuck in a stage due to: • Trauma • Receiving too much or too little of what is needed from parents

  34. VI. Impulses & Defense • Anxiety: a warning signal that something bad is about to happen • Anxiety signals the ego to use defenses • Anxiety ~ air raid siren warning of an impending air attack • Ego defenses ~ anti-aircraft guns designed to combat the enemy planes

  35. Ego Defense Mechanisms • Repression (The master defense):blocking mental content from conscious awareness • Sublimation • Denial • Displacement • Intellectualization • Projection • Rationalization • Reaction Formation • Regression

  36. VII. How the Unconscious Reveals Itself • Hypnosis • Free Association • Dream Analysis

  37. VII. How the Unconscious Reveals Itself • Projective Tests

  38. The Rorschach Inkblot Test

  39. The Rorschach Inkblot Test

  40. Issues Considered When Scoring the Rorschach (Exner Scoring System) • Human? • Animal? • Movement? • Whole blot? • Part of the blot that is described • How typical is the response given (ordinary, unusual, or “-”)

  41. Thematic Apperception Test (TAT

  42. Thematic Apperception Test (TAT)

  43. VII. How the Unconscious Reveals Itself • Freudian Slips

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