1 / 14

PSYCHOANALYTICAL APROACH Key figures: Freud, Jung, Adler, Horney

PSYCHOANALYTICAL APROACH Key figures: Freud, Jung, Adler, Horney.

neidao
Télécharger la présentation

PSYCHOANALYTICAL APROACH Key figures: Freud, Jung, Adler, Horney

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. PSYCHOANALYTICAL APROACHKey figures: Freud, Jung, Adler, Horney • Personality is…it arises from a conflict between our aggressive pleasure seeking biological impulses & the internalized social restraints against them. It is a way of expressing impulses that brings satisfaction w/o guilt or punishment. • Assessments: • Freudian treatment approaches: dream analysis, hypnosis, free association • Projective tests: • TAT: Thematic Apperception Test • Rorschach inkblot test Weakness: too subjective, potentially not reliable and/or valid

  2. PSYCHOANALYTICAL APROACH • Strengths: • Importance of childhood • Power of the unconscious • Struggle with inner conflicts • Provided building blocks • Weaknesses: • Development a lifelong process not just childhood • Underestimate peer influence • Superiority of men belief • Dream theories • Repression myth? • Defining the unconscious (not as big as thought) • Lack of scientific methodology

  3. ICEBURG ANALOGY OF THE MIND

  4. FREUD’S COMPONENTS OF PERSONALITY • 1. Id – “pleasure principle” unconsciousimpulses that want to be gratified, without regard to potential punishment….YOUR INNER CHILD • 2. Ego “reality principle”– moderates between the id and superego…YOU IN THE MIDDLE • 3. Superego – the “moral principle” of our personality which tells us right from wrong our conscience…YOURINNER PARENT

  5. PSYCHOANALYTICAL APPROACH • TERMS TO KNOW: • Defense mechanisms: • Repression, regression, reaction formation, projection, rationalization, displacement, & sublimation Freud’s stages of psychosexual development: oral, anal, phallic, latency, & genital

  6. Trait Theory • Personality is…identifiable and measurable behavior patterns to be described, labeled & categorized. • The Greeks had 4: melancholic, sanguine, phlegmatic, choleric • Key figures: Allport, Myers & Briggs, Eysenck, Costa & McCrae • Assessment • Children: shy-inhibited or fearless-uninhibited • Type A or Type B • Body types: endomorph, mesomorph, ectomorph • Myers-Briggs: thinking-feeling (Keirsey test is a version of this) • MMPI (Minnesota Multiphasice Personality Inventory…business, jobs, etc. • Eysenck: introvert/extrovert stable/unstable • Costa & McCrae: The Big 5: OCEAN (openness, conscientiousness, extroverted, agreeableness, neurotic)

  7. Trait theory • Strengths • Objective tests • Averaging our behaviors reveals distinct personality traits • Individual differences are typically easily perceived. • Weaknesses • Self reports are ok, but peer reports seem better • Person-situation controversy: do personality trait persist over time & across situations or do situations influence us more than we like to admit? • Personality scores do not strongly predict behaviors…again situational influences

  8. Humanistic theory • Personality is…our sense of self and should be viewed through the eyes of the subject not the researcher. • Key figures: Abraham Maslow & Carl Rogers • Assessment • Sometimes subjective sometimes objective • The ideal vs. the actual self (when equitable, it is considered a + self-concept)

  9. Humanistic theory • Strengths • The importance of the self • Significant influence on counseling, education, parenting, management • Emphasis on the individual reinforces Western values • Weaknesses • Is self-esteem a cause of personality or an effect of events? (self esteem is the core concept of this approach) • Self-serving bias: the tendency to perceive ourselves more favorably; adaptively, a good thing • Vague & subjective • Too much focus on the self? • Naively optimistic? What about evil?

  10. Social-Cognitive Perspective • Personality is…a result of external events and how we interpret them. • Key players: Alfred Bandura (Bobo doll) • Reciprocal determinism: process of interacting w/ our environment • Assessment • Correlation & experimentation… putting people in situations and measuring their behaviors • Predictive power in past behavior patterns or simulated situations

  11. Social-Cognitive Perspective • Do you feel the world is run by a few powerful people? • Do you feel that getting a good job depends mainly on being at the right place at the right time? • Do you feel that success and luck go hand in hand? • If so, you tend to have an external locus of control.

  12. Social-Cognitive Perspective • Do you strongly believe that what happens to you is of your own doing? • Do you believe that the average person can influence government decisions? • Do you believe being successful is a matter of hard work? • If so, you tend to have an internal locus of control. • A sense of control is a human necessity or one may likely suffer from learned helplessness.

  13. Culture’s influence • Individualistic societies: ME • Give priority to one’s own goals over the group goals and defining one’s identity in terms of personal attributes rather than group identifications • Typical of American, Western European, Australian & New Zealand cultures • Join groups but not as focused on group harmony • Collectivistic societies: WE • Give priority to the goals of one’s group (often one’s extended family or work group) and defining one’s identity accordingly • Typical of Eastern cultures (China, Japan, SE Asia) • Group harmony & connections to extended family are highly valued.

  14. Social-Cognitive Perspective Strengths Notes the importance of the interaction of the person & situation Builds on research of learning & cognition • Weaknesses • Too much focus on the situation & not the individual’s traits • Where is the “person” in personality?

More Related