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Personality Theories and Assessment

Personality Theories and Assessment. Psychology: A Concise Introduction 2 nd Edition Richard Griggs Chapter 8. Prepared by J. W. Taylor V. Personality. A person’s internally based characteristic ways of acting and thinking. The Journey…. The Psychoanalytic Approach to Personality

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Personality Theories and Assessment

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  1. Personality Theories and Assessment Psychology: A Concise Introduction2nd Edition Richard Griggs Chapter 8 Prepared byJ. W. Taylor V

  2. Personality A person’s internally based characteristic ways of acting and thinking

  3. The Journey… • The Psychoanalytic Approach to Personality • The Humanistic Approach and the Social-Cognitive Approach to Personality • Trait Theories of Personality and Personality Assessment

  4. The Psychoanalytic Approach to Personality Freudian Classical Psychoanalytic Theory of Personality Neo-Freudian Theories of Personality

  5. Freudian Classical Psychoanalytic Theory of Personality • Developed by Sigmund Freud in the late nineteenth century and continued until his death in 1939 • Freud received a medical degree and established a practice as a clinical neurologist treating patients with emotional disorders • Believed sex was a primary cause of emotional problems and was a critical component of his personality theory • Remains an important influence in Western culture

  6. Freud’s Three Levels of Awareness 1. The conscious mind is what you are presently aware of, what you are thinking about right now 2. The preconscious mind is stored in your memory that you are not presently aware of but can gain access to 3. The unconscious mindis the part of our mind of which we cannot become aware • It contains, however, the primary motivations for all of our actions and feelings – our biological instinctual drives (such as for food and sex) and repressed unacceptable thoughts, memories, and feelings, especially unresolved conflicts from our early childhood experiences

  7. Freud’s Three-Part Personality Structure Id Ego Superego

  8. The Id • Is the original personality, the only part present at birth and the part out of which the other two parts of our personality emerge • Resides in the unconscious mind • Includes our biological instinctual drives, the primitive parts of our personality located in our unconscious • Life instincts for survival, reproduction, and pleasure • Death instincts, destructive and aggressive drives detrimental to survival • Operates on a pleasure principle; that is, it demands immediate gratification for these drives without the concern for the consequences of this gratification

  9. The Ego • Starts developing during the first year or so of life to find realistic and socially-acceptable outlets for the id’s needs • Operates on thereality principle, finding gratification for instinctual drives within the constraints of reality (the norms and laws of society) • Part of the ego is unconscious (tied to the id) and part of the ego is conscious and preconscious (tied to the external world) • Serves as the executive manager of the personality

  10. The Superego • Represents one’s conscience and idealized standards of behavior in their culture • Operates on a morality principle, threatening to overwhelm us with guilt and shame • The demands of the superego and the id will come into conflict and the ego will have to resolve this turmoil within the constraints of reality • To prevent being overcome with anxiety because of trying to satisfy the id and superego demands, the ego uses what Freud called defense mechanisms, processes that distort reality and protect us from anxiety

  11. Freud’s Defense Mechanisms

  12. Freud’s Defense Mechanisms

  13. Unhealthy Personalities • Develop not only when we become too dependent upon defense mechanisms, but also when the id or superego is unusually strong or the ego unusually weak

  14. Freud’s Psychosexual Stage Theory • Was developed chiefly from his own childhood memories and from his years of interactions with his patients and their case studies that included their childhood memories • An erogenous zone is the area of the body where the id’s pleasure-seeking psychic energy is focused during a particular stage of psychosexual development • A change in erogenous zones designates the beginning of a new stage • Fixation occurs when a portion of the id’s pleasure-seeking energy remains in a stage because of excessive gratification or frustration of our instinctual needs and continue throughout the person’s life and impact their behavior and personality traits

  15. Five Psychosexual Stages Oral Stage (birth to 18 months) Anal Stage (18 months to 3 years) Phallic Stage (3 to 6 years) Latency Stage (6 years to puberty) Genital Stage (puberty to adulthood)

  16. Freud’s Psychosocial States of Personality Development

  17. Potty Training • Parents try to get the child to have self-control during toilet training • If the child reacts to harsh toilet training by trying to get even with the parents by withholding bowel movements, an anal-retentive personality with the traits of orderliness, neatness, stinginess, and obstinacy develops • The anal-expulsive personality develops when the child rebels against the harsh training and has bowel movements whenever and wherever he desires

  18. Phallic Stage Conflicts • In the Oedipus conflict, the little boy becomes sexually attracted to his mother and fears the father (his rival) will find out and castrate him • In the Electra conflict, the little girl is attracted to her father because he has a penis; she wants one and feels inferior without one (penis envy)

  19. Identification • In the process of identification, the child adopts the characteristics of the same-sexed parents and learns their gender role (the set of behaviors expected of someone of a particular sex) • It is during identification that the superego begins to develop

  20. Evaluation of Freud’s Psychoanalytic Theory of Personality • Freud’s notion of an “unconscious” level of awareness is not accessible to anyone and is impossible to examine scientifically • Indeed, unconscious information processing does impact our thinking and behavior • However, the unconscious is not a storehouse of instinctual drives, conflicts, and repressed memories and desires • Although early childhood experiences are indeed important, there is little evidence for his psychosexual stages impacting development

  21. Evaluation of Freud’s Psychoanalytic Theory of Personality • Contemporary researchers think repression, seldom, if ever, really occurs • We understand today how Freud’s questioning during therapy may have created such “repressed’ memories in his patients • There is evidence we fight hard to maintain self-esteem, but not necessarily through defense mechanisms as Freud described them

  22. Neo-Freudian Theories of Personality • Agree with many of Freud’s basic ideas, but differ in one or more important ways Carl Jung’s Collective Unconscious Alfred Adler’s Striving for Superiority Karen Horneyand theNeed for Security

  23. Carl Jung’s Collective Unconscious • The collective unconsciousis the accumulated universal experiences of humankind, with each of us inheriting the same cumulative storehouse of all human experiences • These experiences are manifested in archetypes, which are images and symbols of all the important themes in the history of humankind (e.g., God, mother, hero) • Notions of collective unconscious and archetypes are more mystical than scientific and cannot be empirically tested

  24. Carl Jung’s Collective Unconscious • Jung proposed two main personality attitudes, extraversion and introversion • Jung also proposed four functions/styles of gathering information • Sensing is the reality function in which the world is carefully perceived • Intuiting is more subjective perception • Thinking is logical deduction • Feeling is the subjective emotional function • The two personality attitudes and four functions are the basis for the Myers-Briggs Type Indicator, still in wide use today

  25. Alfred Adler’s Striving for Superiority • Adler thought the main motivation was what he termed “striving for superiority” – to overcome the sense of inferiority that we feel as infants given our totally helpless and dependent state • A healthy person learns to cope with these feelings, becomes competent, and develops a sense of self-esteem • Inferiority complex is the strong feeling of inferiority felt by those who never overcome this initial feeling of inferiority

  26. Karen Horney and The Need for Security • Focused on dealing with our need for security, rather than a sense of inferiority • A child’s caregivers must provide a sense of security for a healthy personality to develop or else basic anxiety, a feeling of helplessness and insecurity in a hostile world, will result Three neurotic personality patterns • Moving toward peopleA compliant, submissive person • Moving against peopleAn aggressive, domineering person • Moving away from peopleA detached, aloof person

  27. The Humanistic Approach and the Social-Cognitive Approach to Personality The Humanistic Approach to Personality The Social-Cognitive Approach to Personality

  28. Alternative Approaches • Humanistic theories developed in the 1960s as a part of a response to the deterministic psychoanalytic and strict behavioral psychological approaches that then dominated psychology and the study of personality • The humanistic approach emphasizes conscious free will in one’s actions, the uniqueness of the individual person, and personal growth • During the 1960s, social-cognitive theorists rebelled against the narrowness of the strict behavioral approach to the development of personality, emphasizing both social and cognitive factors along with conditioning to explain personality development

  29. The Humanistic Approach to Personality • Abraham Maslow is considered the father of the humanistic movement • He studied the lives of very healthy and creative people to develop his theory of personality • Maslow’s hierarchy of needsis an arrangement of the innate needs that motivate our behavior, from the strongest needs at the bottom of the pyramid to the weakness needs at the top of the pyramid

  30. Self-Actualization Self-Esteem Social Safety Physiological Maslow’s Hierarchy of Needs

  31. Maslow’s Hierarchy of Needs

  32. Self-Actualization • Characteristics of self-actualized people include • Accepting themselves, others, and the nature of world for what they are • Having a need for privacy and only a few close, emotional relationships • Being autonomous and independent, democratic, and very creative • Having peak experiences, which are experiences of deep insight in which you experience whatever you are doing as fully as possible

  33. Critique • Maslow hierarchy of needs is criticized for being based on non-empirical vague studies of a small number of people that he subjectively selected as self-actualized

  34. Roger’s Self Theory • Carl Rogers was a client-centered therapist who dealt with young, bright college students with adjustment problems • Emphasized self-actualization • Believe that people have a strong need for positive regard – to be accepted by and have the affection of others, especially the significant others in our life

  35. Roger’s Self Theory • Our parents set up conditions of worth, the behaviors and attitudes for which they would give us positive regard • Meeting conditions of worth continues throughout life, and a person develops a self-concept of what others think he should be • Unconditional positive regard – acceptance and approval without conditions • Empathy from others, and having others be genuine with respect to their own feelings is necessary if we are to self-actualized • Note that neither Maslow nor Roger’s theories are research-based

  36. The Social-Cognitive Approach to Personality • Is research-based by combining elements of three major research perspectives • Cognitive • Behavioral • Sociocultural • Maintains that learning through environmental conditioning contributes to personality development • However, social learning/modeling and cognitive processes, such as perception and thinking, are also involved and are actually more important to the development of our personality

  37. Bandura’s Self-System • The self-system is the set of cognitive processes by which a person observes, evaluates, and regulates his/her social behavior • There is a conscious decision to choose what behavior to engage in, acting in accordance with the assessment of whether the behavior will be reinforced or not • Self-efficacy is a judgment of one’s effectiveness in dealing with particular situations and plays a major role in determining our behavior • Low self-efficacy is associated with depression, anxiety, and helplessness • High self-efficacy is associated with self-confidence, positive outlook, and minimal self-doubt

  38. Rotter’s Locus of Control • Locus of control is a person’s perception of the extent to which he/she controls what happens to him/her • External locus of control refers to the perception that chance or external forces beyond your control determine your fate • Internal locus of control refers to the perception that you control your own fate

  39. Locus of Control • People with an internal locus of control perceive their success as dependent upon their own needs, but they may or may not feel that they have the competence (efficacy) to bring about successful outcomes in various situations • People with an internal locus of control are psychologically and physically better off • External locus of control may contribute to learned helplessness, a sense of hopelessness in which one thinks that he/she is unable to prevent unpleasant events

  40. Self-Perception • Attribution is the process by which we explain our own behavior and that of others • Internal attribution means that the outcome is attributed to the person • External attribution means that the outcome is attributed to factors outside the person

  41. Self-Perception • Self-serving biasis the tendency to make attributions so that one can perceive oneself favorably • If the outcome is positive, we make an internal attribution for it • If the outcome is negative, we make an external attribution for it • Self-serving bias is adaptive because it protects us from falling prey to learned helplessness and depression

  42. Learned Helplessness and Depression • Can result from: • Internal attributions for negative outcomes (“I failed the test because I am no good at math”) • External attributions for positive outcomes (“I aced the test because it was so easy”) • Pessimistic explanations are also stable(i.e., the causes are permanent, “I will always have no ability for math”) and global(“I have no ability for anything”)

  43. Trait Theories of Personality and Personality Assessment Trait Theories of Personality Personality Assessment

  44. Trait Theories of Personality • Personality traitsare internally based, relatively stable characteristics that define an individual’s personality • Each trait is a dimension, a continuum ranging from one extreme of the dimension to the other • Trait theorists use factor analysis and other statistical techniques to tell them how many basic personality factors (or traits) are needed to describe human personality, as well as what these factors are • Factor analysis identifies clusters of test items (e.g., on a personality test) that measure the same factor/trait

  45. The Number and Kind of Personality Traits • Raymond B. Cattell, using factor analysis, found that 16 traits were necessary to describe human personality • Hans Eysenck, also using factor analysis, argued for three trait dimensions • Cattell and Eysenck differed because the number of traits depends on the level of categorization in the factor analysis • Eysenck’s theory is at a more general and inclusive level of abstraction than Cattell’s

  46. Eysenck’s Three-Factor Theory Extraversion-Introversion Eysenck argued that these traits are determined by heredity Neuroticism-Emotionalstability Psychoticism-Impulsecontrol

  47. Eysenck’s Three-Factor Theory • The biological basis for the extraversion-introversion trait is level of cortical arousal (neuronal activity) • Introverts have higher normal-levels of arousal than an extravert, so extraverts need to seek out external stimulation to raise the level of arousal in the brain to a more optimal level

  48. Eysenck’s Three-Factor Theory • People who are high on the neuroticism-emotional stability dimension tend to be overly anxious, emotionally unstable, and easily upset because of a more reactive sympathetic nervous system • The psychoticism-impulse control trait is concerned with aggressiveness, impulsiveness, and empathy • A high level of testosterone and a low level of MAO, a neurotransmitter inhibitor, lead to high levels of psychoticism

  49. Five-Factor Model of Personality • These five factors appear to be universal and are consistent from about age 30 to late adulthood • These factors are measured using an assessment instrument called the NEO-PI

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