Unit One - Westinghouse College Prep
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Transcript Unit One - Westinghouse College Prep
Unit Ten:
Personality
What is Personality?
Definition
A relatively enduring set of behavioral,
emotional and mental characteristics
remains relatively stable over time
makes each of us unique
Begin Lec. 1 Guide
Enduring Issues in Psychology
Nature vs. Nurture
Is personality genetically encoded or learned?
Enduring Issues in Psychology
Unconscious or Conscious?
Do you know why you do what you do?
Enduring Issues in Psychology
Fixed vs. Situational
Is personality stable or does it change from
situation to situation?
Sigmund Freud
Background
Hot.
Victorian Era
A time of repression
Rigid gender roles separate spheres for males
and females
Clothing restricted
movement and covered
head to toe
Rumors said people were
even scandalized by bare
table and piano legs!
Queen Victoria of England
Sigmund Freud
Three Main Beliefs
The Psychoanalytic Perspective
Childhood experiences determine the
adult personality
Unconscious mental processes
influence everyday behavior
Conflict causes most human behavior
Sigmund Freud
Evidence for Existence of the Unconscious
Free Association
Freudian therapeutic
technique
Say whatever comes
to mind without
censorship
Unconscious comes to
the surface
Sigmund Freud
Evidence for Existence of the Unconscious
“Slip of the tongue”
AKA “Freudian Slip”
Your unconscious
thoughts leak out and
you say something you
did not mean to
Sigmund Freud
Evidence for Existence of the Unconscious
Dream Interpretation
Dreams allow unconscious urges to leak
out
Dreams allow unconscious wishes to be
fulfilled in a safe way
Dreams are symbolic and may be
interpreted
Sigmund Freud
Evidence for Existence of the Unconscious
“Tip of the Iceberg”
Freudian saying that
implies we are
unaware of most of
what motivates us
What is conscious is
just the “tip of the
iceberg”
A LOT more is
beneath the surface
S’up.
What we are aware of at
any given time.
What we can easily retrieve
What we are unaware of and
is deeply buried
Sigmund Freud
3-Part Theory of Personality Structure
Part 1: The Id
Born with this intact
Governed by
“Pleasure Principle”
Houses unconscious
drives of sex (libido)
and aggression
Selfish, irrational,
seeks instant
gratification
DO IT NOW!
Sigmund Freud
3-Part Theory of Personality Structure
Part 2: The Superego
Develops during
childhood (6 years)
Governed by “Judicial”
or “Moral Principle”
The internalized parent
Seeks to do what is right
and good (conscience)
Causes us to feel guilty
for our desires/id
impulses
Behave!
Sigmund Freud
3-Part Theory of Personality Structure
Part 3: The Ego
Develops during
childhood (6 months)
Governed by “Reality
Principle”
Seeks to gratify Id
urges at an
appropriate time
Inherits inevitable
anxiety produced by
Id-Superego conflict
?
Sigmund Freud
The Psychosexual Stages
Oral Stage (0-1.5)
Erogenous Zone=Mouth
Libido satisfied by breast
feeding
Major conflict: weaning
Failure to resolve the issue
leads to an oral fixation
Suck/chew things for security
Smoking, obsessive eating,
nail biting, pen chewing,
drinking
Sarcasm, aggressiveness
Sigmund Freud
The Psychosexual Stages
Anal Stage (1.5-3)
Erogenous Zone=Anus
Libido satisfied by defecating
I refuse!
Major conflict: toilet training
Coping with demands for control
Failure to resolve the issue leads to an
anal fixation
Anal Retentive - tightly controlled,
OCD, fear of dirt, obsessed with
punctuality
Anal Expulsive - messy,
disorganized, rebellious, overly
giving, obsession with bathroom
humor
Sigmund Freud
The Psychosexual Stages
Phallic Stage (4-6) BOYS
WT*!!
Oedipus Complex
HA!
Boy desires mother, wants to
eliminate father
Boy relinquishes desire for mom
and befriends dad out of fear
Uh-oh
AHA!!
Sigmund Freud
The Psychosexual Stages
Phallic Stage (4-6) GIRLS
Oedipus Complex
Girl then seeks penis through father
during Electra Complex
Girl resolves this by replacing her
desire for a penis with her desire for
a baby and plays with dolls
Sigmund Freud
The Psychosexual Stages
Phallic Stage (4-6)
Major conflict: relinquishing desire for opposite sex
parent
Failure to resolve the issue leads to fixation
Overly flirtatious
Excessive modesty, or excessively timid
Overly proud
Promiscuous
Sigmund Freud
The Psychosexual Stages
Latency (7-11)
Child goes to school
Sexual feelings
repressed
Child develops
academic, social and
extracurricular skills
Typically plays in
same-sex play groups
Sigmund Freud
The Psychosexual Stages
Genital (puberty on)
Begins when child hits
puberty/sexual
maturity
Normal sexual
relationships occur at
this stage
Hi, I’m your dad!
No he’s not.
Sigmund Freud
The Defense Mechanisms
The inevitable conflict between id and
superego produces anxiety.
This anxiety is inherited by the ego,
which uses the defense mechanisms
to better manage it.
Sigmund Freud
The Defense Mechanisms
Denial (Negation)
Refusal to acknowledge a painful reality
Spouse affair/childhood misconduct
Repression
Unpleasant thoughts are excluded from consciousness; “motivated forgetting”
Dream symbols
Projection
Attributing one’s own feelings, motives, or wishes to others
Generalizing: She hates me! He hates me! Everyone hates me!
Regression
Reverting to childlike behavior
Oral-comfort on sucking on thumb
Rationalization
Making up a logical explanation for an emotionally painful event rather than dealing with the pain
“I only drink just to be social”
Reaction formation
The ego unconsciously makes unacceptable impulses look their opposites
“I hate dad” “I love dad”
Displacement
Diverts sexual or aggressive impulses toward an object or person who is more acceptable
Sublimination
Transformation of unacceptable impulses into socially valued motivations
Da vicini’s portrait
Sigmund Freud
The Defense Mechanisms
Intellectualization
Thinking about stressful problems in an abstract way to detach oneself
from them
Undoing
After-the-fact defense mechanism involving “making up” for guiltproducing actions
Neo Freudians
General Themes
The Neo-Freudians were a group of
psychologists who followed Freud’s teachings
and were often his best and brightest students.
They eventually had some minor disagreements
with Freud about his theory, and developed
theories of their own.
Freud had little patience for these dissenters,
and quickly kicked them to the curb.
Begin Lec. 2 Guide
Neo Freudians
Alfred Adler
He was the younger, “weaker” son in his family
Inferiority was the key to understanding
personality
Inferiority complex
Fixation on feelings of personal inferiority that can
lead to emotional and social paralysis
Striving for superiority and power
Fictional Finalism
Setting long-term goals that may never be reached,
but help you to achieve a sense of satisfaction along
the way
Neo Freudians
Alfred Adler
Birth Order
Dethronement
Oldest
Middle
Youngest
Only
When the next child is born, the older one is forced to
share parental attention
Compensation
Our efforts to win back parental love after
dethronement
Neo Freudians
Karen Horney (Horn-EYE!)
One of the first female psychoanalysts to study
with Freud.
Got divorced to pursue her career – rare at the
time!
Viewed anxiety as a powerful motivating force
Environmental and social factors important seen
as being as important as unconscious sexual
conflict
Anxiety caused by child's sense of helplessness
triggers our desire for love and security
Neo Freudians
Karen Horney
Developed Coping Mechanisms to deal
with insecurity
Compliance – moving toward others
Aggression – moving against others
Withdrawal – moving away from others
Neurotic trends
Irrational strategies for coping with emotional
problems
Neo Freudians
Carl Jung
One of Freud’s best students – his “surrogate
son”
Freud was said to have fainted in his presence
several times!
Believed in the collective unconscious, in
addition to the personal unconscious
Collective unconscious was comprised of
archetypes (species universal experiences)
Freud’s legacy
Today’s psychologists discount the idea of
inherited experiences or that sex is the
basis of personality
They do assumed mental life is
unconscious, struggle with inner conflicts
among out wishes, fears, and values, &
that childhood shapes our personality and
ways of becoming attached to others
Personality Assessment:
Psychodynamic Theories
Projective tests
Ambiguous stimuli presented to subject/client
Open-ended – no “correct” answer
Answers are interpreted by therapist for
underlying meaning
Preferred by psychodynamic theorists to
unleash the unconscious
Examples
Rorschach test
Thematic Apperception Test (TAT)
Personality Assessment:
Thematic Apperception Test (TAT)
Developed by Henry Murray in 1935
Examiner chooses 10 cards with
ambiguous black-and-white drawings
of people in various situations
Subjects must tell a story about each
card
Results analyzed based on need for
achievement, affiliation, and
aggression
Heroes, needs, themes and outcomes
of the stories provide insight
Relies too much on the examiner’s
interpretation – little reliability/validity
Personality Assessment:
RorschachTest
Developed by Hermann
Rorschach in 1921
10 inkblots – 5 color, 5 bw
Subjects describe all 10 inkblots
Examiner then goes through
cards again and asks questions
for clarification/detail
Provides subject with
considerable freedom to respond,
but lacks reliability and validity.
Assessing Psychodynamic
Theories of Personality
Strengths
Early experiences shape
personality and these
should be studied from a
developmental perspective
Human emotion and
motivation are important in
understanding personality
Concept of the unconscious
Therapeutic techniques
Criticisms
Untestable
Data to support this
theory comes primarily
from case studies based
on the memories of
clients, which we know
can be flawed
Pessimistic outlook on
human nature
Sexist/biased against
women
Evaluating the Psychoanalytic
Perspective
Freud did not have access to DNA studies (its like
comparing Henry Ford’s Model T to today’s hybrid
cars
Development is lifelong
Freud overestimate parental influence
Researchers find little support for Freud’s idea
that defense mechanism disguise sexual and
aggressive impulses
Evaluating the Psychoanalytic
Perspective
Freud's theory on Repression: Rare mental
response to terrible trauma
Terror-management theory-explore people's
emotional and behavioral responses to
reminders of their impending death
Freud’s theory offers after the fact
explanations and fails to predict such
behaviors
Does not allow for it to be false “resistant”
Humanistic Theories
As you already know, these theories stress the
potential for human goodness and the natural
desire to achieve personal goals
Unlike psychodynamic theories, humanistic
theories give individuals the power to control
their own destiny
Representatives include Abraham Maslow and
Carl Rogers
Self-concept: “Who am I?”
Begin Lec. 3 Guide
Humanistic Theories
Abraham Maslow
Humanistic Theories
Carl Rogers
REAL
SELF
IDEAL
SELF
Behavior is goal-directed and
worthwhile
Positive Regard
REAL
SELF
IDEAL
SELF
Positive regard impacts
personality and happiness
Growth-promoting climate requires:
genuineness, acceptance, & empathy
Conditional – you are only loved
when you conform to others’
wishes
Unconditional – you are loved no
matter what choices you make
Real self – what you really are
Ideal self – what you want to be
Should have some overlap – you
will if you get unconditional
positive regard!
Evaluating Humanistic
Perspective
Influenced counseling, education, childrearing, and management
Critiques: vague and subjective,
individualism, naïve
Trait and Type Theories
Personality is best explained in terms
of descriptive adjectives and
categories comprised of related
qualities
Earliest of all types of personality
theories
Representatives include Hippocrates
and Galen, Allport and Eysenck
Trait and Type Theories
Gordon Allport
Allport perused the dictionary to extract every
possible adjective that could be used to describe
personality
After finding several thousand words, he decided
this task was…overwhelming
He decided to describe personality in terms of three
types of traits
Cardinal Traits – DEFINING trait
Central Traits – top 8-10 descriptives
Secondary Traits – situational descriptives
Trait and Type Theories
Hans Eysenck
Eysenck evaluated
personality based on 3 major
dimensions:
Stable vs. Unstable (Neurotic)
Introverted vs. Extroverted
Are you predictable?
Are you sponteneous?
Are you social and outgoing?
Are you reserved?
Psychoticism
Are you EXTREMELY stable,
unstable, introverted or
extroverted?
Biology and Personality
Extroverts: outgoing, excitement, dislike
of quiet reading, impulsive, etc
Extraverts seek stimulation because their
normal brain arousal is relatively low
PET scans show that a frontal lobe area
involved in behavior inhibition is less active
in extraverts than in introverts
Assessing Traits
Personality inventories
MMPI-classic personality inventory
Empirically derived
Are scored objectively, but does not
guarantee validity
People will answer based on socially desirable
answers to create a good impression
Trait and Type Theories
Big Five
The “Big Five” traits currently thought to be
central to describing personality (OCEAN)
Openness
Conscientiousness
Are you outgoing?
Agreeableness
Are you goal directed and driven?
Extroversion
Will you try new things? Do you keep an open mind? Are
you intelligent?
Are you a peace-maker or a trouble-maker?
Neuroticism/stability
Are you predictable? Do you enjoy routine?
Trait and Type Theories
Big Five
Why not try
eating
spiders?
Open to new
experiences…
NOT open…
I’m not
eating
that!
Hmpf!
Trait and Type Theories
Big Five
Conscientious…
Undirected…
I am
working ‘til
it’s DONE!
Whatever…
Trait and Type Theories
Big Five
I hate
people.
Yeeeehaw!
Introvert!
Extrovert!
Trait and Type Theories
Big Five
Break it up!
I am gonna
kick you’re
a**!
Agreeable…
Antagonistic…
Trait and Type Theories
Big Five
Did
someone
touch my
book!?!?!?!
I may
fetch…then
again, I may
maul you to
death…
Stable,
Predictable…
Unpredictable,
Neurotic…
The Big Five Factors
Very stable
Nature vs. Nurture (50/50)
Predict other personal attributes
Conscientious people earn better grades
Night owls are more extraverted
Evaluating the Trait Perspective
Focuses on inborn qualities that are
relatively consistent
Traits rival socioeconomic status and
cognitive ability as predictors of mortality,
divorce, and occupations
People don’t act with predictable
consistency
Inconsistency makes personality test score
weak predictors of behavior
Evaluating the Trait Perspective
People’s AVERAGE outgoingness,
happiness, or carelessness over many
situations is predictable
In unfamiliar situation-our traits remain
hidden as we carefully attend to social
cues
In familiar, informal situations-we fee less
constrained
Behaviorist Theories
Behaviorist theories claim that personality is
formed through environmental stimuli –
reinforcement and punishment.
Example psychologists include Albert Bandura,
John Watson and B.F. Skinner
Behaviorist Theories
Albert Bandura
Bandura believed people
will imitate what they
see others doing without
being directly reinforced.
He called this theory
observational
learning theory
His famous study was
called the Bobo Doll
Study pictured here…
Behaviorist Theories
Classical Conditioning
Some behaviorists like
Watson and Pavlov
believed aspects of
personality could be
learned simply by
pairing stimuli
together
Watson proved this in
his Baby Albert
experiment
Behaviorist Theories
Operant Conditioning
Some behaviorists like
Skinner believed that
personality could be
learned by being
reinforced or
punished for certain
behaviors.
You will
NOT
swear,
Johnny!
!@*#$
#$%$!
Cognitive Theories
Cognitive theorists believe that personality is
primarily a function of of thoughts and thought
processes.
Example cognitive theorists include Bandura,
Rotter and Mischel
Cognitive Theories
Julian Rotter
Rotter was a cognitive theorist who developed
the concept of locus of control.
People tend to have either an internal or
external locus of control.
Internal Locus of Control – things that happen in
your life are a result of your own actions.
E.g. “I made varsity because I spent the whole off-season
training to do so!”
External Locus of Control – things that happen in
your life are a result of forces beyond your control.
E.g. “I made varsity because my horoscope said I would
have a lucky day!”
Cognitive Theories
Albert Bandura
Bandura, who also could be considered a
cognitive theorist, believed that self efficacy
was important in understanding personality.
Self efficacy is defined as one’s belief that they
will be successful in the things they do.
Individuals with a higher sense of self efficacy
tend to be happier and more successful.
Interestingly, girls’ sense of self efficacy tends
to drop when they hit puberty. Why?
Cognitive Theories
Walter Mischel
Mischel believed in the concept of selfregulation.
This accounts for the fact that people often
change their personality depending on the
situation they are in.
In the process of self-regulation, people
change their actions and responses on the
basis of past experiences as well as an
assessment of the current situation.
Social-Cognitive Perspective
Reciprocal determinism-the interaction
between behavior, internal personal factors,
and the environment
Different people choose different environments
Our personalities shape how we interpret and
react to events
Our personality help create situations to which
we react
Personal Control
See ourselves as controlling or controlled by
our environment
Depleting and Strengthening self-control
Ability to control impulses and delay gratification
Self-control requires energy and attention
Discipline in on area will spill over into other
areas
Exercising
Personal Control
Under conditions of personal freedom and
empowerment, people thrive
Stable democracies
Nursing home
Tyranny of choice-”excess of choice”
Regret over chosen options
Western culture
Optimism vs. Pessimism
Pessimism: “I can’t do this” “There is
nothing I can do about it”
Depressed hopelessness dampens the
body’s disease fighting immune system
Excessive optimism-in the face of
adversity pays dividends and can dash
reality
Blind us to real risk
Blindness to one’s own incompetence
Assessing Behavior in Situations
To predict behavior, they often observe
behavior in realistic situations
Person’s past behavior is the best
predictor of behavior in the future in
similar situations
Evaluating the Social-Cognitive
Perspective
Critics charge that it focuses on so much
on the situation that it fails to appreciate
the person’s inner traits
Personality traits have been shown to
predict behavior at work, love, and play
Exploring the Self
The center of personality
Spotlight effect-overestimating others
noticing and evaluating our appearance,
performance, and blunders
(teenagers/egocentrism)
Self-esteem-people who feel good about
themselves have fewer sleepless nights,
succumb less easily to pressures to
confirm, less shy, anxious, and are just
plain happier
Exploring the Self
Low self-esteem deflates self-image
More judgmental, insecure
Self-serving bias: people perceive oneself
favorably
People accept more responsibility for good
deeds than for bad “We won, they lost”
Test example
Most people see themselves as better than
average (overconfidence)
Finding one’s self-esteem threatened people
with large egos may put other down or act
violently
Exploring the Self
Generation Me-express more narcissismmaterialism, famous, expectations
Defensive self-esteem
Fragile, makes failures feel threatening, false
praise
Secure self-esteem
Feel accepted of who we are
Culture and Self
Individualism
Personal control and values
Define their identity in terms of personal
attributes
Individual achievement
Western cultures
Need to belong
Relatively free to switch places of worship,
jobs, relationships
Culture and Self
Collectivism
Family, groups, loyal friends define self
Sense of belonging, a set of values, network
of close individuals, sense of security
More stable deeper attachment's
Elders and superiors receive respect
Regional differences
Asian Cultures
Personality Assessment:
How do we measure personality?
Objective tests – Standardized, closed-ended
Sixteen Personality Factor Questionnaire (Cattell’s
16PF)
Minnesota Multiphasic Personality Inventory (MMPI-2)
Myers-Briggs Personality Inventory
Preferred by trait and type theorists
Projective tests – Ambiguous stimuli
Rorschach test
Thematic Apperception Test (TAT)
Preferred by psychodynamic theorists to unleash the
unconscious
Personality Assessment
The personal interview/Assessment interview
Direct observation/Naturalistic Observation
As previously discussed, can get very honest information
Self Monitoring
1 to 1 direct questioning
Method of personality regulation used when you want to
change an aspect of your personality
Record all thoughts and behaviors surrounding a
behavioral pattern you want to change to try to eliminate
triggers
Neuropsychological Assessment
Use technology to monitor brain activity during certain
behaviors or thought processes to understand organic
causes of personality traits