Jeopardy Final Jeopardy Freud I Freud II Personality theories

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Presentation transcript:

Jeopardy Final Jeopardy Freud I Freud II Personality theories Potpourri Social II $100 $100 $100 $100 $100 $200 $200 $200 $200 $200 $300 $300 $300 $300 $300 $400 $400 $400 $400 $400 $500 $500 $500 $500 $500 Final Jeopardy

1 - $100 An individual’s characteristic pattern of thinking, feeling, and acting is called personality

1 - $200 Free association is central to the process of this personality perspective psychoanalysis

1 - $300 According to the psychoanalytic theory, this part of the personality that seeks immediate gratification of basic drives Id

1 - $400 According to Freud, this part of the personality represents internalized ideals and provides standards for judgment. Superego

1 - $500 According to Freud, these are used in order for the ego to prevent threatening impulses from being consciously recognized Defense Mechanisms

2 - $100 defense mechanism by which we disguise threatening impulses by attributing them to others projection

2 - $200 Neo-Freudian personality theorists were most likely to disagree with Freud about this aspect of his theory Sex

2 - $300 Type question to appear here Type answer to appear with a mouse-click here

2 - $400 The Neofreudian whocoined the term “inferiority complex” Alfred Adler

2 - $500 Survivors’ vivid memories of Nazi death camp experiences most clearly challenge this Freudian concept l repression

3 - $100 proposed that human motivations form a pyramid-shaped hierarchy of needs Abraham Maslow

3 - $200 theorist that emphasized that an individual’s personal growth is promoted by interactions with others who are genuine, accepting, and empathetic Carl Rogers

3 - $300 This personality theory is more concerned with describing, rather than explaining, personality. Trait

3 - $400 A person who is careless and disorganized most clearly ranks low on this Big Five trait dimension Conscientiousness

3 - $500 According to this perspective on personality, behavior is influenced by the interaction between persons and situations Social Cognitive

4 - $100 According to Bandura, this involves multidirectional influences among behaviors, internal personal factors, and environmental factors Reciprocal Determinism

4 - $200 Overestimating the extent to which others notice and evaluate our appearance and performance is called Spotlight effect

4 - $300 Attributing your loss of a game to a situational factor rather than a personal shortcoming is called Self-serving bias

4 - $400 This studies how people Think about, influence, and relate to one another Social Psychology

4 - $500 This refers to our tendency to underestimate the impact of situational factors and to overestimate the impact of personal traits in explaining the behavior of others Fundamental attribution error

5 - $100 Refers to the tendency to Perform well-learned tasks more effectively in the presence of others Social facilitation

5 - $200 tendency for people to exert less effort when they are pooling their efforts toward a common goal is known as Social Loafing

5 - $300 A loss of self-awareness and self-restraint in group situations that foster arousal and anonymity is called Social Loafing

5 - $400 overriding desire for harmony in a decision-making group increases the probability of this groupthink

5 - $500 Equity and self-disclosure are important to the development of this Companionate love

Final Jeopardy Three key ingredients to attraction that have to do with social relations Proximity, physical attractiveness, and similarity