Trait Theories Explain differences between people in terms of stable personality traits Modern day psychologists have found 5 personality dimensions.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Mastering11.1.
Advertisements

Sigmund Freud The Psychoanalytic Approach. Background  Began as a physician  In seeing patients, began to formulate basis for later theory Sexual conflicts.
$2 $5 $10 $20 $1 $2 $5 $10 $20 $1 $2 $5 $10 $20 $1 $2 $5 $10 $20 $1 $2 $5 $10 $20 $1 Freud A little More Freud Defense mechanisms Neo-Freudians humanistic.
Theories of Personality: Psychoanalytic Approach
Personality Do you have one????. Different Perspectives Psychodynamic –Unconscious, sexual, motivation, conflict Humanistic –Positive growth, realization.
Trait Theories Explain differences between people in terms of stable personality traits Modern day psychologists have found 5 personality dimensions that.
INTRODUCTION TO PSYCHOLOGY
Personality An individual’s characteristic pattern of thinking, feeling, and acting.
PSYCHOLOGY:.
Chapter 11 Personality This multimedia product and its contents are protected under copyright law. The following are prohibited by law: any public performance.
Personality liudexiang. Overview Personality Psychodynamic theories Humanistic personality theories Personality assessment.
Who’s got PERSONALITY?.  Name the different theories of personality. 1. Psychoanalysis 2. Trait Theory 3. Humanistic Theory 4. Social-Cognitive 5. Behaviorism/
Psychoanalytic Therapy
 Personality  an individual’s characteristic pattern of thinking, feeling, and acting  basic perspectives  Psychoanalytic  Humanistic.
UNIT 10.  The Psychoanalytic Perspective The Psychoanalytic Perspective  The Humanistic Perspective The Humanistic Perspective  The Trait Perspective.
The Trait Perspective  Thinking About Psychology  Module 26.
Personality. Pattern of thinking, feeling and behaving that is characteristic of an individual. Psychoanalytic perspective Humanistic perspective Trait.
Personality Chapter 10.
Psychoanalytic theory A.K.A. psychodynamic theory Sigmund Freud based on case studies & self-analysis childhood & unconscious sexual & aggressive drives.
Personality. The organization of enduring behavior patterns that often serve to distinguish us from one another.
Personality What is your personality?. What are the ideas about personality? Psychoanalytic Humanistic Trait Social cognitive The self.
Personality.
Personality.
Ch Personality. What are the perspectives on personality? Psychoanalytic Psychoanalytic Humanistic Humanistic Trait Trait Social cognitive Social.
Chapter 14: Theories of Personality. Personality defined The consistent, enduring, and unique characteristics of a person.
UNIT 10 PERSONALITY Students will be able to understand personality development and know who the Neo-Freudians were. DD Question: What is personality?
AP Psychology Unit #7 Notes – Day #1 Stress & Personality Theories.
This is… Jeopardy 1.
Psychology 102 Module 40.
Unit 10: Personality.
Chapter 12: Personality: Theory, Research, and Assessment
Theories of Personality
What is Personality? An individual’s characteristic pattern of thinking, feeling, and acting Four basic perspectives: Psychoanalytic Trait Humanistic Social.
Psychoanalytic Approach
PERSONALITY 5-7% 250$ 250$ 250$ 250$ 500$ 500$ 500$ 500$ 750$ 750$
Psychology 102 Module
Jeopardy Potpourri Q $100 Q $100 Q $100 Q $100 Q $100 Q $200 Q $200
PowerPoint Image Slideshow
A person’s pattern of thinking, feeling and acting.
Personality: Theory, Research, and Assessment
An individual’s pattern of thinking, feeling and acting.
Personality Development
Personality A person’s general style of interacting with the world
Personality Psychology /7/2018.
Do Now Which defense mechanism do you use the most?
Personality.
Clicker Questions Psychology, 11th Edition by David G. Myers & C. Nathan DeWall Slides by Melissa Terlecki, Cabrini College Chapter 14: Personality.
Chapter 15 Personality`.
Trait and psychoanalytic approach
Personality liudexiang.
Do Now If you take out and open your notebook by the time I count to ten (10), the entire class gets extra credit.
Personality Radwan Banimustafa MD.
A person’s pattern of thinking, feeling and acting.
Personality * An individual’s consistent patterns of feeling, thinking, and behaving.
Personality A person’s general style of interacting with the world
A person’s pattern of thinking, feeling and acting.
Personality Theory, Research and Assessment
Chapter Fourteen Personality
Psychoanalysts Freud Unit 5.
Chapter 10: Personality.
Psychology: An Introduction
56.1 – Identify which of Freud’s ideas were accepted or rejected by his followers.
A person’s pattern of thinking, feeling and acting.
Final Exam Review, pt. 4 Chapters 7 & 8.
“Characteristic pattern of thinking,
Personality A person’s general style of interacting with the world
The Psychoanalytic Approach
Historic Perspectives: Psychoanalytic and Humanistic
Myers EXPLORING PSYCHOLOGY (6th Edition in Modules)
Modules 46-48: Personality
Presentation transcript:

Trait Theories Explain differences between people in terms of stable personality traits Modern day psychologists have found 5 personality dimensions that span cultures

The 5 Factor Theory Extraversion Neuroticism Conscientiousness Agreeableness Openness to Experience

The 5 Factor Theory Extraversion Neuroticism Outgoing Withdrawn Stable Unstable

The 5 Factor Theory Agreeableness Conscientiousness Low High Undependable Dependable

Openness to Experience The 5 Factor Theory Openness to Experience Closed Open

The 5 Factor Theory Helpful in predicting general trends in behavior Too general to predict behavior in a specific situation

Social Cognitive Theory Bandura's Reciprocal Determinism and Self-Efficacy Rotter's Locus of Control

Reciprocal Determinism Environment Personal Cognitive Factors Behavior

Self-Efficacy One's perception of personal effectiveness One of Bandura's personal/cognitive factors

Greater effort & persistence Self-Efficacy Belief you will do well Greater effort & persistence Success

Belief you will do poorly Self-Efficacy Belief you will do poorly Less effort & persistence Failure

Belief you control your fate Internal Locus Belief you control your fate Optimism about the future Taking action

Belief you don’t control your fate External Locus Belief you don’t control your fate Pessimism about the future Doing nothing

The Person: Beliefs and Behaviors Humanistic psychology Abraham Maslow Self-actualization Oceanic feelings (flow) Carl Rogers Client-centered therapy Unconditional positive regard

The World: Social Influences on Personality Birth order Peer relationships: Personality development by peer pressure Sex differences in personality: Nature and nurture Culture and personality: Are there national personalities?

Assessment Observation Interviews Rating Scales Inventories Projective Tests

Problems Observations, interviews, & rating scales suffer from reliability problems & the halo effect Halo Effect: Assuming that someone with one favorable trait has many others as well

The MMPI-2 The most widely-used inventory Consists of 567 true-false questions

The CPI An MMPI-like test designed for normal individuals The MMPI is more useful for clinical purposes, the CPI for normal populations

Projective Tests The Rorschach Inkblot Test The Thematic Apperception Test (TAT)

The Rorschach Subject tells what each blot looks like and what aspect of the blot triggered that response

The Rorschach Responses scored on use of parts vs. wholes, movement, content, use of color Criticized for lack of reliability, low validity (inability to predict behavior)

The TAT Consists of 19 vague or ambiguous drawings Person describes what is happening in each

Sentence Completion A projective test requiring completion of open-ended sentences May be more reliable than the TAT

Sigmund Freud Assumptions: Traits transcend situations Personality formed in childhood

Freud’s Model

Freudian Theory Personality components Id: Concerned with drive satisfaction, provides the motive power; follows the pleasure principle (the little devil on your shoulder) Ego: Rational thought; controls & channels id; follows the reality principle Superego: Oversees balance between ego & id; internalized parental control; much like a conscience (the little angel on your shoulder)

Freudian Theory The Libido: The sexual life energy that drives the id; other researchers dispute Freud's sexual emphasis The Conscious: Consists of things you are currently aware of; constantly changing The Preconscious: Consists of things in long term memory that influence behavior; could be retrieved if desired The Subconscious: Consists of things you're unaware of but that influence you; the primary personality component

Freudian Theory The Unconscious: The primary personality component Consists of things you're unaware of but that influence you Can't be tapped directly Reflected in slips of the tongue, dreams, etc.

Freudian Theory: Stages Psychosexual Stages (source of libido satisfaction) Oral (0-1 year) Anal (1-3 years) Phallic (3-6 years) Latency (6-puberty) Genital (from puberty)

Freudian Theory: Stages Oral Stage: Libido gratification comes from oral exploration of the world Infant learns to trust in others, esp. for food Oral Personality: Problems in the oral stage supposedly lead to pessimism about the world, hostility or passivity

Freudian Theory: Stages Anal Stage: Kids learn about delay of gratification Kids gain pleasure and libido satisfaction from being in control Anal Personality: Problems in the anal stage supposedly lead to either excessive orderliness or excessive messiness

Freudian Theory: Stages Phallic Stage: Freud believed sex-role identification occurred Mechanisms included castration anxiety (boys) & penis envy (girls) Phallic Personality: Problems in the phallic stage supposedly lead to sex-role identification problems, promiscuity, vanity, or excessive chastity

Freudian Theory: Stages Latency Stage: A time of focus on achievement and mastery of skills Libido is channeled into mastery activities Freud thought little of interest happened here Others have argued the sense of self-esteem is established here

Freudian Theory: Stages Genital Stage: The time of mature personality, intimacy with others Libido satisfied by adult- type sexual activity

Freudian Theory: Defense Defense Mechanisms Methods for dealing with anxiety Freud thought some more mature than others Denial Repression Projection Reaction Formation Rationalization Regression Displacement Sublimation

Denial Refusing to accept that the feeling is present or that the event occurred A very primitive mechanism Example: preschoolers will convince themselves they didn't do something they wish they hadn't

Repression Relegating anxiety- causing thoughts to the unconscious, refusing to think about them Example: Scarlett O'Hara in Gone With the Wind -- "I won't think about that now, I'll think about that tomorrow."

Projection Attributing one's undesirable traits or actions to others, so they become the problem instead of you Example from a failing student: "I'm not worried about me, but I'd hate to see Ellen flunk--she's so fragile"

Reaction Formation Taking actions opposite to one's feelings in order to deny the reality of the feelings Freud thought many people fervently pursuing a cause were using this mechanism to hide their true feelings

Rationalization Creating intellectually - acceptable arguments for thoughts or behavior to hide the actual anxiety - causing impulses Examples: "I only read Playboy for the articles." "I didn't get an A on my paper because I didn't want to make you feel inferior."

Regression Reverting to the comfort of behaviors of an earlier stage of development in order to cope Example: Children who crawl around the floor and produce baby talk when a new baby enters the family

Displacement Substituting a less-threatening object for the subject of the hostile or sexual impulse A person mad at his boss might attack an underling instead--a person like the boss in some ways, but not as anxiety provoking

Sublimation The most mature mechanism Redirecting anxiety-causing impulses into socially acceptable actions Example: Dealing with anxiety over a final by engaging in vigorous physical activity

Problems with Freud Too general: Explains everything after the fact, but predicts nothing beforehand Key portions are contrary to recent data: There is no evidence for penis envy, castration anxiety, the latency period Biased against females: Freud's negative attitudes towards women colored his entire theory Relies on too many constructs: Relies on the existence of hypotheticals such as the id, ego, & superego

Contributions The discovery of unconscious processes His emphasis on childhood influences on adult behavior

Neo-Freudians Carl Jung Alfred Adler Karen Horney Former students of Freud who broke away from him (often acrimoniously) to create their own theories Carl Jung Alfred Adler Karen Horney

Carl Jung Personality Theory: Ego Personal Unconscious: Like a combination of Freud's preconscious and unconscious Collective Unconscious: Inherited tendencies to respond in a particular way (archetypes) shared by all humans

Alfred Adler Humans motivated by the need to overcome inferiority and strive for significance Inferiority Complex: Adler's term for feelings of inferiority that interfere with development

Karen Horney Stressed need for safety & satisfaction Childhood frustration may lead to development of basic anxiety & neurosis Tyranny of the Should: Horney's term for focusing on an unrealistic, perfect self-image that leads to dissatisfaction