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Chapter 11: Personality: Theory, Research, and Assessment
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Defining Personality: Consistency and Distinctiveness Personality Traits –Dispositions and dimensions The Five-Factor Model –Extraversion –Neuroticism –Openness to experience –Agreeableness –Conscientiousness
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Psychodynamic Perspectives Freud’s psychoanalytic theory –Structure of personality Id - Pleasure principle Ego - Reality principle Superego - Morality –Levels of awareness Conscious Unconscious Preconscious
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Psychodynamic Perspectives Freud’s psychoanalytic theory –Conflict Sex and Aggression Anxiety Defense Mechanisms
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Figure 11.2 Freud’s model of personality structure
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Figure 11.3 Freud’s model of personality dynamics
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Table 11.1 Defense Mechanisms, with Examples
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Freud on Development: Psychosexual Stages Sexual = physical pleasure Psychosexual stages –Oral, Anal, Phallic, Latency, Genital Fixation = Excessive gratification or frustration Overemphasis on psychosexual needs during fixated stage
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Table 11.2 Freud’s Stages of Psychosexual Development
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Other Psychodynamic Theorists Carl Jung: Analytical Psychology –Personal and collective unconscious –Archetypes Alfred Adler: Individual Psychology –Striving for superiority –Compensation
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Figure 11.4 Jung’s vision of the collective unconscious
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Evaluating Psychodynamic Perspectives Pros –The unconscious –The role of internal conflict –The importance of early childhood experiences –The use of defense mechanisms Cons –Poor testability –Inadequate empirical base –Sexist views
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Behavioral Perspectives Skinner’s views –Conditioning and response tendencies Bandura’s social cognitive theory –Observational learning –Models –Self-efficacy Mischel’s views –The person-situation controversy
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Figure 11.5 A behavioral view of personality
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Figure 11.6 Personality development and operant conditioning
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Evaluating Behavioral Perspectives Pros –Based on rigorous research –Insights into effects of learning and environmental factors Cons –Over-dependence on animal research –Fragmented view of personality –Dehumanizing views
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Humanistic Perspectives Carl Rogers’s person-centered theory –Self-concept Conditional/unconditional positive regard Incongruence and anxiety Abraham Maslow’s theory of self- actualization –Hierarchy of needs –The healthy personality
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Figure 11.7 Rogers’s view of personality structure
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Figure 11.8 Rogers’s view of personality development and dynamics
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Figure 11.9 Maslow’s hierarchy of needs
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Figure 11.10 Maslow’s view of the healthy personality
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Evaluating Humanistic Perspectives Pros –Recognized importance of subjective views –Recognized importance of self-concept –Laid foundation for positive psychology Cons –Many aspects of theory are difficult to test –Unrealistic optimism –More empirical research needed
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Biological Perspectives Eysenk’s theory –Determined by genes –Extraversion-introversion Behavioral genetics –Twin studies –Heritability estimates The evolutionary approach –Traits conducive to reproductive fitness
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Figure 11.11 Eysenck’s model of personality structure
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Evaluating Biological Perspectives Pros –Convincing evidence for genetic influence Cons –Too much reliance on heritability estimates –No comprehensive biological theory
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A Contemporary Empirical Approach: Terror Management Theory Conflict between self-preservation and ability to foresee death Culture and self-esteem
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Figure 11.13 Overview of terror management theory
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Contemporary Empirical Approaches: Terror Management Theory Increasing subjects’ mortality salience causes them to: –Punish moral transgressions more harshly –Be less tolerant of criticism of their country –Give greater rewards to those who uphold cultural standards –Respect cultural icons more
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Culture and Personality Independent self Interdependent self
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Figure 11.14 Culture and conceptions of self
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