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Published byAngelica Boone Modified over 9 years ago
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Personality Factors
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1. The Affective Domain a) Self-esteem b) Inhibitions c) Risk-taking d) Anxiety e) Empathy f) Extroversion receiving, responding valuing, organizing, value system
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The Affective Domain The affective domain (emotions or feelings) may be juxtaposed to the cognitive side. The development of affective states or feelings involves a variety of personality factors, feelings both about ourselves and about others with who m we come into contact. Benjamin Bloom’s definition of the affective domain: Receiving: persons must be aware of the environment sorrounding, and be willing to receive and to give controlled or selected attention to a stimulus. Responding: the person is willing to respond voluntarily without coercion, and then to receive satisfaction from that response. Valuing: placing worth on a thing, a behavior, or a person. Orgavinzation: system of beliefs, determining interrelationalships among them, and establishing a hierarchy. Value system: individuals become characterized by and understand themselves.
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1. Self-esteem Global Situational or specific Task
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2. Inhibition Inhibition and Language Ego
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3. Risk Taking
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4. Anxiety Trait anxiety State anxiety Debilitative anxiety Facilitative anxiety
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5. Empathy
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6. Extroversion Extroversion / Introversion
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Myers-Briggs Types
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Types: Extroversion-Introversion (E/I) Sensing-Intuition (S/N) Thinking-feeling (T/F) Judging-perceiving (J/P)
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Major Assets and liabilities of Myers-Briggs types
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Motivation Behavioristic Cognitive (need for exploration, manipulation, activity, simulation, knowledge, enhancement) Constructivist
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Motivation Extrinsic/Intrinsic Instrumental / Integrative orientations
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The Neurobiology of Affect Amygdala
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Problems with measuring factors: Validity (self-perceptions) “Self-flattery” Culturally-ethnocentric
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