Name the Psychologist D-Fence Definitions. Trait Theory. What Perspective? Freud

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1 THIS IS

2 Name the Psychologist D-Fence Definitions What Perspective? Freud Trait Theory

3 Psychoanalytic approach to personality A 100

4 Freud A 100

5 The guy who made the pyramid A 200

6 Abraham Maslow A 200

7 One of the two psychologists who corrected Freud s emphasis on childhood; they placed higher emphasis on social interactions than Freud A 300

8 Karen Horney or Alfred Adler A 300

9 Social-Cognitive approach to personality A 400

10 Albert Bandura A 400

11 He expanded on Maslow s work and studied concepts related to the self A 500

12 Carl Rogers A 500

13 The conscious expression of feelings that are the opposite of unconscious feelings B 100

14 Reaction Formation B 100

15 Disguising unacceptable, unconscious impulses by attributing them to others B 200

16 Projection B 200

17 Every time Mr. Vogel got upset with one of his AP Psych students, he tended to give extremely difficult tests to his American History classes B 300

18 Displacement B 300

19 Angela remembers every detail about her high school sweetheart, but remembers hardly anything about the college boyfriend who broke her heart B 400

20 Repression B 400

21 After getting a low grade on an AP Psych exam, you go to the gym and run 10 miles on the treadmill B 500

22 Sublimation B 500

23 The perception that you control your own fate C 100

24 Internal Locus of Control C 100

25 According to Rogers, an attitude of total acceptance toward another person C 200

26 Unconditional Positive Regard C 200

27 A readiness to perceive oneself favorably C 300

28 Self-serving bias C 300

29 The interacting influences of behavior, traits, and environment C 400

30 Reciprocal Determinism C 400

31 Carl Jung s concept of a shared, inherited reservoir of memory tracing from our species history C 500

32 Collective Unconscious C 500

33 The personality perspective most likely to use free association D 100

34 Psychoanalysis D 100

35 The personality perspective that studies how individuals react in different situations D 200

36 Social-Cognitive D 200

37 The personality perspective most criticized for being over simplistic; describing but NOT explaining personality D 300

38 Trait Theory D 300

39 The personality perspective most concerned with growth and self-actualization D 400

40 Humanistic D 400

41 The personality perspective most dependent upon projective tests D 500

42 Psychoanalysis or Psychodynamics D 500

43 In suggesting that the mind is mostly hidden, Freud was most clearly emphasizing the importance of this E 100

44 Unconscious or Id E 100

45 Freud would attribute feelings of guilt to this part of one s personality E 200

46 Superego E 200

47 You want to be a loving member of your family, but also want to show disgust at your sibling s habits; Freud says this part of your personality finds a solution E 300

48 Ego E 300

49 Ego is to Id as the reality principle is to this E 400

50 Pleasure principle E 400

51 Freud said this part of your mind is accessible at a particular moment, but often remains at the unconscious level E 500

52 Preconscious E 500

53 In Big Five Theory, emotional stability is measured in this dimension F 100

54 Neuroticism F 100

55 Factor Analysis measures the dimensions of emotional stability versus instability on the Y axis, and these two characteristics on the X axis F 200

56 Introversion and Extraversion F 200

57 In Big Five Theory, the endpoints for imagination and practicality partly measure this Trait Dimension F 300

58 Openness F 300

59 This personality inventory is the most widely researched and clinically used of all personality tests F 400

60 Minnesota Multiphasic Personality Inventory (MMPI) F 400

61 This famous psychometric questionnaire was designed to measure psychological preferences in how people make decisions; initially served to help women enter the workforce post-wwii F 500

62 Myers-Brigg Type Indicator F 500

63 The Final Jeopardy Category is: Concept of Self Please record your wager. Click on screen to begin

64 Innovation and creativity are most likely to be appreciated in a culture characterized by this Click on screen to continue

65 Individualism Click on screen to continue

66 Thank You for Playing Jeopardy! Game Designed By C. Harr-MAIT

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