Psychology in Your Life

Similar documents
Myers Psychology for AP, 2e

PERSONALITY CHAPTER 11 MEYERS AND DEWALL

Myers Psychology for AP*

Chapter 14 Personality

Personality. Chapter 13

Reading Guide Name: Date: Hour: Module 55: Freud s Psychoanalytic Perspective: Exploring the Unconscious (pg ) Personality:

Personality Personality Personality Psychoanalysis Freud s Theory of Personality

Personality. Announcements. Psychodynamic Approach 10/31/2012. Psychodynamic: Structure of Personality Ego

What is Personality?

Chapter 12. Personality

Personality. Chapter 12

PERSONALITY UNIT. Who am I? What do we know about why people are they way they are?

Personality. Unit 3: Developmental Psychology

Personality. Radwan Banimustafa MD. Copyright 2010 Allyn & Bacon

Chapter 11. Personality

Name: Period: Chapter 13 Reading Guide Personality Introduction & The Psychoanalytic Perspective (pg ) 1. Personality:

6. Athletes often attribute their losses to bad officiating. This best illustrates A) an Electra complex. B) learned helplessness. C) the spotlight ef

Myers EXPLORING PSYCHOLOGY (7th Ed) Chapter 12. Modified from: James A. McCubbin, PhD Clemson University. Worth Publishers

Personality. Personality 12/13/2010. Personality

Theories of Personality

Written Assignment 3. Chapters covering Human Development, Personality and Motivation and Emotion. Corresponds with Exam 3

Personality SSPVB2: The student will evaluate assessment tools and theories in personality.

Personality. Trait Perspective. Defining Personality: Consistency and Distinctiveness. PSY 1000: Introduction to Psychology

Collective Unconscious What is inherited and common to all members of a species o Human mind developed thought forms over the years Archetypes

Theories of Personality

Assessing personality

Personality Psychology

Highlights of what you may have learned from General Psychology 202?

What is Personality?

PROGRESS TEST 1. Multiple-Choice Questions

CHAPTER 11 PREVIEW - PERSONALITY

Psych 120. General Psychology. Personality. What is personality? 7/21/2010

10: Personality. STUDY GUIDE Answers. Introducing Personality and The Psychoanalytic Perspective

Theories of Personality Dr. Arnel Banaga Salgado

Abraham Maslow. Albert Bandura. Alfred Adler. 2nd stage. Child's development during which bowel control is the primary conflict ages 1-2.

Classic Perspectives on Personality

1/29/2015 THIS IS. Name the. Trait Theory. What Perspective? Psychologist D-Fence Definitions Freud

What is Personality? How do you define personality? CLASS OBJECTIVES 12/4/2009. Chapter 12 Personality and its assessment. What is personality?

Chapter 11 Learning Objectives with SubQuestions

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

Personality: What is it? Personality: Part 1. Psychodynamic Approach. Freud s Model of Personality. Freud s Model of Personality

Major Psychological Perspectives

pattern thinking (cognitive), feeling (emotive), and acting (behavioral)

What is Personality? Personality. an individual s characteristic pattern of thinking, feeling, and acting

Personality. Chapter 13

Review Sheet Personality (5-7%)

Personality. Personality Theories Personality Assessment

Sigmund Freud. By Amrita and Aisha

Nature of Personality Psychodynamic Perspectives Behavioral Perspectives Humanistic Perspectives Biological Perspectives Contemporary Empirical

A person s unique long-term pattern of thinking, emotion, and behavior; the consistency of who you are, have been, and will become

Personality. What We Will Cover in This Section. Personality Defined

Personality. PSYCHOLOGY (8th Edition) David Myers. Personality. Chapter 15. The Psychoanalytic Perspective

Chapters Three & Four: Historical and Current Perspectives on Psychopathology. Rick Grieve, Ph.D. Western Kentucky University

Chapter Two: An Integrative Approach to Psychopathology. Rick Grieve, Ph.D. Western Kentucky University

Theories of Personality

Objective 1: Define personality, and explain how Freud's treatment of psychological disorders led to his study of the unconscious mind.

Personality and its disorders

Personality. An individual s characteristic pattern of thinking, feeling, and acting. Each dwarf has a distinct personality.

Chapter 8 Personality

Psychological Disorders Psych 335. Outline/Overview. Psychodynamic model. Chapter 3 Contemporary Frameworks. Biological Model

Personality. Psychodynamic Perspective. Theories of Personality. Personality. Chapter 13 Spring, 2010 Guest Lecturer: Sara Branch

Name: Period: Reading Guide Chapter 13: Personality

Personality: Dispositional Approach

UNDERGRADUATE COURSE. SUBJECT: Psychology. PAPER: Basic Psychological Processes. TOPIC: Personality. LESSON: Humanistic Approach

Psychodynamic Approaches. What We Will Cover in This Section. Themes. Introduction. Freud. Jung.

Final Exam Review. Questions 1 to 25

id = the part of the mind connected to desire ego = the part of the mind connected to logic superego = the part of the mind connected to morality

PERSONALITY THEORIES FREUDIAN PSYCHODYNAMICS

Introduction to Psychology. Lecture No: 32 ALLPORTS TRAIT THEORY

Bryant-Taneda. AP Psychology 12 Ch. 14 Personality

PSYC Chapter 2: Introduction To Psychodynamic Theory Dr. Deborah Myles

PSYC 221 Introduction to General Psychology

Chapter 11: Personality

Personality means how a person affects others and how he understands and views himself as well as the pattern of inner and outer measurable traits,

Psychological Approaches to Counseling. Mr. Lema, Isaac Clinical Psychologist (MSc.) 25 th November 2015

THEORIES OF PERSONALITY II Psychodynamic Assessment 1/1/2014 SESSION 6 PSYCHODYNAMIC ASSESSMENT

What Is Personality? Early Approaches

Personality Submitted in partial fulfillment of the requirement for the award of degree Of MBA

Personality. Development of Personality

Revision notes The structure of the personality:

PERSONALITY COMPONENTS. In this connection we can discuss two different views :

Dr Radwan Banimustafa. Department of Psychiatry University of Jordan School of Medicine

CHAPTER 3. Background THE PSYCHOANALYTICAL THEORY OF SIGMUND FREUD. part 1. The View of the Person. The View of the Person

Using Lectures You May Already Have Prepared As a Basis for Teaching this Course

Neff, K. D., & Lamb, L. M. (2009). Self-Compassion. In S. Lopez (Ed.), The. Encyclopedia of Positive Psychology (pp ). Blackwell Publishing.

TABLE 11.5 The Major Personality Perspectives Perspective Key Theorists Key Themes and Ideas

CHAPTER OUTLINE CHAPTER SUMMARY

Personality. Formal and Informal Approaches to Personality

Personality: Psychoanalytic Theory. Rusk Psychology

Core Course of BSc Counselling Psychology VI Semester-CUCBCSS 2014 admn onwards

Chapter 14: Theories of Personality

Insight - Oriented Approaches

Personality. Chapter 12. Personality traits. Factor analysis approach. Trait Theories. What Is Personality?

Freud & Personality Development

Lap 4 Essential Question:

Psychological Approach to Comparative Education Aneela Farooq Afshan Nisar

Chapter 13: Personality 1. Introducing Personality. Psychodynamic Theories

Chapter 2 THEORIES OF CHILD DEVELOPMENT

Personality and The Psychoanalytic Perspective

Individual Differences (Personality) Abdullah Nimer

Transcription:

Sarah Grison Todd Heatherton Michael Gazzaniga Psychology in Your Life SECOND EDITION Chapter 13 Self and Personality 1 2016 W. W. Norton & Company, Inc.

13.1 How Do We Know Ourselves? Personality The characteristic thoughts, emotional responses, and behaviors that are relatively stable in an individual over time and across circumstances Self-schema An integrated set of memories, beliefs, and generalizations about the self Researchers typically observe activity in the middle of the frontal lobes of the brain when people process information about themselves 2

Our Sense of Self Is Who We Believe We Are Each of us has a notion of something we call the self, but the self is difficult to define For college students, the sense of self typically includes Gender Age Student status Interpersonal style (e.g., shy, friendly) Personal characteristics (e.g., moody, optimistic) Body image (e.g., positive, negative) 3

Our Sense of Self Is Who We Believe We Are (3) 4

Our Sense of Self Is Who We Believe We Are (4) Working self-concept Reflects how people think of themselves at a given moment Research respondents are especially likely to mention features such as ethnicity, gender, or age if they differ in these respects from other people around them at that moment Self-esteem The affective aspect of the self Many theories propose that self-esteem is based on how we believe others perceive us This view is known as reflected appraisal 5

Our Sense of Self Is Who We Sociometer theory Believe We Are (7) Self-esteem is a sociometer, an internal monitor of social acceptance or rejection When our sociometer indicates a high possibility of rejection, we experience low self-esteem When our sociometer indicates a low probability of rejection, we tend to experience high self-esteem 6

Our Sense of Self Is Who We Believe We Are (8) 7

Our Sense of Self Is Who We Believe We Are (9) Self-esteem and life outcomes Evidence from psychology indicates that selfesteem may be less important than is commonly believed A review of several hundred studies found that although people with high self-esteem report being much happier than others, self-esteem is weakly related to objective life outcomes 8

Our Sense of Self Is Who We Believe We Are (10) One characteristic associated with inflated self-esteem is narcissism An analysis of many studies found increasing narcissism among American college students between 1979 and 2006 Even though we might encourage children to have high self-esteem, there is a tendency for self-esteem to fall during adolescence and be at its lowest for people, especially young women, aged 18 to 22 years 9

Our Sense of Self Is Who We Believe We Are (11) 10

We Try to Maintain a Positive Sense of Self (3) Better-than-average effect According to research, most people have positive illusions that is, overly favorable and unrealistic beliefs in at least three areas 1. They continually experience the better-than-average effect 2. They have unrealistic beliefs about how much they can control events 3. They are unrealistically optimistic about their personal future 11

We Try to Maintain a Positive Social comparisons Sense of Self (4) Downward comparisons: Comparing oneself to another person who is less competent or in a worse situation, which tends to protect one s high self-esteem Upward comparisons: Comparing oneself to another person who is more competent or in a better situation, which tends to confirm one s low self-esteem Temporal comparison is another form of downward comparison, in which people view their current selves as better than their former selves 12

We Try to Maintain a Positive Sense of Self (6) 13

We Try to Maintain a Positive Self-serving biases Sense of Self (7) Self-serving bias: The tendency for people to take personal credit for success but blame failure on external factors For instance, students who do extremely well on exams often explain their performance by referring to their skills or hard work Those who do poorly might describe the test as an arbitrary examination of trivial details 14

Our Sense of Self Is Influenced by Cultural Factors (1) Some cultures emphasize the collective self: connections with others, following norms etc. Such collectivist cultures include those in Japan, Greece, Pakistan, China, and some regions of Africa Individualist cultures emphasize rights and freedoms, self-expression, and diversity, This includes the cultures of northern and western Europe, Australia, Canada, New Zealand, and the United States 15

We Try to Maintain a Positive Sense of Self (10) 16

13.2 How Can We Understand Personality? (1) In the past century, psychologists have studied personality based on several different approaches Psychodynamic theory Humanistic approaches Social cognitive approaches Trait approaches 17

Psychodynamic Theory Emphasizes Unconscious Conflicts (1) Psychodynamic theory Freudian theory stating that unconscious forces determine behavior The central idea of this theory is that unconscious forces such as wishes, desires, and hidden memories determine behavior 18

Psychodynamic Theory Emphasizes Unconscious Conflicts (2) Unconscious conflicts The conscious level of our mental activity consists of the thoughts that we are aware of The preconscious level consists of content that is not currently in our awareness but that could be brought to awareness The unconscious level contains material that the mind cannot easily retrieve 19

Psychodynamic Theory Emphasizes Unconscious Conflicts (3) 20

Psychodynamic Theory Emphasizes Unconscious Conflicts (4) Three structures of personality 1. Id: The component of personality that is completely submerged in the unconscious and operates according to the pleasure principle Freud called the force that drives the pleasure principle the libido. Today, the term has a specifically sexual connotation 2. Superego: In psychodynamic theory, the component of personality that reflects the internalization of societal and parental standards of conduct It is a rigid structure of morality, or conscience 21

Psychodynamic Theory Emphasizes Unconscious Conflicts (6) 3. Ego: In psychodynamic theory, the component of personality that tries to satisfy the wishes of the id while being responsive to the superego The ego operates according to the reality principle, which involves rational thought and problem solving Conflicts between the id and the superego lead to anxiety. The ego then copes with the anxiety through various defense mechanisms Defense mechanisms: Unconscious mental strategies that the mind uses to protect itself from distress 22

Psychodynamic Theory Emphasizes Unconscious Conflicts (9) Psychosexual stages of development In each stage, the libido is focused on one of the body s erogenous zones, which include the mouth, the anus, and the genitals Newborns to age two kids are in the oral stage Kids 2 to 3 years old enter the anal stage From ages 3 to 5, children are in the phallic stage The phallic stage is followed by a latency stage In the genital stage, adolescents and adults attain mature attitudes about sexuality and adulthood Oedipus complex 23

Psychodynamic Theory Emphasizes Unconscious Conflicts (11) According to Freud, progression through these psychosexual stages profoundly affects personality For example, some people become fixated, or stuck, at a stage during which they receive either excessive parental restriction or indulgence Those fixated at the oral stage develop oral personalities Those fixated at the anal phase develop analretentive personalities 24

Psychodynamic Theory Emphasizes Unconscious Conflicts (12) Psychodynamic theory today Contemporary neo-freudians focus on social interactions In object relations theory our mind and sense of self develop in relation to others ( objects ) in our environment, and how we relate to these others shapes our personality Because Freud s central premises cannot be examined through accepted scientific methods, psychologists have largely abandoned psychodynamic theories 25

Humanistic Approaches Emphasize Goodness in People (1) Humanistic approaches Ways of studying personality that emphasize self-actualization, the search for fulfillment of potential through greater self-understanding Carl Rogers introduced a person-centered approach to understanding personality and human relationships Conditions of worth Unconditional positive regard 26

Social Cognitive Approaches Focus on How Thoughts Shape Personality (1) Social cognitive approaches Ways of studying personality that recognize the influence of how people think Expectancy theory According to Rotter s expectancy theory, our behaviors are a part of our personality They result from how we think about two things Our expectancies for reinforcement The values we ascribe to particular reinforcers 27

Social Cognitive Approaches Focus on How Thoughts Shape Personality (3) Personalities are based on locus of control The idea that personality is based on people s perception of whether they control the rewards and punishments they experience (internal locus of control) or not (external locus of control) 28

Social Cognitive Approaches Focus on How Thoughts Shape Personality (5) Reciprocal determinism Albert Bandura argued that three factors influence how a person acts 1. Person s environment 2. Person factors, which include the person s characteristics, self-confidence, and expectations 3. Behavior itself Because personality is explained by the interaction of all three factors, the model is called reciprocal determinism 29

Social Cognitive Approaches Focus on How Thoughts Shape Personality (6) 30

Trait Approaches Describe Trait approaches Characteristics (1) Ways of studying personality that are based on people s characteristics their tendencies to act in a certain way over time and across circumstances These allow us to predict a variety of different behaviors Traits exist on a continuum Most people fall somewhere in the middle, and relatively few are at the extremes 31

Trait Approaches Describe Characteristics (3) The Big Five, or Five Factor Theory This theory identifies five basic personality traits 1. Openness to experience 2. Conscientiousness 3. Extraversion 4. Agreeableness 5. Neuroticism (secure, calm, rarely angered) Evidence supports the five-factor theory The Big Five personality traits emerge across cultures and among adults and children, even when vastly different questionnaires are used to assess the factors 32

Trait Approaches Describe Characteristics (6) Biological trait theory Eysenck developed the biological trait theory Eysenck initially proposed that personality traits had two major dimensions 1. How outgoing people were 2. Whether their emotions tended to be stable or unstable 33

Trait Approaches Describe Characteristics (7) Introversion refers to how shy, reserved, and quiet a person is Extraversion refers to how sociable, outgoing, and bold a person is Eysenck believed that this dimension reflects differences in biological processes Eysenck also proposed a third dimension of personality traits. Psychoticism reflects a mix of aggression, poor impulse control, selfcenteredness, or a lack of empathy, and is now called constraint 34

Trait Approaches Describe Characteristics (9) 35

13.3 How Does Biology Affect Personality? Research has shown that certain genes can be linked with some personality traits Numerous studies have shown that identical twins are more similar than non-identical twins in personality traits described by the fivefactor theory Further evidence for the genetic basis of personality comes from adoption studies 36

Our Temperaments Are Innate (1) Temperament Biologically based tendency to feel or act in certain ways Life experiences may alter personality traits, but temperaments represent the innate biological structures of personality Three aspects of temperament Three personality characteristics can be considered temperaments 1.Activity level 2.Emotionality 3.Sociability 37

Our Temperaments Are Innate (4) Long-term implications of temperament Early childhood temperament appears to influence behavior and personality significantly throughout a person s development 38

Personality Is Influenced by Physiology (1) Research on the neurobiological basis of personality has explored the dimension of extraversion/introversion Reticular activating system (RAS) 39

Personality Stability Is Influenced by Biology and Situation (1) Genetic makeup may predispose people to certain personality traits or characteristics Whether personality is fixed or changeable depends on how we define the essential features of personality 40

Personality Stability Is Influenced by Biology and Situation (3) Cross-cultural findings suggest that agerelated changes in personality occur independently of environmental influences and therefore that personality change itself may be based in human biology Identical twins personalities become more similar as they age 41

Personality Stability Is Influenced by Biology and Situation (5) Other evidence suggests that some aspects of personality change in response to life events Basic tendencies: Personality traits that are largely determined by biology and are stable over time Characteristic adaptations: Changes in behavioral expression of basic tendencies based on the demands of specific situations Parenting style has less influence on personality than we used to believe it did 42

Personality Stability Is Influenced by Biology and Situation (7) Life events can also change personality Personality is usually stable because environments tend to be relatively stable Stability increases over time, particularly after 50 43

How Do We Assess Personality? Projective measures Personality tests examine unconscious processes by having people interpret ambiguous stimuli Thematic Apperception Test (TAT) Rorschach inkblot test 44

Several Methods Are Used to Assess Personality (2) Self-report measures Personality tests that use questionnaires to let people respond to items that reveal traits and behaviors NEO Personality Inventory Personality in everyday life Electronically activated record (EAR) People wear a device that unobtrusively tracks their real-world moment-to-moment interactions, picking up snippets of conversation and other auditory information 45

Several Methods Are Used to Assess Personality (5) Observational methods How well do observers personality judgments predict others behavior? Our close acquaintances may predict our behavior more accurately than we do ourselves Research suggests that we have blind spots about various aspects of our personality because we want to feel good about ourselves 46

Behavior Is Influenced by Personality and Situations (2) Interaction of personality and situation Mischel proposed that behaviors are determined more by situations than by personality traits Situationism: The theory that behavior is determined more by situations than by personality traits Personality psychologists differentiate between strong situations and weak situations Strong situations (e.g., elevators, religious services, job interviews) tend to mask differences in personality, thanks to the power of the social environment Weak situations (e.g., parks, bars, one s house) tend to reveal differences in personality Interactionists: Theorists who believe that behavior is determined jointly by situations and underlying traits 47

There Are Cultural and Sex Differences in Personality (1) Researchers found the five-factor theory personality traits in 56 countries, but there were modest differences across the countries Women and men are much more similar than different in terms of personality, but the differences between them largely support the stereotypes 48