What is personality and what is it used to explain?
What is a personality trait?
– Traits are individual difference variables (something that can differ between individuals); characteristics that describe ways in which people differ from each other. ex. someone who is introverted compared to someone who is extroverted. We’re comparing these traits to other people. Ex. height
– Can be thought of as an internal causal property; desires and needs within us that guide behaviour
–Can be thought of as purely descriptive summary – a label that we apply to describe/summarize a person’s typical behaviour (describing the average tendencies of a person)
•ex. if someone always always does kind behaviours, then we would summarize their behaviour tendencies and say that they’re a kind person
– In personality psychology, the concept of trait has been used to denote consistent intercorrelated patterns of behaviour, especially expressive or stylistic behaviour
– Individuals can be characterized in term of relatively enduring (stable) patterns of thoughts, feelings, and actions; that traits can be quantitatively assessed; that they show some degree of cross-situational consistency
What is the most common approach to personality?
What is factor analysis and how has it been used to determine the basic traits?
What is the Dark Triad?
What is the Dark Tetrad?
What are the four different personality theories?
(1) psychodynamic perspectives: include all of the diverse theories descended from the work of Sigmund Freud, which focus on unconscious mental forces.
(2) behavioural perspectives:
(3) humanistic perspectives
(4) biological perspectives
What is Freud’s Psychoanalytic Theory to personality and why were they controversial?
What is the id, ego, superego?
the id’s desires for immediate satisfaction often trigger internal conflicts with the ego and superego. These conflicts play a key role in Freud’s theory
What are the three levels of awareness?
1) The conscious consists of whatever one is aware of at a particular point in time.
2) The preconscious contains material just beneath the surface of awareness that can easily be retrieved. Examples might include your middle name, what you had for supper last night, or an argument you had with a friend yesterday
3) The unconscious contains thoughts, memories, and desires that are well below the surface of conscious awareness but that nonetheless exert great influence on behaviour. Ex. a forgotten trauma from childhood, hidden feelings of hostility toward a parent, and repressed sexual desires.
What is the conflict between sex/aggression?
What are anxiety and defence mechanisms?
What are the different types of defence mechanisms?
What are the psychosexual stages and fixation?
– psychosexual stages are developmental periods with a characteristic sexual focus that leave their mark on adult personality
– Fixation is a failure to move forward from one stage to another as expected. Caused by excessive gratification of needs at a particular stage or by excessive frustration of those needs (needs are under- or over-gratified). Fixations left over from childhood affect adult personality.
1) Oral (first year of life)
– erotic focus: mouth (sucking, biting)
– the manner in which the child is weaned from the breast or the bottle
•Early stage task is feeding
– struggles feeding – Oral Incorporative Personality – could lead to the development of a dependent personality; good listener, gullible
– Behaviours include: eating, drinking, smoking, kissing
•Late stage task is weaning
– Struggles weaning (from bottle to regular food)– Oral Sadistic Personality – could lead to the development of an aggressive personality; sarcasm, cynicism, ridicule.
– Behaviours include: gum chewing, overeating, nail-biting.
2) Anal (2–3)
– erotic focus: anus (expelling or retaining feces)
– The crucial event at this time is toilet training
•Early stage task is feces expulsion
– Anal Expulsive Personality – self-confident, uninhibited, resistant to authority. Lack of bowel control, bed-wetting.
– Behaviours include: overly generous, creative, extreme messiness
•Late stage task is feces retention
– Anal Retentive Personality – rigid, compulsive. Constipation.
– Behaviours include: perfectionistic, stubbornness, stinginess
3) Phallic (4–5)
– erotic focus: genitals (masturbating)
•Boys: Oedipus complex (desires for their opposite-sex parent, accompanied by feelings of hostility toward their same-sex parent). Castration anxiety
– Phallic character. Hyper-masculinity.
– Behaviours include: Concerns with expressing virility. Power tools, trucks, cars, large machinery. Heavy reliance on masturbation
•Girls: Electra complex (desires for their opposite-sex parent, accompanied by feelings of hostility toward their same-sex parent). Penis envy (young girls feel hostile toward their mother because they blame her for their anatomical “deficiency.”)
–Hysterical character. Hyper-femininity.
–Behaviours include: Flirtatiousness. Promiscuity. Male-bashing. Heavy reliance on masturbation
4) Latency
– 6–12
– erotic focus: none (sexually repressed)
– expanding social contacts beyond the immediate family
5) Genital
– Puberty onward
– erotic focus: genitals (being sexually intimate)
– sexual energy is normally channelled toward peers of the other sex, rather than toward oneself, as in the phallic stage
–contributing to society through working
–• an adults behaviour is a manifestation of their progression through these stages (1-4 excluding genital). If they progressed through these stages in balance, they move on to become a healthy functioning adult. If they had any fixation at any of these stages, then your personality will be shaped by one of these
What is Carl Jung’s analytical psychology theory?
What is Adler’s individual psychology?
What are the criticisms of the psychodynamic approaches?
What is behaviourism?
How did Skinner explain personality in terms of conditioning?
What is Bandura’s social cognitive theory?
How does Bandura explain personality in terms of observational learning?
How does Bandura explain personality in terms of self-efficacy?
What is Walter MIschel’s person-situation controversy?
What does Norman Endler argue?
– interactional approach to personality: argued that personality traits interact with situational factors to produce behaviour