Defining Self The way people think and feel about - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 30
About This Presentation
Title:

Defining Self The way people think and feel about

Description:

Defining Self The way people think and feel about themselves (Brown, 1998). The human self is a self-organizing, interactive system of thoughts, feelings, and ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:134
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 31
Provided by: pagesTows
Category:
Tags: defining | feel | people | self | think | way

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: Defining Self The way people think and feel about


1
Defining Self
  • The way people think and feel about themselves
    (Brown, 1998).
  • The human self is a self-organizing, interactive
    system of thoughts, feelings, and motives that
    characterizes an individual (Hoyle).

2
Self vs. Personality
  • According to Brown
  • Self is what people think they are like.
  • Personality is what people are actually like.

3
History of the Self in Psychological Science
  • William James (1842-1910)
  • Discussed concepts such as self-concept and
    self-esteem
  • Used introspection-observation of ones own
    consciousness.
  • Behaviorists (e.g., Watson, Skinner)
  • Dominated American psychology from 1915-1955.
  • Psychology is the science of behavior, not of the
    mind.
  • Self relegated to non-scientific psychology.
  • Cognitive Revolution and Re-Emergence of the Self
  • People are active organisms, capable of planning
    and initiating behaviors in order to achieve
    desired end-states.

4
Self at the Center of Human Experience
  • ENV ? SELF ? BEH

5
William James View of Self
  • 2 Main Components
  • Me the self-concept (knowledge and thoughts
    related to who you think you are).
  • I the perceiver (the part of self that allows
    you to be consciously aware of who you are).
  • I sees Me

6
Three Components of Self-Concept (James)
  • Spiritual Self- your internal perception of who
    you are.
  • Personality traits, abilities, interests,
    feelings, desires.
  • Social Self- how you are perceived by others.
  • Largely based on social roles and group
    memberships.
  • Material Self- tangible objects, people, or
    places that carry the designation my or mine.
  • Bodily self
  • Extracorporeal self

7
Cognitive Components of the Self
  • The Self is a collection of knowledge.
  • Network Models
  • Self-schemas- cognitive generalizations about the
    self, derived from past experience, that organize
    and guide the processing of new self-related
    information (Markus, 1977).

8
Markus' (1977) Self-Schema studies
  • Step 1
  •  
  • Individuals are categorized as independent,
    dependent, or aschematic.
  •  
  • How would you describe yourself
  •  
  • Dependent 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7
    8 9 10 Independent
  •  
  • Conformist 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7
    8 9 10 Individualist
  •  
  • Follower 0 1 2 3 4 5 6
    7 8 9 10 Leader

9
Markus' (1977) Self-Schema studies
  • Step 2 (3-4 weeks later)
  •  
  • Judge whether 69 traits are self-descriptive or
    not (RT measured). Each item presented for 2s.
  •  
  • Example
  •  
  • Individualistic
  •   Me Not Me

10
Results (Markus, 1977)
  • Self-schemas
  • Allow consistent judgments of self
  • Speed up processing of self-relevant info

11
Extensions of Self-Schema Research
  • Memory
  • Acceptance of feedback
  • Judgment of others

12
Self-Reference Effect
  • Rogers, Kuiper, Kirker (1977)
  •  
  • Step 1 
  • Structural properties Is kind printed in
    lowercase letters?
  • Phonemic properties Does kind rhyme with mind?
  • Semantic properties Does kind mean the same as
    nice?
  • Self-relevance Does kind describe you?
  • Step 2 Surprise recall.

13
Self-Reference Effect
  • Information related to the self is more easily
    recalled.

14
Working Self-Concept
  • Working self-concept- the portion of the self
    that is accessible at the moment.
  • Consists of
  • core self-conceptions (stable across situations).
  • tentative self-conceptions (change depending on
    the situation).

15
Self-Complexity (Linville, 1987)
  • self-complexity entails cognitively organizing
    self-knowledge in terms of a greater number of
    self-aspects and maintaining greater distinctions
    among self-aspects.
  • A complex cognitive representation of the self
    serves to moderate the adverse physical and
    mental health effects of stressful events.

16
Motivational Views of Self
  • Self-evaluation motives
  • Self-enhancement- people want to feel good about
    themselves.
  • Accuracy- people want valid info about
    themselves.
  • Self-verification- people want info that is
    consistent with how they view themselves.
  • Self-improvement- people want to get better.

17
Swann et al. (1987) Method
  • Participants were high or low in social SE
  • Task read a passage from a book while evaluator
    watches
  • Evaluator gives favorable or unfavorable
    feedback.
  • Participants rate the evaluator and their current
    mood.

18
Swann et al. (1987) Results
19
Swann et al. (1987) Results
20
Compromises b/w Enhancement and Verification
  • Morling Epstein (1997 Study 2)
  • Participants were high or low in self-esteem.
  • Ps read scenarios involving potential dating
    partners
  • Self-verifying partner
  • Slight or extremely enhancing partner
  • Slight or extremely belittling partner
  • Ps rated immediate gut reactions of liking for
    each partner
  • And more considerate, deliberate reactions of
    liking.

21
Compromises b/w Enhancement and
VerificationImmediate Condition
22
Compromises b/w Enhancement and
VerificationDeliberate Condition
23
Self-Discrepancy Theory (Higgins, 1987)
  • Three components of self
  • Actual self- the person you think you are.
  • Ideal self- the person youd ideally like to be.
  • Ought self- the person you think you should be.

24
Self-Discrepancy Theory (Higgins, 1987)
  • 1. We are motivated to reach a condition where
    actual self matches our personally relevant
    self-guides (ideal or ought selves).
  • 2. Self discrepancies have affective
    consequences.
  • Actual-ideal self discrepancy leads to
    dejection-related emotions.
  • Actual-ought self discrepancy leads to
    agitation-related emotions.

25
Experimental Evidence for Self-Discrepancy Theory
(Higgins et al., 1986)
  • Participants were students who scored high on
    both actual-ideal and actual-ought discrepancy
    and those who scored low on both.
  • Ideal prime condition describe the kind of
    person you and your parents would ideally like
    you to be
  • Ought prime condition describe the kind of
    person you and your parents think you ought to
    be
  • DV pre and post-test mood questionnaire.

26
Results (Higgins et al., 1986)
  • Ideal priming increased high-discrepancy
    participants dejection.
  • Ought priming increased high-discrepancy
    participants agitation.

27
Working Self-Concept
  • Working self-concept- the portion of the self
    that is accessible at the moment.
  • Consists of
  • core self-conceptions (stable across situations).
  • tentative self-conceptions (change depending on
    the situation).

28
Stability and Malleability of the Self-Concept
(Markus Kunda, 1986)
  • Manipulated similarity vs. uniqueness
  • e.g., Which card do you prefer?

Uniqueness condition 2 confederates disagree
with you on 15/18 trials. Similarity condition 2
confederates agree with you on 15/18 trials.
29
Results, Markus Kunda (1986)
  • Me/not me judgments for similarity (average,
    normal, follower) and uniqueness (original,
    independent, unique) words
  • No effect of condition on similarity and
    uniqueness words endorsed as self-descriptive.
  • But, ps in the uniqueness condition hit me
    faster for similarity words.
  • Ps in the similarity condition hit me faster
    for uniqueness words and not me faster for
    similarity words.

30
Conclusions
  • Self can be described in cognitive units such as
    nodes in a network or self-schemas.
  • Different social situations activate different
    portions of the self and different self-motives.
  • Motives affect our processing of self-related
    information and subsequent emotions.
  • Several theories suggest that the self is
    resistant to change.
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com