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Theories of Personality Development

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Title: Theories of Personality Development


1
Theories of Personality Development
2
Trait Theories
  • Explain differences between people in terms of
    stable personality traits
  • Modern day psychologists have found 5 personality
    dimensions that span cultures

3
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4
The 5 Factor Theory
  • Extraversion
  • Neuroticism
  • Conscientiousness
  • Agreeableness
  • Openness to Experience

5
The 5 Factor Theory
6
The 5 Factor Theory
7
The 5 Factor Theory
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The 5 Factor Theory
  • Helpful in predicting general trends in behavior
  • Too general to predict behavior in a specific
    situation

10
Personality Heredity
  • Heritability can be calculated by comparing
    traits of twins reared together and twins reared
    apart

11
Heritability, Big 5 Traits
(Minnesota Study)
12
Heritability, Extraversion
(Minnesota Study)
13
Heritability, Neuroticism
(Minnesota Study)
14
Heritability, Conscientiousness
(Minnesota Study)
15
Heritability, Agreeableness
(Minnesota Study)
16
Heritability, Openness
(Minnesota Study)
17
Behaviorist Theory
  • Behavior determined by
  • Reward
  • Punishment
  • Classical conditioning

18
Social Cognitive Theory
  • Bandura's Reciprocal Determinism and
    Self-Efficacy
  • Rotter's Locus of Control

19
Reciprocal Determinism
Environment
Personal Cognitive Factors
Behavior
20
Self-Efficacy
  • One's perception of personal effectiveness
  • One of Bandura's personal/cognitive factors

21
Self-Efficacy
Beliefyou will dowell
Greatereffort persistence
Success
22
Self-Efficacy
Beliefyou will dopoorly
Lesseffort persistence
Failure
23
Internal Locus
Belief you control your fate
24
Internal Locus
Belief you dontcontrol your fate
25
The Person Beliefs and Behaviors
  • Humanistic psychology
  • Abraham Maslow
  • Self-actualization
  • Oceanic feelings (flow)
  • Carl Rogers
  • Client-centered therapy
  • Unconditional positive regard

26
The World Social Influences on Personality
  • Birth order
  • Peer relationships Personality development by
    peer pressure
  • Sex differences in personality Nature and
    nurture
  • Culture and personality Are there national
    personalities?

27
Assessment
  • Observation
  • Interviews
  • Rating Scales
  • Inventories
  • Projective Tests

28
Problems
  • Observations, interviews, rating scales suffer
    from reliability problems the halo effect
  • Halo Effect
  • Assuming that someone with one favorable trait
    has many others as well

29
The MMPI-2
  • The most widely-used inventory
  • Consists of 567 true-false questions

30
The CPI
  • An MMPI-like test designed for normal individuals
  • The MMPI is more useful for clinical purposes,
    the CPI for normal populations

31
Projective Tests
  • The Rorschach Inkblot Test
  • The Thematic Apperception Test (TAT)

32
The Rorschach
  • Subject tells what each blot looks like and what
    aspect of the blot triggered that response

33
The Rorschach
  • Responses scored on use of parts vs. wholes,
    movement, content, use of color
  • Criticized for lack of reliability, low validity
    (inability to predict behavior)

34
The TAT
  • Consists of 19 vague or ambiguous drawings
  • Person describes what is happening in each

35
The TAT
  • A TAT-like picture

Criticized for low reliability for reflecting
temporary states rather than long-term traits
36
Sentence Completion
  • A projective test requiring completion of
    open-ended sentences
  • May be more reliable than the TAT

37
Magazine Quizzes
  • "Personality" tests in popular magazines often
    use vague terms and rely on the the "Barnum
    Effect"
  • "Always have a little something for everybody.
    (Famed circus owner P.T. Barnum)
  • In this case involves having everyone's
    assessment be vague (so it fits) but positive (so
    you'll believe it)

38
Sigmund Freud
  • Assumptions
  • Traits transcend situations
  • Personality formed in childhood

39
Freuds Model
40
Freudian Theory
  • Personality components
  • Id Concerned with drive satisfaction, provides
    the motive power follows the pleasure principle
    (the horse)
  • Ego Rational thought controls channels id
    follows the reality principle (the rider)
  • Superego Oversees balance between ego id
    internalized parental control much like a
    conscience

41
Freudian Theory
  • The Libido The sexual life energy that drives
    the id other researchers dispute Freud's sexual
    emphasis
  • The Conscious Consists of things you are
    currently aware of constantly changing
  • The Preconscious Consists of things in long term
    memory that influence behavior could be
    retrieved if desired
  • The Subconscious Consists of things you're
    unaware of but that influence you the primary
    personality component

42
Freudian Theory
  • The Unconscious
  • The primary personality component
  • Consists of things you're unaware of but that
    influence you
  • Can't be tapped directly
  • Reflected in slips of the tongue, dreams, etc.

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44
Freudian Theory Stages
  • Psychosexual Stages(source of libido
    satisfaction)
  • Oral (0-1 year)
  • Anal (1-3 years)
  • Phallic (3-6 years)
  • Latency (6-puberty)
  • Genital (from puberty)

45
Freudian Theory Stages
  • Oral Stage
  • Libido gratification comes from oral exploration
    of the world
  • Infant learns to trust in others, esp. for food
  • Oral Personality
  • Problems in the oral stage supposedly lead to
    pessimism about the world, hostility or
    passivity

46
Freudian Theory Stages
  • Anal Stage
  • Kids learn about delay of gratification
  • Kids gain pleasure and libido satisfaction from
    being in control
  • Anal Personality
  • Problems in the anal stage supposedly lead to
    either excessive orderliness or excessive
    messiness

47
Freudian Theory Stages
  • Phallic Stage
  • Freud believed sex-role identification occurred
  • Mechanisms included castration anxiety (boys)
    penis envy (girls)
  • Phallic Personality
  • Problems in the phallic stage supposedly lead to
    sex-role identification problems, promiscuity,
    vanity, or excessive chastity

48
Freudian Theory Stages
  • Latency Stage
  • A time of focus on achievement and mastery of
    skills
  • Libido is channeled into mastery activities
  • Freud thought little of interest happened here
  • Others have argued the sense of self-esteem is
    established here

49
Freudian Theory Stages
  • Genital Stage
  • The time of mature personality, intimacy with
    others
  • Libido satisfied by adult- type sexual activity

50
Freudian Theory Defense
  • Defense Mechanisms
  • Methods for dealing with anxiety
  • Freud thought some more mature than others

Denial Repression Projection Formal
Reaction Rationalization Regression Displacement
Sublimation
51
Denial
  • Refusing to accept that the feeling is present or
    that the event occurred
  • A very primitive mechanism
  • Example preschoolers will convince themselves
    they didn't do something they wish they hadn't

"Firecrackers? No, I never use firecrackers!"
52
Repression
  • Relegating anxiety- causing thoughts to the
    unconscious, refusing to think about them
  • Example
  • Scarlett O'Hara in Gone With the Wind -- "I
    won't think about that now, I'll think about that
    tomorrow."

"I refuse to even think about firecrackers."
53
Projection
  • Attributing one's undesirable traits or actions
    to others, so they become the problem instead of
    you
  • Example from a failing student
  • "I'm not worried about me, but I'd hate to see
    Ellen flunk--she's so fragile"

"Okay, I played with 1, but Joe's always playing
with firecrackers."
54
Reaction Formation
  • Taking actions opposite to one's feelings in
    order to deny the reality of the feelings
  • Freud thought many people fervently pursuing a
    cause were using this mechanism to hide their
    true feelings

"Hi! I'm the president of the local
anti-fireworks club!"
55
Rationalization
  • Creating intellectually - acceptable arguments
    for thoughts or behavior to hide the actual
    anxiety - causing impulses
  • Examples
  • "I only read Playboy for the articles."
  • "I didn't get an A on my paper because I didn't
    want to make you feel inferior."

"I wasn't playing with fireworks I was testing
them to see if they're safe."
56
Regression
  • Reverting to the comfort of behaviors of an
    earlier stage of development in order to cope
  • Example
  • Children who crawl around the floor and produce
    baby talk when a new baby enters the family

"I couldn't be using fire-crackers, I'm too
little."
57
Displacement
  • Substituting a less-threatening object for the
    subject of the hostile or sexual impulse
  • A person mad at his boss might attack an
    underling instead--a person like the boss in some
    ways, but not as anxiety provoking

"I'm not afraid of firecrackers. I'm afraid of
what will happen if mom finds out."
58
Sublimation
  • The most mature mechanism
  • Redirecting anxiety-causing impulses into
    socially acceptable actions
  • Example
  • Dealing with anxiety over a final by engaging in
    vigorous physical activity

"My puppet show is about kids who use
firecrackers."
59
Problems with Freud
  • Too general Explains everything after the fact,
    but predicts nothing beforehand
  • Key portions are contrary to recent data There
    is no evidence for penis envy, castration
    anxiety, the latency period
  • Biased against females Freud's negative
    attitudes towards women colored his entire theory
  • Relies on too many constructs Relies on the
    existence of hypotheticals such as the id, ego,
    superego

60
Contributions
  • The discovery of unconscious processes
  • His emphasis on childhood influences on adult
    behavior

61
Neo-Freudians
  • Former students of Freud who broke away from him
    (often acrimoniously) to create their own
    theories
  • Carl Jung
  • Alfred Adler
  • Karen Horney

62
Carl Jung
  • Personality Theory
  • Ego
  • Personal Unconscious Like a combination of
    Freud's preconscious and unconscious
  • Collective Unconscious Inherited tendencies to
    respond in a particular way (archetypes) shared
    by all humans

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64
Alfred Adler
  • Humans motivated by the need to overcome
    inferiority and strive for significance
  • Inferiority Complex Adler's term for feelings of
    inferiority that interfere with development

65
Karen Horney
  • Stressed need for safety satisfaction
  • Childhood frustration may lead to development of
    basic anxiety neurosis

Tyranny of the Should Horney's term for focusing
on an unrealistic, perfect self-image that leads
to dissatisfaction
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