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Psychology of the Self

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... Appraisal: self-evaluation based on the perceptions & evaluations ... If working self-concept is stable over time, it may become part of the stable self ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Psychology of the Self


1
Psychology of the Self
2
Historical Background
  • William James (1890)
  • The material self body, clothes, wife and
    children, home
  • The social self recognition which a man gets
    from others
  • The spiritual self a man's inner or subjective
    being, his psychic faculties or dispositions

3
What is the Self?
  • Self-concept The set of beliefs we hold about
    who we are
  • Self-esteem The evaluation we make of ourselves
  • High vs. low self-esteem
  • Global vs. domain specific self-esteem
  • Explicit vs. implicit self-esteem

4
What is the Self? (contd)
  • People w/ high self-esteem
  • think well of themselves, set appropriate goals,
    use feedback in a self-enhancing manner
  • cope successfully w/ difficult situations
  • remember their daily experiences more favorably
  • People w/ low self-esteem
  • think poorly of themselves, select unrealistic
    goals, or shy away from goals, experience
    negative emotions in case of (-) feedback
  • Are more vulnerable to depression when they
    encounter stress
  • Remember their past more negatively

5
What is the Self? (contd)
  • Measuring self-esteem
  • Explicit self-esteem Questionnaires (e.g.
    Rosenberg (1965), I feel that I have a number of
    good qualities)
  • Implicit self-esteem E.g., Implicit Association
    Tests

6
Development of the Self
  • Visual self-concept develops bw 15 24 months
  • During early childhood, children categorize
    themselves on concrete dimensions
  • Around age 8, children begin to define themselves
    on psychological attributes
  • Adolescence Identity formation

7
Sources of Self-Knowledge
  • Socialization
  • Reflected Appraisal self-evaluation based on the
    perceptions evaluations of others
  • Feedback from others
  • Self-perception
  • Labeling arousal states
  • Environmental distinctiveness
  • Social comparison
  • Social identity self concept derived from
    group-membership

8
Culture and the Self
  • Independent self the sense of oneself as
    bounded, unitary, separate from the social
    context
  • Interdependent self the sense of self as
    flexible, variable, connected to the social
    context

9
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10
A New Approach Balanced Integration
Differentiation Model (BID)
  • Imamoglu (2003)
  • Are independence (individualism, individuation)
    and interdependence (collectivism, relatedness)
    opposite?
  • Intrapersonal differentiation orientation a
    basic psychological need to actualize ones
    unique potentials
  • Interpersonal integration orientation a basic
    psychological need to be connected to others

11
A New Approach BID (contd)
Intrapersonal differentiation
Normative patterning
Individuation
Relatedness
Interpersonal integration
Separatedness
12
A New Approach BID (contd)
  • Related individuated people reported
  • Higher self-satisfaction
  • Higher family satisfaction
  • Higher perceived parental acceptance
  • Lower perceived parental control
  • Higher need for cognition

13
Aspects of Self-Knowledge
  • Self schemas How one thinks about ones personal
    qualities in a particular life domain
  • People are schematic on dimension that are
    important to them
  • Schemas help identify situations that are
    relevant and guide ones behavior
  • They help remember schema-relevant info
  • Not always positive!

14
Aspects of Self-Knowledge (contd)
  • Possible selves schemas that people hold what
    they may or could become in the future
  • They help people to articulate goals and develop
    goal-directed behaviors
  • They may be positive or negative!

15
Aspects of Self-Knowledge (contd)
  • Self-discrepancies discrepancies bw how we
    perceive ourselves how we would ideally like to
    be or believe others think we should be
  • Ideal self the personal attributes one would
    like to have
  • Ought self the personal attributes one believes
    one should possess
  • Actual-ideal discrepancy -gt dejection-related
    emotions (e.g., disappointment, dissatisfaction,
    or sadness)
  • Actual-ought discrepancy -gt agitation-related
    emotions (e.g., fear, anxiety)

16
Self-Regulation
  • The ways people control and direct their own
    actions
  • Working self-concept the aspect of the
    self-concept that is salient in a particular
    situation
  • Threats to working self-concept may decrease
    self-esteem but stable self usually wins out
  • If working self-concept is stable over time, it
    may become part of the stable self

17
Self-Regulation (contd)
  • Self-complexity The number of dimensions that
    people use to think about themselves
  • Low self-complexity may lead to negative emotions
    in case of failure
  • Self-complexity may act as a buffer against
    stressful life events

18
Self-Regulation (contd)
  • Self-efficacy Specific expectation about our
    abilities to accomplish certain tasks
  • Self-efficacy beliefs are highly specific
  • Enable people to plan, cope w/ setbacks, engage
    in goal-directed behavior

19
Self-Regulation (contd)
  • Two independent motivational systems
  • Behavioral activation system (BAS) an appetitive
    system, when activated people tend to approach
    people and activities in the environment
  • Behavioral inhibition system (BIS) an aversive
    system, when activated people are more likely to
    avoid others and activities
  • BAS, ideal self, promotion focus
  • BIS, ought self, prevention focus

20
Self-Awareness
  • Self-awareness experiencing oneself as an object
    of ones own attention
  • Cybernetic Theory of Self-Regulation People
    compare their behavior to a standard, decide that
    it matches the standard or does not, continue
    adjusting their behavior until a match is made or
    the goal is abandoned

21
Motivation and The Self
  • Need for an accurate self-concept
  • Need for a consistent self-concept
  • Self-verification seeking out interpreting
    situations that confirms ones self-concept
  • We selectively interact w/ others who see us as
    we see ourselves
  • We like people who see us positively on the
    attributes that we are confident to hold

22
Motivation and The Self (contd)
  • Self-improvement
  • Remember possible selves?
  • Comparing ones self with others
  • Self-enhancement the need to hold a positive
    view of oneself
  • Positive illusions mild, falsely positive
    self-enhancing perceptions of ones personal
    qualities
  • People see themselves more positively
  • They have more control over the events
  • They are unrealistically optimistic about the
    future

23
Motivation and The Self (contd)
  • Self-Affirmation People cope w/ specific threats
    to their self-worth by reaffirming unrelated
    aspects of themselves
  • High self-esteem people are more likely to use
    this strategy
  • It may eliminate the need for defensive
    strategies against threats

24
Motivation and The Self (contd)
  • Terror Management Theory The terror of mortality
    is kept under control by two factors a cultural
    worldview and self-esteem
  • People act in accordance with cultural norms when
    mortality is salient
  • They aggress against others who challenge their
    worldviews
  • Affiliate w/ close others
  • High self-esteem is a buffer against death anxiety

25
Motivation and The Self (contd)
  • Self-Evaluation Maintenance Theory Reacting to
    the success of others with pride or discontent
    consequent efforts to restore a sense of self
  • The comparison effect the more important the
    domain, the better others performance and the
    closer the relationship, the greater is the
    threat to self-evaluation (envy, frustration,
    anger)
  • The reflection effect the less important the
    domain, the better others performance and the
    closer the relationship, the greater is the pride
    people derive from others success

26
Social Comparison Theory
  • People are driven to evaluate themselves through
    comparisons w/ other people
  • The goals of social comparison
  • Accurate self-evaluation
  • Self-enhancement
  • Self-improvement
  • Sense of communion
  • Direction upward vs. downward
  • Consequences positive vs. negative

27
Self-Presentation
  • Deliberate efforts to act in ways that create a
    particular impression of the self
  • Self-handicapping engaging in actions that
    provide obstacles to success, so that failure can
    later be attributed to these obstacles
  • Claimed vs. behavioral self-handicapping

28
Self-handicapping, Self-Concept Clarity,
Self-Esteem
  • Study 1
  • Self-concept clarity explicit self-esteem were
    negatively associated w/ claimed
    self-handicapping
  • Study 2
  • Implicit self-esteem was positively associated w/
    behavioral self-handicapping only when
    self-concept clarity was low

29
Self-handicapping, Self-Concept Clarity,
Self-Esteem (contd)
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