1 / 28

Personality: Vive la Difference!

Personality: Vive la Difference!. How would you define personality. Describe your best friend’s personality. Some questions that are addressed in the study of personality. Are you born with a certain personality or is your personality learned?

Download Presentation

Personality: Vive la Difference!

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Personality:Vive la Difference!

  2. How would you define personality • Describe your best friend’s personality

  3. Some questions that are addressed in the study of personality • Are you born with a certain personality or is your personality learned? • Is your behavior governed by conscious thoughts or by motives that you may not be conscious of? • Does your personality stay constant or does it change in different situations? • Are people basically good or basically bad? • Is your early history more important to the formation of your personality or is your recent history more important? • What is a “healthy” personality?

  4. The book’s definition of Personality A set of behavioral, emotional, and cognitive tendencies that people display over time and across situations

  5. What is a theory of personality • An explanation of how we got the personalities that we have. • A theory that addresses many of the questions that I raised in the first slide.

  6. Freud’s theory: Assumptions • Determinism • Major forces: Sex drive and aggressive drive • People basically bad and must strive to overcome bad instincts.

  7. Freud: Consciousness • Conscious level • Normal awareness • Preconscious level • Easily brought to consciousness • Unconscious level • Hidden thoughts and desires

  8. Freud: Structural Model • The id • Unconscious level • Present at birth • Home to sexual and aggressive drive • Governed by the pleasure principle • Think Homer Simpson

  9. Freud: Structural Model • The superego • Preconscious and unconscious levels • Develops in childhood • Home to morality and conscience • Governed by the ego ideal • Think Ned Flanders

  10. Freud: Structural Model • The ego • Conscious, preconscious, and unconscious levels • Develops in childhood (before superego) • Acts as a referee between id and superego • Governed by the reality principle • Think Lisa Simpson or maybe Marge

  11. Freud: Personality Development • We must pass through psychosexual stages successfully • Each stage focuses on how we receive pleasure • Failure to pass through a stage leads to fixation • In times of stress, we regress to that stage

  12. Freud: Psychosexual Stages • Oral stage (birth to 1 year) • Anal stage (1 to 3 years) • Phallic stage (3 to 6 years) • Oedipus and Electra complexes • Latency period (6 to puberty) • Genital stage (puberty onward)

  13. Freud: Defense Mechanisms Unconscious attempts prevent unacceptable thoughts from reaching conscious awareness • Denial • Intellectualization • Projection • Rationalization • Reaction formation • Repression • Sublimation • Undoing

  14. Freud’s Followers • Carl Jung • Collective unconscious • Archetypes • Alfred Adler • Strive for superiority • Inferiority complex • Karen Horney • Basic anxiety • Privilege envy (not penis envy)

  15. Critiques of Freud • Not scientific • Hard to test • Too broad • Claims are hard to falsify • Based on limited sample • Female patients • Upper class • 19th-century Vienna

  16. Humanistic Theories • Humanists focus on people’s positive aspects: their innate goodness, creativity, and free will • Reaction to Freud’s emphasis on… • Hedonic tendencies • Unconscious basis of behavior

  17. Humanistic Theories • Abraham Maslow • Hierarchy of needs • Self-actualization • Carl Rogers • Unconditional positive regard • Criticisms • Difficult to test • Idealistic view

  18. Is there really such a thing as a personality?Shyness? With your friends? Classmates? Teachers?Honesty? Would you return change found in the phone machine? Would you steal from a store?

  19. Personality:Traits or Situations? • Trait view • We think and behave consistently across situations • Situationist view • Our thoughts and behaviors change with the situation • Interactionist view • Both traits and situations affect thoughts and behavior

  20. Extraversion WithdrawnOutgoing Neuroticism Stable Unstable Agreeableness Low High Conscientiousness UndependableDependable Openness to experience Closed Open Trait Theories: The Big Five

  21. Extraversion Withdrawn Outgoing Neuroticism StableUnstable Psychoticism/Nonconformity Low High Trait Theories: Eysenck’sThree-Factor Model

  22. Measuring Personality:Interviews and Observation • Interviews • Structured set of questions (can be modified) • Focuses on specific thoughts and behaviors • Hard to generalize beyond interview • Observation • Focuses on behaviors, not thoughts • Works best if judge knows participant

  23. Measuring Personality:Inventories • Questionnaires (paper or computer) • Produce a personality profile • Easy to score and statistically analyze • Social desirability

  24. What do you see? Measuring Personality: Projective Tests • Include Rorschach and TAT • Concerns about validity and reliability

  25. Myers-Briggs • http://www.personalitytest.net/types/index.htm

More Related