1 / 36

Unit X Personality

Unit X Personality. What role does the unconscious play in personality development?. Personality. An individual’s way of thinking, feeling, and acting… explains what makes us unique

brownv
Download Presentation

Unit X Personality

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. Unit XPersonality What role does the unconscious play in personality development?

  2. Personality • An individual’s way of thinking, feeling, and acting…explains what makes us unique • The two foremost theories on personality come from Freud's psychoanalytic and Maslow and Rodgers humanistic approach • Sigmund Freud first to focus clinical attention on the unconscious mind • Goal determine if neurological issues had a psychological cause • By observing patients he was able to “discover” the unconscious mind, where he believed most neurological issues began

  3. Parts of the mind • Conscious • Preconscious Below the level of immediate awareness, but can be recalled • Unconscious Contains repressed information that we are unaware of • Free association was used to explore the unconscious • Patients talk about whatever comes to mind • “How does that make you feel” • Freud believed we often repressedinformation and nothing was accidental • This theory was known as Psychoanalysis

  4. Exploring the Unconscious • Personality arises from a conflict between impulse and restraint, and it develops from this solution • Freud proposed three interacting systems • Id Devil • Strives to satisfy basic needs, and operates on the pleasure principleseeking immediate gratification-Freudian Slips • Ego You • Seeks to gratify impulses realistically(long-term pleasure) • Superego Angel • The voice of our moral principle(achieve the ideal scenario) • Often is in conflict with the Id

  5. Psychosexual stages • Freud believed that personality/development formed during childhood, where the id focused solely on pleasure seeking behavior • Each stage represents a fixation on different areas of the body • Each stage is associated with a particular conflict that must be resolved • Stages Conflict • Oral weaning • Anal toilet training • Phallic sexual feelings • Latency none • Genital mating

  6. How did Freud believe development occurred?

  7. Exploring the Unconscious • During the phallic stage Freud believed the Oedipus Complex developed • A boys sexual desire for his mother/hatred for his father • This idea is eventually repressed/replaced with a child’s identification, or the mirroring of traits • Freud believed that the ego protected itself with defense mechanisms- tactics used to distort reality

  8. Assessing Unconscious • Personality assessment tools, useful to study personality or provide therapy • Projective Test Goal is a “psychological X-ray” • Provides ambiguous stimuli designed to trigger internal projections • Rorschach Inkblot Test(Most widely used test) • Set of 10 inkblots, seeks to identify people’s inner feelings by analyzing their interpretations of the blots • Thematic Apperception Test (TAT) • A projective test in which people express their feelings through stories they make up

  9. How did Freud change the understanding of personality development?

  10. Evaluating Freud • Today psychologists give Freud credit for drawing attention to the unconscious, and the sexual conflict between biology and environment • Freud's concept of repression, and views of the unconscious have not been able to survive science • Freud most offered after-the-fact explanations with little to no scientific backing • Ideas have been mostly disproved/ignored but are crucial to understand as part of psychological history

  11. Neo-Freudian Theorist • Though controversial Freud's writing attracted a small following known as Neo-Freudians • Accepted his thoughts on personality structure/the importance of the unconscious • Placed a greater emphasis on the conscious mind, doubted sex and aggression were the only motivators • Alfred Adler’s inferiority complex • Karen Horney’s sense of helplessness • Jung’s collective unconscious A shared, inherited reservoir of memory traces from our species history

  12. The Modern Unconscious • Freud was correct in thinking we only have access to some of our mind • The modern unconscious mind • Our lives are often guided by and off-screen, out of sight unconscious information processing center • Freud’s ideas failed to predict events, and often used after the fact explanations

  13. Humanistic Theories Prior to 1960 psychology was divided into 2 camps, behaviorists and psychoanalyst, humanistic psychologist were like a breathe of fresh air.

  14. Abraham Maslow • Humanistic Theories  focused on the ways people strive for self-determination/self-realization • Study people through their self reported experiences/feelings • Led by Maslow and Carl Rogers • Opposed Freud's view that the motives of people were “sick” • Abraham Maslowmotivated by a hierarchy of needs • Goal self-actualization/self-transcendence

  15. Carl Rogers • Roger’s agreed with much of what Maslow said, and believed in the good of people • Carl Rogers developed Person-Centered Therapy which emphasized a “growth promoting climate” • Genuineness openness with feelings • Unconditional positive regard therapists must be empathetic and non-judgmental • Empathy sharing/mirroring of feelings

  16. Assessing the Self • Maslow and Roger’s viewed self-concept as a central feature of personality • Positive self-concept = positive outlook on the world • Idealversusactual self • When the ideal self and the actual self match is when someone's self concept is positive • Many humanist reject formal testsbecause it depersonalizes, prefer interviews/conversations

  17. Evaluating Humanism • Renewed interest in self-concept • 9 out of 10 individuals rate self-esteem as very important for motivating themselves and others • Criticisms • Vague, subjective, and often only Maslow and Roger’s values and ideas • Individualistic and Western biased

  18. Trait Perspective:How has modern trait theory changed? Psychoanalysis dives to deep where as behaviorism and humanism does not dive deep enough

  19. Traits • Instead of focusing on the unconscious or how we grow emotionally, some began to try and define personality in terms of a stable pattern of behavior • Trait Theory- Gordon Allport • Worried less on explaining and more on describing traits • Defined personality in terms of behavior patterns • Focus more on differences between individuals • Must understand motivation before the subconscious • Myers-Briggs Type Indicator (MBTI) • An introspective self-report “test” • Goal indicating differing psychological preferences in how people perceive the world and make decisions

  20. Exploring Traits • By placing different traits to individuals psychologists can describe different personality variations • Allport believed there 18,000 different traits • Factor Analysis A technique used to limit overlap, by findingmajor trends in large amounts of data • Believed most traits fall under 2-3 categories, Eysenck Personality Questionnaire • Extroversion versus introversion • Emotional stability versus instability

  21. Assessing Traits • Personality inventory • A questionnaire (often true-false) which people respond to, designed to gauge a wide range of feelings/behaviors • Used to assess selected personality traits • Minnesota Multiphasic Personality Inventory (MMPI)- classic personality inventory • Originally used to determine mental disorders • MMPI-2 567 questions-60-90 minutes(used in job screening)

  22. The BigFive Factors • Todays trait research believed the Eysenck Personality Questionnaire do not truly tell the whole story • Created an expanded set of factors…the Big Five • Conscientiousness Thought vs Impulsivity • Agreeableness Considerate vs Selfishness • Neuroticism Emotional stability vs instability • Openness to experience Opened vs closed thinking • Extraversion Energy level

  23. Questions on The Big Five • How stable are the traits? As you get older these traits remain relatively the same, some strengthen • How heritable are the traits? About 50% • Do the traits predict our actual behavior? Somewhat…for example introverts are more likely to prefer communicating by email than in-person

  24. Person-situation controversy • Although our traits may be stable, the consistency of our behavior is different • Group behavior is easier to predict than individual • Individuals behavior situation is extremely difficult to predict

  25. Social-Cognitive Perspective How does your environment impact your personality?

  26. Social-cognitive perspective- • Albert Bandura Bobo Doll Aggression Study • Social-behavioral approach • We learn most of our behavior through observation situation affects our behavior • Behaviorists focus on how we interact with our environment

  27. Reciprocal Determinism • Personality is shaped by the interacting of behavior, internal personal factor, and environment • If a person is shy(int. factor), and enters a room full of strangers(env.) the person may try to slip to the back of the room to avoid attention (behav) • Ways individuals and the environment interact • Different people choose different environments • Our personalities shape how we interpret and react to events • The way we treat other affects the way they treat us

  28. Social-Cognitive Effects • Researchers tend to believe the proper way to predict behavior is through simulations • Student-teaching/World War II spies • Individualism vs Collectivism • Individualism promotes being independent from others, and defining yourself based on your traits and abilities • Collectivism promotes a connection with others, and defining success in terms of the overall group/team

  29. Exploring the Self • Selfthe center of personality • One example of thinking about self is the concept of possible selves • Many believe that self-esteem is an indication of reality • Self-serving bias People accept responsibility for good deeds not bad • Spotlight effect is an example of how self-focus can fail us • Overestimating other’s noticing/evaluating us • Narcissism has been on the rise “Generation Me” • Tolerant, confident, open-minded, and ambitious but also disengaged, narcissistic, distrustful, and anxious

More Related