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Psychology 305A: Theories of Personality Lecture 7

Psychology 305A: Theories of Personality Lecture 7. 1. Scoring Your Questionnaire: EAS 1. Reverse score items 6, 18, and 19. 2. Sum the following items: 2, 7, 10, 17 1, 6, 15, 20 5, 8, 13, 18 4, 9, 11, 16 3, 12, 14, 19 3. Divide each sum by 4. . 2.

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Psychology 305A: Theories of Personality Lecture 7

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  1. Psychology 305A: Theories of Personality Lecture 7 1 Psychology 305

  2. Scoring Your Questionnaire: EAS • 1. Reverse score items 6, 18, and 19. • 2. Sum the following items: • 2, 7, 10, 17 • 1, 6, 15, 20 • 5, 8, 13, 18 • 4, 9, 11, 16 • 3, 12, 14, 19 • 3. Divide each sum by 4. Psychology 305 2

  3. The Biological Perspective 1. What hypotheses has the evolutionary approach generated regarding (a) sex differences in jealousy (continued) and (b) birth order and personality? 2. What are the goals of behavioural genetics? Psychology 305 3

  4. By the end of today’s class, you should be able to: 1. review research supporting evolutionary hypotheses related to sex differences in jealousy. 2. discuss the influence of birth order on the Big 5. 3. describe the “principle of divergence.” 4

  5. 4. discuss criticisms of the evolutionary approach. 5. review the goals of behavioural genetics. 5

  6. What hypotheses has the evolutionary approach generated regarding sex differences in jealousy? (continued) Psychology 305 6

  7. Following from these adaptive problems, evolutionary psychologists have generated 2 interrelated hypotheses regarding sex differences in jealousy: • Hypothesis A: Females are more likely than males to become jealous in response to cues that suggest emotional infidelity. • Hypothesis B: Males are more likely than females to become jealous in response to cues that suggest sexual infidelity. Psychology 305 7

  8. Studies that have tested these hypotheses include: • Buss et al. (1992; see also Buunk et al., 1996; Miller & Maner, 2009; Schutzwohl & Kock, 2004): • Presented participants with the following dilemma: Psychology 305 8

  9. Think of a serious, committed romantic relationship that you had in the past, that you currently have, or that you would like to have. Imagine that you discover that the person with whom you’ve been seriously involved has become interested in someone else. Of the following, what would distress or upset you more? • Imagining your partner forming a deep emotional attachment to that person. • Imagining your partner enjoying passionate sexual intercourse with that other person. Psychology 305 9

  10. Results consistent with Hypotheses A and B. Percentage Reporting More Distress to Sexual Infidelity 10 Psychology 305

  11. Buss et al. (1999) • Had participants imagine that their partners had become both sexually and emotionally involved with someone else. • Asked participants to indicate which aspect of the infidelity they found more upsetting. Psychology 305 11

  12. Consistent with Hypotheses A and B, found that: (a) 63% of the males but only 13% of the females reported that the sexual aspect of the infidelity was most upsetting. (b) 87% of the females but only 37% of the males reported that the emotional aspect of the infidelity was most upsetting. Psychology 305 12

  13. In a large-scale cross-cultural investigation, Brase, Caprar & Voracek (2004) found similar sex differences in China, Germany, the Netherlands, Korea, Sweden, Japan, England, and Romania. • Pietrzak et al. (2002) replicated findings regarding sex differences in jealousy using physiological measures (e.g., measures of heart rate, skin conductance; assessment of facial expression). Psychology 305 13

  14. What hypotheses has the evolutionary approach generated regarding birth order and personality? • Most animals, including humans, require some degree of parental investment (i.e., investment of parental resources) in order to survive. • When parents have more than one offspring, siblings must compete for parental investment. Psychology 305 14

  15. Evolutionary psychologists maintain that first-born children (FBs) and later-born children (LBs) have developed different strategies to maximize parental investment. 15

  16. E.g. of strategies used by FBs in non-human species: • Predatory birds confronted by a scarce food supply: Older chicks attempt to peck younger chicks to death or exclude them from the nest. • Cuckoo birds: First chick to hatch attempts to eject all other eggs from the nest. Psychology 305 16

  17. For humans, evolutionary psychologists have generated several hypotheses regarding the strategies that FBs and LBs use to maximize parental investment and the impact that these strategies have on personality: Hypothesis A: FBs are higher in extraversion than LBs. Hypothesis B: LBs are higher in agreeableness than FBs. Hypothesis C: FBs are higher in neuroticism than LBs. Psychology 305 17

  18. What are the goals of behavioural genetics? • Goal 1: To determine the degree to which individual differences in personality characteristics are caused by genetic factors as opposed to environmental factors: Psychology 305 18

  19. VP = VG + VE VP = Variation in an observable personality characteristic within a population. VG = Variation in the genetic factors that contribute to that characteristic. VE = Variation in the environmental factors that contribute to that characteristic. Psychology 305 19

  20. Goal 2: To identify the genetic factors that contribute to individual differences in specific personality characteristics. E.g., the gene D4DR on chromosome 11 contributes to individual differences in “sensation seeking” (also referred to as novelty seeking). • Goal 3: To identify the environmental factors that contribute to individual differences in specific personality characteristics. Psychology 305 20

  21. The Biological Perspective 1. What hypotheses has the evolutionary approach generated regarding (a) sex differences in jealousy (continued) and (b) birth order and personality? 2. What are the goals of behavioural genetics? Psychology 305 21

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