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Personality

Personality . By: Lauren Antcliff. The Trait Perspective. Personality: an individuals characteristic pattern of thinking, feeling, and acting Trait: aspects of personality that are relatively consistent

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Personality

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  1. Personality By: Lauren Antcliff

  2. The Trait Perspective Personality: an individuals characteristic pattern of thinking, feeling, and acting Trait: aspects of personality that are relatively consistent Four personality traits: The ancient Greeks classified personalities as Sanguine (cheerful), melancholic (depressed), Choleric (irritable), and Phlegmatic (unemotional). They are basically the four humors.

  3. Identifying Traits GordonAllport: was an American psychology and trait theorist who researched the idea that individual personalities are unique. Allport was born in Montezuma, Indiana in 1897. He was fairly isolated as a child, and observed people. Porprium- meaning the self, it had. The self has seven functions, which tend to arise at certain times of one’s life:  1.  Sense of body (first two years of life, feel closeness and warmth)  2.  Self-identity(first two years of life, recognize ourselves )  3.  Self-esteem (between two and four years old, recognize that we have value to other and ourselves)  4.  Self-extension (between four and six years old, people are essential for my existence)  5.  Self-image (four and six years, “the me as others see me”) 6.  Rationalcoping ( ages six to twelve, when you can deal with life's problems) 7.  Propriatestriving (after twelve, when you set goals, find your calling & have a sense of direction.)

  4. Identifying traits Raymond Cattellbelieved that there are 16 core human traits that have a high or low end. Each of these factors can be Measured using a questionnaire, And then being plotted on a continuum.

  5. Identifying traits Hans Eysenckresearched the genetically influenced dimensions of personality including extraversion and introversion. Extraverts are more outgoing and sociable, while introverts keep top themselves and are quite. He said that emotionally stable people are generally relaxed and calm , where as unstable people are anxious and worry.

  6. The Big Five Traits • The big five traits are Conscientiousness, Agreeableness, Neuroticism, Openness and Extraversion. • Testing for the Traits • Personal Inventories: Which are questionnaires on which people respond to items designed to gauge a range of feelings and behaviors; used to asses selected personality traits. These are objective tests which mean they have multiple choice, true/false, ext. • Validity: is the extent to which a test measures or predicts what it is suppose to test (how well) • Reliability: Is the extent to which a test yields consistent results, regardless of who gave the test or where it was taken. • The Minnesota Multiphasic Personality Inventory: is the most widely researched and clinically used personality test; used to identify emotional disorders , and now used for many other screening purposes.

  7. Big five pic

  8. The Big Five Traits The MMPI-2 assesses the test takers on 10 clinical scales used to diagnose psychological disorders, like anger disorders or if someone is trying to fake a mental illness. They do have a weakness, they do NOT explain why we behave the way we do; for instance: Laura is calm and secure, so we would label her emotionally stable. But the trait theories don’t explain why she is calm and secure.

  9. Social-Cognitive Perspective • Albert Bandura: Believes that the way to understand personality is to consider the thoughts before, during and after the event • Reciprocal Determinism: The mutual influences between personality and environmental factors. • Three Influences: • 1. your thoughts or cognitions • 2. your environment • 3. Your behaviors • You have to consider these three questions when looking at personality : • How does behavior change in different situations? How do you perceive the situation? And How do the elements of the situation affect the behavior?

  10. Personal Control • Locus of Control: • people with an internal locus control- have the perception that you control your own fate- are healthier, have less stress and not as likely to be depressed. • Where as people with an external locus control- attribute there fate to outside forces. People with internal locus are also more likely to succeed at school.

  11. Martin Seligman • He researched helplessness, and then turned his efforts into optimism. • Learned Helplessness: Is a helpless feeling when an animal or human cant avoid repeated events. • This develops when people face traumatic events that they have no control over. • People are happier when they have control over things, like belongings in a nursing home.

  12. Martin Seligman Positive psychology: the movement is psychology that focuses on the study of optimal human functioning and the factors that allow individuals and communities to thrive.

  13. Biblography http://webspace.ship.edu/cgboer/allport.html Thinking about psychology 2nd addition.

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