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psychology
CHAPTER
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Psychology, Third Edition
Saundra K. Ciccarelli • J. Noland White
third edition
theories of
personality
13
Copyright ©2012 by Pearson Education, Inc.
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Psychology, Third Edition
Saundra K. Ciccarelli • J. Noland White
Learning Objectives
• LO 13.1Personality from various perspectives
• LO 13.2Freud’s historical views of personality
• LO 13.3Jung, Adler, Horney, and Erikson’s modifications
• LO 13.4	How does modern psychoanalytic theory differ from Freud
• LO 13.5	Behavioral and social cognitive explanations of personality
• LO 13.6	How humanists explain personality
• LO 13.7	The history and current views of the trait perspective
• LO 13.8	Biology, heredity and cultural roles in personality
• LO 13.9	Advantages and disadvantages of various measure of personality
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Psychology, Third Edition
Saundra K. Ciccarelli • J. Noland White
Personality
• Personality - the unique and relatively
stable ways in which people think, feel,
and behave.
• Character - value judgments of a person’s
moral and ethical behavior.
• Temperament - the enduring
characteristics with which each person is
born.
LO 13.1 Personality
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Psychology, Third Edition
Saundra K. Ciccarelli • J. Noland White
Four Perspectives in Study of Personality
• Psychoanalytic
• Behavioristic (including social cognitive
theory)
• Humanistic
• Trait perspectives
LO 13.1 Personality
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Saundra K. Ciccarelli • J. Noland White
Sigmund Freud
• Founder of the psychoanalytic movement
in psychology.
LO 13.2 Freud’s historical views of personality
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Sigmund Freud
• Europe during the Victorian age.
– Men were understood to be unable to control
their "animal" desires at times, and a good
Victorian husband would father several
children with his wife and then turn to a
mistress for sexual comfort, leaving his
virtuous wife untouched.
LO 13.2 Freud’s historical views of personality
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Psychology, Third Edition
Saundra K. Ciccarelli • J. Noland White
Sigmund Freud
• Europe during the Victorian age.
– Women, especially those of the upper
classes, were not supposed to have sexual
urges.
– Backdrop for this theory.
LO 13.2 Freud’s historical views of personality
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Psychology, Third Edition
Saundra K. Ciccarelli • J. Noland White
Divisions of Consciousness
• Preconscious mind - level of the mind in
which information is available but not
currently conscious.
• Conscious mind - level of the mind that is
aware of immediate surroundings and
perceptions.
LO 13.2 Freud’s historical views of personality
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Psychology, Third Edition
Saundra K. Ciccarelli • J. Noland White
Divisions of Consciousness
• Unconscious mind - level of the mind in
which thoughts, feelings, memories, and
other information are kept that are not
easily or voluntarily brought into
consciousness.
– Can be revealed in dreams and Freudian slips
of the tongue.
LO 13.2 Freud’s historical views of personality
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Saundra K. Ciccarelli • J. Noland White
Figure 13.1 Freud’s Conception of the Personality
This iceberg represents the three levels of the mind. The part of the iceberg visible above the surface is the conscious
mind. Just below the surface is the preconscious mind, everything that is not yet part of the conscious mind. Hidden
deep below the surface is the unconscious mind, feelings, memories, thoughts, and urges that cannot be easily
brought into consciousness. While two of the three parts of the personality (ego and superego) exist at all three levels
of awareness, the id is completely in the unconscious mind.
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Psychology, Third Edition
Saundra K. Ciccarelli • J. Noland White
Freud’s Theory: Parts of Personality
• Id - part of the personality present at birth
and completely unconscious.
– Libido - the instinctual energy that may come
into conflict with the demands of a society’s
standards for behavior.
– Pleasure principle - principle by which the id
functions; the immediate satisfaction of needs
without regard for the consequences.
LO 13.2 Freud’s historical views of personality
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Freud’s Theory: Parts of Personality
• Ego - part of the personality that develops
out of a need to deal with reality, mostly
conscious, rational, and logical.
– Reality principle - principle by which the ego
functions; the satisfaction of the demands of
the id only when negative consequences will
not result.
LO 13.2 Freud’s historical views of personality
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Freud’s Theory: Parts of Personality
• Superego - part of the personality that acts
as a moral center.
– Ego ideal - part of the superego that contains
the standards for moral behavior.
– Conscience - part of the superego that
produces pride or guilt, depending on how
well behavior matches or does not match the
ego ideal.
LO 13.2 Freud’s historical views of personality
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Defense Mechanisms
• Psychological defense mechanisms -
unconscious distortions of a person’s
perception of reality that reduce stress and
anxiety.
• Denial - psychological defense
mechanism in which the person refuses to
acknowledge or recognize a threatening
situation.
LO 13.2 Freud’s historical views of personality
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Saundra K. Ciccarelli • J. Noland White
Defense Mechanisms
• Repression - psychological defense
mechanism in which the person refuses to
consciously remember a threatening or
unacceptable event, instead pushing
those events into the unconscious mind.
• Rationalization - psychological defense
mechanism in which a person invents
acceptable excuses for unacceptable
behavior.
LO 13.2 Freud’s historical views of personality
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Defense Mechanisms
• Projection - psychological defense
mechanism in which unacceptable or
threatening impulses or feelings are seen
as originating with someone else, usually
the target of the impulses or feelings.
LO 13.2 Freud’s historical views of personality
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Defense Mechanisms
• Reaction formation - psychological
defense mechanism in which a person
forms an opposite emotional or behavioral
reaction to the way he or she really feels
to keep those true feelings hidden from
self and others.
• Displacement - redirecting feelings from a
threatening target to a less threatening
one.
LO 13.2 Freud’s historical views of personality
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Defense Mechanisms
• Regression - psychological defense
mechanism in which a person falls back
on childlike patterns of responding in
reaction to stressful situations.
• Identification - defense mechanism in
which a person tries to become like
someone else to deal with anxiety.
LO 13.2 Freud’s historical views of personality
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Defense Mechanisms
• Compensation (substitution) - defense
mechanism in which a person makes up
for inferiorities in one area by becoming
superior in another area.
• Sublimation - channeling socially
unacceptable impulses and urges into
socially acceptable behavior.
LO 13.2 Freud’s historical views of personality
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Freud’s Theory:
Stages of Personality Development
• Fixation - disorder in which the person
does not fully resolve the conflict in a
particular psychosexual stage, resulting in
personality traits and behavior associated
with that earlier stage.
• Psychosexual stages - five stages of
personality development proposed by
Freud and tied to the sexual development
of the child.
LO 13.2 Freud’s historical views of personality
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Freud’s Theory:
Stages of Personality Development
• Oral stage - first stage occurring in the first
year of life in which the mouth is the
erogenous zone and weaning is the
primary conflict. Id dominated.
LO 13.2 Freud’s historical views of personality
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Freud’s Theory:
Stages of Personality Development
• Anal stage - second stage occurring from
about 1 to 3 years of age, in which the
anus is the erogenous zone and toilet
training is the source of conflict. Ego
develops.
– Anal expulsive personality - a person fixated
in the anal stage who is messy, destructive,
and hostile.
LO 13.2 Freud’s historical views of personality
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Psychology, Third Edition
Saundra K. Ciccarelli • J. Noland White
Freud’s Theory:
Stages of Personality Development
• Anal stage - second stage occurring from
about 1 to 3 years of age, in which the
anus is the erogenous zone and toilet
training is the source of conflict. Ego
develops.
– Anal retentive personality - a person fixated in
the anal stage who is neat, fussy, stingy, and
stubborn.
LO 13.2 Freud’s historical views of personality
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Saundra K. Ciccarelli • J. Noland White
Freud’s Theory:
Stages of Personality Development
• Phallic stage - third stage occurring from
about 3 to 6 years of age, in which the
child discovers sexual feelings. Superego
develops.
– Oedipus complex- situation occurring in the
phallic stage in which a child develops a
sexual attraction to the opposite-sex parent
and jealousy of the same-sex parent.
LO 13.2 Freud’s historical views of personality
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Psychology, Third Edition
Saundra K. Ciccarelli • J. Noland White
Freud’s Theory:
Stages of Personality Development
• Phallic stage - third stage occurring from
about 3 to 6 years of age, in which the
child discovers sexual feelings. Superego
develops.
– Identification - defense mechanism in which a
person tries to become like someone else to
deal with anxiety.
LO 13.2 Freud’s historical views of personality
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Freud’s Theory:
Stages of Personality Development
• Latency - fourth stage occurring during the
school years, in which the sexual feelings
of the child are repressed while the child
develops in other ways.
• Genital – sexual feelings reawaken with
appropriate targets.
LO 13.2 Freud’s historical views of personality
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Freud’s Psychoanalysis
• Psychoanalysis - Freud’s term for both the
theory of personality and the therapy
based on it.
LO 13.2 Freud’s historical views of personality
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Neo-Freudians
• Neo-Freudians - followers of Freud who
developed their own competing theories of
psychoanalysis.
– Jung developed a theory of a collective
unconscious.
• Personal unconscious - Jung’s name for
the unconscious mind as described by
Freud.
LO 13.3 Jung, Adler, Horney, and Erikson’s modifications
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Neo-Freudians
• Collective unconscious – Jung’s name for
the memories shared by all members of
the human species.
• Archetypes - Jung’s collective, universal
human memories.
LO 13.3 Jung, Adler, Horney, and Erikson’s modifications
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Neo-Freudians
• Adler proposed feelings of inferiority as
the driving force behind personality and
developed birth order theory.
LO 13.3 Jung, Adler, Horney, and Erikson’s modifications
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Neo-Freudians
• Horney developed a theory based on
basic anxiety and rejected the concept of
penis envy.
– Basic anxiety - anxiety created when a child is
born into the bigger and more powerful world
of older children and adults.
– Neurotic personalities – maladaptive ways of
dealing with relationships in Horney’s theory.
LO 13.3 Jung, Adler, Horney, and Erikson’s modifications
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Neo-Freudians
• Erikson developed a theory based on
social rather than sexual relationships,
covering the entire life span.
LO 13.3 Jung, Adler, Horney, and Erikson’s modifications
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Modern Psychoanalytic Theory
• Current research has found support for:
– Defense mechanisms
– Concept of an unconscious mind that can
influence conscious behavior
• Other concepts cannot be scientifically
researched.
LO 13.4 Modern psychoanalytic theory
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Behaviorism and Personality
• Behaviorists define personality as a set of
learned responses or habits.
– Habits - in behaviorism, sets of well-learned
responses that have become automatic.
• Social cognitive learning theorists –
theorists who emphasize the importance
of both the influences of other people’s
behavior and of a person’s own
expectancies on learning.
LO 13.5 Behavioral and social cognitive explanations of personality
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Behaviorism and Personality
• Social cognitive view – learning theory that
includes cognitive processes such as
anticipating, judging, memory, and
imitation of models.
• Reciprocal determinism - Bandura’s
explanation of how the factors of
environment, personal characteristics, and
behavior can interact to determine future
behavior.
LO 13.5 Behavioral and social cognitive explanations of personality
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Behaviorism and Personality
• Self-efficacy – individual’s perception of
how effective a behavior will be in any
particular circumstance (NOT the same as
self-esteem).
LO 13.5 Behavioral and social cognitive explanations of personality
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Figure 13.2 Reciprocal Determinism
In Bandura’s model of reciprocal determinism, three factors influence behavior: the environment, which consists of the
physical surroundings and the potential for reinforcement; the person (personal/cognitive characteristics that have
been rewarded in the past); and the behavior itself, which may or may not be reinforced at this particular time and
place.
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Humanistic Theories of Personality
• Humanistic perspective - the "third force"
in psychology that focuses on those
aspects of personality that make people
uniquely human, such as subjective
feelings and freedom of choice.
• Developed as a reaction against the
negativity of psychoanalysis and the
deterministic nature of behaviorism.
LO 13.6 How humanists explain personality
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Roger’s Theory of Personality
• Self-actualizing tendency – the striving to
fulfill one’s innate capacities and
capabilities.
• Self-concept - the image of oneself that
develops from interactions with important,
significant people in one’s life.
• Self - archetype that works with the ego to
manage other archetypes and balance the
personality.
LO 13.6 How humanists explain personality
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Roger’s Theory of Personality
• Real self - one’s perception of actual
characteristics, traits, and abilities.
• Ideal self - one’s perception of whom one
should be or would like to be.
• Positive regard – warmth, affection, love,
and respect that come from significant
others in one’s life.
LO 13.6 How humanists explain personality
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Figure 13.3 Real and Ideal Selves
According to Rogers, the self-concept includes the real self and the ideal self. The real self is a person’s actual
perception of traits and abilities, whereas the ideal self is the perception of what a person would like to be or thinks he
or she should be. When the ideal self and the real self are very similar (matching), the person experiences harmony
and contentment. When there is a mismatch between the two selves, the person experiences anxiety and may engage
in neurotic behavior.
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Roger’s Theory of Personality
• Unconditional positive regard - positive
regard that is given without conditions or
strings attached.
• Conditional positive regard- positive
regard that is given only when the person
is doing what the providers of positive
regard wish.
LO 13.6 How humanists explain personality
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Roger’s Theory of Personality
• Fully functioning person – a person who is
in touch with and trusting of the deepest,
innermost urges and feelings.
LO 13.6 How humanists explain personality
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Trait Theories of Personality
• Trait theories - theories that endeavor to
describe the characteristics that make up
human personality in an effort to predict
future behavior.
– Trait - a consistent, enduring way of thinking,
feeling, or behaving.
• Allport first developed a list of about 200
traits and believed that these traits were
part of the nervous system.
LO 13.7 Trait perspective
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Trait Theories of Personality
• Cattell reduced the number of traits to
between 16 and 23 with a computer
method called factor analysis.
• Surface traits - aspects of personality that
can easily be seen by other people in the
outward actions of a person.
LO 13.7 Trait perspective
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Figure 13.4 Cattell’s Self-Report Inventory
This is an example of personality profiles based on Cattell’s 16PF self-report inventory. The two groups represented
are airline pilots and writers. Notice that airline pilots, when compared to writers, tend to be more conscientious,
relaxed, selfassured, and far less sensitive. Writers, on the other hand, are more imaginative and better able to are
think abstractly. Source: Cattell (1973).
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Trait Theories of Personality
• Source traits - the more basic traits that
underlie the surface traits, forming the
core of personality.
– Example: Introversion - dimension of
personality in which people tend to withdraw
from excessive stimulation.
LO 13.7 Trait perspective
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The Big Five Theory
• Five-factor model (Big Five) - model of
personality traits that describes five basic
trait dimensions.
– Openness - one of the five factors; willingness
to try new things and be open to new
experiences.
– Conscientiousness - the care a person gives
to organization and thoughtfulness of others;
dependability.
LO 13.7 Trait perspective
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The Big Five Theory
• Five-factor model (Big Five) - model of
personality traits that describes five basic
trait dimensions.
– Extraversion - dimension of personality
referring to one’s need to be with other
people.
LO 13.7 Trait perspective
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The Big Five Theory
• Extraverts - people who are outgoing and
sociable.
• Introverts - people who prefer solitude and
dislike being the center of attention.
– Agreeableness - the emotional style of a
person that may range from easygoing,
friendly, and likeable to grumpy, crabby, and
unpleasant.
LO 13.7 Trait perspective
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The Big Five Theory
• Introverts - people who prefer solitude and
dislike being the center of attention.
– Neuroticism - degree of emotional instability
or stability.
LO 13.7 Trait perspective
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Trait Theories Today
• Cross-cultural research has found support
for the five-factor model of personality
traits in a number of different cultures.
– Future research will explore the degree to
which child-rearing practices and heredity
may influence the five personality factors.
LO 13.7 Trait perspective
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Trait Theories Today
• Trait-situation interaction - the assumption
that the particular circumstances of any
given situation will influence the way in
which a trait is expressed.
LO 13.7 Trait perspective
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Biology and Personality
• Behavior genetics - a field of study of the
relationship between heredity and
personality.
– Twin and adoption studies have found support
for a genetic influence on many personality
traits.
LO 13.8 Biology, heredity and cultural roles in personality
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Figure 13.5 Personalities of Identical and Fraternal Twins
Identical and fraternal twins differ in the way they express the Big Five personality factors. The scores of identical twins
have a correlation of about 50 percent, whereas those of fraternal twins have a correlation of only about 15 to 20
percent. These findings give support to the idea that some aspects of personality are genetically based.
Source: Loehlin (1992)
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James Arthur Springer and James
• Edward Lewis, otherwise known as the
"Jim" twins. Although separated shortly
after birth and reunited at age 39, they
exhibited many similarities in personality
and personal habits.
LO 13.8 Biology, heredity and cultural roles in personality
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Cultural Personality
• Four basic dimensions of personality
along which cultures may vary:
– individualism/collectivism
– power distance
– masculinity/femininity
– uncertainty avoidance
LO 13.8 Biology, heredity and cultural roles in personality
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Measuring Personality: Interviews
• Interview - method of personality
assessment in which the professional
asks questions of the client and allows the
client to answer, either in a structured or
unstructured fashion.
• Halo effect – tendency of an interviewer to
allow positive characteristics of a client to
influence the assessments of the client’s
behavior and statements.
LO 13.9 Advantages and disadvantages of various measure of personality
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Measuring Personality: Projective Tests
• Projection - defense mechanism involving
placing, or "projecting," one’s own
unacceptable thoughts onto others, as if
the thoughts actually belonged to those
others and not to oneself.
• Projective tests - personality assessments
that present ambiguous visual stimuli to
the client and ask the client to respond
with whatever comes to mind.
LO 13.9 Advantages and disadvantages of various measure of personality
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Measuring Personality: Projective Tests
• Rorschach inkblot test - projective test that
uses 10 inkblots as the ambiguous stimuli.
• Thematic Apperception Test (TAT) -
projective test that uses 20 pictures of
people in ambiguous situations as the
visual stimuli.
LO 13.9 Advantages and disadvantages of various measure of personality
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Figure 13.6 Rorschach Inkblot Example
A facsimile of a Rorschach inkblot. A person being tested is asked to tell the interviewer what he or she sees in an
inkblot similar to the one shown. Answers are neither right nor wrong but may reveal unconscious concerns. What do
you see in this inkblot?
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Figure 13.7 Thematic Apperception Test Example
A sample from the Thematic Apperception Test (TAT). When you look at this picture, what story does it suggest to
you? Who are the people? What is their relationship?
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Measuring Personality: Projective Tests
• Subjective - concepts and impressions
that are only valid within a particular
person’s perception and may be
influenced by biases, prejudice, and
personal experiences. This is a problem
with projective tests.
LO 13.9 Advantages and disadvantages of various measure of personality
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Measuring Personality: Behavioral Measures
• Direct observation - assessment in which
the professional observes the client
engaged in ordinary, day-to-day behavior
in either a clinical or natural setting.
• Rating scale- assessment in which a
numerical value is assigned to specific
behavior that is listed in the scale.
LO 13.9 Advantages and disadvantages of various measure of personality
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Saundra K. Ciccarelli • J. Noland White
Measuring Personality: Behavioral Measures
• Frequency count - assessment in which
the frequency of a particular behavior is
counted.
LO 13.9 Advantages and disadvantages of various measure of personality
Copyright ©2012 by Pearson Education, Inc.
All rights reserved.
Psychology, Third Edition
Saundra K. Ciccarelli • J. Noland White
Measuring Personality: Personality Inventory
• Personality inventory - paper and pencil or
computerized test that consists of
statements that require a specific,
standardized response from the person
taking the test.
– NEO-PI - based on the five-factor model
– Myers-Briggs Type Indicator - based on
Jung’s theory of personality types.
LO 13.9 Advantages and disadvantages of various measure of personality
Copyright ©2012 by Pearson Education, Inc.
All rights reserved.
Psychology, Third Edition
Saundra K. Ciccarelli • J. Noland White
Measuring Personality: Personality Inventory
• Personality inventory - paper and pencil or
computerized test that consists of
statements that require a specific,
standardized response from the person
taking the test.
– MMPI-2 - designed to detect abnormal
personality.
LO 13.9 Advantages and disadvantages of various measure of personality
Copyright ©2012 by Pearson Education, Inc.
All rights reserved.
Psychology, Third Edition
Saundra K. Ciccarelli • J. Noland White
Personality Tests and Internet
• There are numerous personality tests
available on the Internet.
• Not all equal in quality, reliability, or
validity.
• Lack of professional interpretation of the
results of such tests.
LO 13.9 Advantages and disadvantages of various measure of personality
Copyright ©2012 by Pearson Education, Inc.
All rights reserved.
Psychology, Third Edition
Saundra K. Ciccarelli • J. Noland White

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PSYC1101 Chapter 13 PowerPoint

  • 1. psychology CHAPTER Copyright ©2012 by Pearson Education, Inc. All rights reserved. Psychology, Third Edition Saundra K. Ciccarelli • J. Noland White third edition theories of personality 13
  • 2. Copyright ©2012 by Pearson Education, Inc. All rights reserved. Psychology, Third Edition Saundra K. Ciccarelli • J. Noland White Learning Objectives • LO 13.1Personality from various perspectives • LO 13.2Freud’s historical views of personality • LO 13.3Jung, Adler, Horney, and Erikson’s modifications • LO 13.4 How does modern psychoanalytic theory differ from Freud • LO 13.5 Behavioral and social cognitive explanations of personality • LO 13.6 How humanists explain personality • LO 13.7 The history and current views of the trait perspective • LO 13.8 Biology, heredity and cultural roles in personality • LO 13.9 Advantages and disadvantages of various measure of personality
  • 3. Copyright ©2012 by Pearson Education, Inc. All rights reserved. Psychology, Third Edition Saundra K. Ciccarelli • J. Noland White Personality • Personality - the unique and relatively stable ways in which people think, feel, and behave. • Character - value judgments of a person’s moral and ethical behavior. • Temperament - the enduring characteristics with which each person is born. LO 13.1 Personality
  • 4. Copyright ©2012 by Pearson Education, Inc. All rights reserved. Psychology, Third Edition Saundra K. Ciccarelli • J. Noland White Four Perspectives in Study of Personality • Psychoanalytic • Behavioristic (including social cognitive theory) • Humanistic • Trait perspectives LO 13.1 Personality
  • 5. Copyright ©2012 by Pearson Education, Inc. All rights reserved. Psychology, Third Edition Saundra K. Ciccarelli • J. Noland White Sigmund Freud • Founder of the psychoanalytic movement in psychology. LO 13.2 Freud’s historical views of personality
  • 6. Copyright ©2012 by Pearson Education, Inc. All rights reserved. Psychology, Third Edition Saundra K. Ciccarelli • J. Noland White Sigmund Freud • Europe during the Victorian age. – Men were understood to be unable to control their "animal" desires at times, and a good Victorian husband would father several children with his wife and then turn to a mistress for sexual comfort, leaving his virtuous wife untouched. LO 13.2 Freud’s historical views of personality
  • 7. Copyright ©2012 by Pearson Education, Inc. All rights reserved. Psychology, Third Edition Saundra K. Ciccarelli • J. Noland White Sigmund Freud • Europe during the Victorian age. – Women, especially those of the upper classes, were not supposed to have sexual urges. – Backdrop for this theory. LO 13.2 Freud’s historical views of personality
  • 8. Copyright ©2012 by Pearson Education, Inc. All rights reserved. Psychology, Third Edition Saundra K. Ciccarelli • J. Noland White Divisions of Consciousness • Preconscious mind - level of the mind in which information is available but not currently conscious. • Conscious mind - level of the mind that is aware of immediate surroundings and perceptions. LO 13.2 Freud’s historical views of personality
  • 9. Copyright ©2012 by Pearson Education, Inc. All rights reserved. Psychology, Third Edition Saundra K. Ciccarelli • J. Noland White Divisions of Consciousness • Unconscious mind - level of the mind in which thoughts, feelings, memories, and other information are kept that are not easily or voluntarily brought into consciousness. – Can be revealed in dreams and Freudian slips of the tongue. LO 13.2 Freud’s historical views of personality
  • 10. Copyright ©2012 by Pearson Education, Inc. All rights reserved. Psychology, Third Edition Saundra K. Ciccarelli • J. Noland White Figure 13.1 Freud’s Conception of the Personality This iceberg represents the three levels of the mind. The part of the iceberg visible above the surface is the conscious mind. Just below the surface is the preconscious mind, everything that is not yet part of the conscious mind. Hidden deep below the surface is the unconscious mind, feelings, memories, thoughts, and urges that cannot be easily brought into consciousness. While two of the three parts of the personality (ego and superego) exist at all three levels of awareness, the id is completely in the unconscious mind.
  • 11. Copyright ©2012 by Pearson Education, Inc. All rights reserved. Psychology, Third Edition Saundra K. Ciccarelli • J. Noland White Freud’s Theory: Parts of Personality • Id - part of the personality present at birth and completely unconscious. – Libido - the instinctual energy that may come into conflict with the demands of a society’s standards for behavior. – Pleasure principle - principle by which the id functions; the immediate satisfaction of needs without regard for the consequences. LO 13.2 Freud’s historical views of personality
  • 12. Copyright ©2012 by Pearson Education, Inc. All rights reserved. Psychology, Third Edition Saundra K. Ciccarelli • J. Noland White Freud’s Theory: Parts of Personality • Ego - part of the personality that develops out of a need to deal with reality, mostly conscious, rational, and logical. – Reality principle - principle by which the ego functions; the satisfaction of the demands of the id only when negative consequences will not result. LO 13.2 Freud’s historical views of personality
  • 13. Copyright ©2012 by Pearson Education, Inc. All rights reserved. Psychology, Third Edition Saundra K. Ciccarelli • J. Noland White Freud’s Theory: Parts of Personality • Superego - part of the personality that acts as a moral center. – Ego ideal - part of the superego that contains the standards for moral behavior. – Conscience - part of the superego that produces pride or guilt, depending on how well behavior matches or does not match the ego ideal. LO 13.2 Freud’s historical views of personality
  • 14. Copyright ©2012 by Pearson Education, Inc. All rights reserved. Psychology, Third Edition Saundra K. Ciccarelli • J. Noland White Defense Mechanisms • Psychological defense mechanisms - unconscious distortions of a person’s perception of reality that reduce stress and anxiety. • Denial - psychological defense mechanism in which the person refuses to acknowledge or recognize a threatening situation. LO 13.2 Freud’s historical views of personality
  • 15. Copyright ©2012 by Pearson Education, Inc. All rights reserved. Psychology, Third Edition Saundra K. Ciccarelli • J. Noland White Defense Mechanisms • Repression - psychological defense mechanism in which the person refuses to consciously remember a threatening or unacceptable event, instead pushing those events into the unconscious mind. • Rationalization - psychological defense mechanism in which a person invents acceptable excuses for unacceptable behavior. LO 13.2 Freud’s historical views of personality
  • 16. Copyright ©2012 by Pearson Education, Inc. All rights reserved. Psychology, Third Edition Saundra K. Ciccarelli • J. Noland White Defense Mechanisms • Projection - psychological defense mechanism in which unacceptable or threatening impulses or feelings are seen as originating with someone else, usually the target of the impulses or feelings. LO 13.2 Freud’s historical views of personality
  • 17. Copyright ©2012 by Pearson Education, Inc. All rights reserved. Psychology, Third Edition Saundra K. Ciccarelli • J. Noland White Defense Mechanisms • Reaction formation - psychological defense mechanism in which a person forms an opposite emotional or behavioral reaction to the way he or she really feels to keep those true feelings hidden from self and others. • Displacement - redirecting feelings from a threatening target to a less threatening one. LO 13.2 Freud’s historical views of personality
  • 18. Copyright ©2012 by Pearson Education, Inc. All rights reserved. Psychology, Third Edition Saundra K. Ciccarelli • J. Noland White Defense Mechanisms • Regression - psychological defense mechanism in which a person falls back on childlike patterns of responding in reaction to stressful situations. • Identification - defense mechanism in which a person tries to become like someone else to deal with anxiety. LO 13.2 Freud’s historical views of personality
  • 19. Copyright ©2012 by Pearson Education, Inc. All rights reserved. Psychology, Third Edition Saundra K. Ciccarelli • J. Noland White Defense Mechanisms • Compensation (substitution) - defense mechanism in which a person makes up for inferiorities in one area by becoming superior in another area. • Sublimation - channeling socially unacceptable impulses and urges into socially acceptable behavior. LO 13.2 Freud’s historical views of personality
  • 20. Copyright ©2012 by Pearson Education, Inc. All rights reserved. Psychology, Third Edition Saundra K. Ciccarelli • J. Noland White Freud’s Theory: Stages of Personality Development • Fixation - disorder in which the person does not fully resolve the conflict in a particular psychosexual stage, resulting in personality traits and behavior associated with that earlier stage. • Psychosexual stages - five stages of personality development proposed by Freud and tied to the sexual development of the child. LO 13.2 Freud’s historical views of personality
  • 21. Copyright ©2012 by Pearson Education, Inc. All rights reserved. Psychology, Third Edition Saundra K. Ciccarelli • J. Noland White
  • 22. Copyright ©2012 by Pearson Education, Inc. All rights reserved. Psychology, Third Edition Saundra K. Ciccarelli • J. Noland White Freud’s Theory: Stages of Personality Development • Oral stage - first stage occurring in the first year of life in which the mouth is the erogenous zone and weaning is the primary conflict. Id dominated. LO 13.2 Freud’s historical views of personality
  • 23. Copyright ©2012 by Pearson Education, Inc. All rights reserved. Psychology, Third Edition Saundra K. Ciccarelli • J. Noland White Freud’s Theory: Stages of Personality Development • Anal stage - second stage occurring from about 1 to 3 years of age, in which the anus is the erogenous zone and toilet training is the source of conflict. Ego develops. – Anal expulsive personality - a person fixated in the anal stage who is messy, destructive, and hostile. LO 13.2 Freud’s historical views of personality
  • 24. Copyright ©2012 by Pearson Education, Inc. All rights reserved. Psychology, Third Edition Saundra K. Ciccarelli • J. Noland White Freud’s Theory: Stages of Personality Development • Anal stage - second stage occurring from about 1 to 3 years of age, in which the anus is the erogenous zone and toilet training is the source of conflict. Ego develops. – Anal retentive personality - a person fixated in the anal stage who is neat, fussy, stingy, and stubborn. LO 13.2 Freud’s historical views of personality
  • 25. Copyright ©2012 by Pearson Education, Inc. All rights reserved. Psychology, Third Edition Saundra K. Ciccarelli • J. Noland White Freud’s Theory: Stages of Personality Development • Phallic stage - third stage occurring from about 3 to 6 years of age, in which the child discovers sexual feelings. Superego develops. – Oedipus complex- situation occurring in the phallic stage in which a child develops a sexual attraction to the opposite-sex parent and jealousy of the same-sex parent. LO 13.2 Freud’s historical views of personality
  • 26. Copyright ©2012 by Pearson Education, Inc. All rights reserved. Psychology, Third Edition Saundra K. Ciccarelli • J. Noland White Freud’s Theory: Stages of Personality Development • Phallic stage - third stage occurring from about 3 to 6 years of age, in which the child discovers sexual feelings. Superego develops. – Identification - defense mechanism in which a person tries to become like someone else to deal with anxiety. LO 13.2 Freud’s historical views of personality
  • 27. Copyright ©2012 by Pearson Education, Inc. All rights reserved. Psychology, Third Edition Saundra K. Ciccarelli • J. Noland White Freud’s Theory: Stages of Personality Development • Latency - fourth stage occurring during the school years, in which the sexual feelings of the child are repressed while the child develops in other ways. • Genital – sexual feelings reawaken with appropriate targets. LO 13.2 Freud’s historical views of personality
  • 28. Copyright ©2012 by Pearson Education, Inc. All rights reserved. Psychology, Third Edition Saundra K. Ciccarelli • J. Noland White Freud’s Psychoanalysis • Psychoanalysis - Freud’s term for both the theory of personality and the therapy based on it. LO 13.2 Freud’s historical views of personality
  • 29. Copyright ©2012 by Pearson Education, Inc. All rights reserved. Psychology, Third Edition Saundra K. Ciccarelli • J. Noland White Neo-Freudians • Neo-Freudians - followers of Freud who developed their own competing theories of psychoanalysis. – Jung developed a theory of a collective unconscious. • Personal unconscious - Jung’s name for the unconscious mind as described by Freud. LO 13.3 Jung, Adler, Horney, and Erikson’s modifications
  • 30. Copyright ©2012 by Pearson Education, Inc. All rights reserved. Psychology, Third Edition Saundra K. Ciccarelli • J. Noland White Neo-Freudians • Collective unconscious – Jung’s name for the memories shared by all members of the human species. • Archetypes - Jung’s collective, universal human memories. LO 13.3 Jung, Adler, Horney, and Erikson’s modifications
  • 31. Copyright ©2012 by Pearson Education, Inc. All rights reserved. Psychology, Third Edition Saundra K. Ciccarelli • J. Noland White Neo-Freudians • Adler proposed feelings of inferiority as the driving force behind personality and developed birth order theory. LO 13.3 Jung, Adler, Horney, and Erikson’s modifications
  • 32. Copyright ©2012 by Pearson Education, Inc. All rights reserved. Psychology, Third Edition Saundra K. Ciccarelli • J. Noland White Neo-Freudians • Horney developed a theory based on basic anxiety and rejected the concept of penis envy. – Basic anxiety - anxiety created when a child is born into the bigger and more powerful world of older children and adults. – Neurotic personalities – maladaptive ways of dealing with relationships in Horney’s theory. LO 13.3 Jung, Adler, Horney, and Erikson’s modifications
  • 33. Copyright ©2012 by Pearson Education, Inc. All rights reserved. Psychology, Third Edition Saundra K. Ciccarelli • J. Noland White Neo-Freudians • Erikson developed a theory based on social rather than sexual relationships, covering the entire life span. LO 13.3 Jung, Adler, Horney, and Erikson’s modifications
  • 34. Copyright ©2012 by Pearson Education, Inc. All rights reserved. Psychology, Third Edition Saundra K. Ciccarelli • J. Noland White Modern Psychoanalytic Theory • Current research has found support for: – Defense mechanisms – Concept of an unconscious mind that can influence conscious behavior • Other concepts cannot be scientifically researched. LO 13.4 Modern psychoanalytic theory
  • 35. Copyright ©2012 by Pearson Education, Inc. All rights reserved. Psychology, Third Edition Saundra K. Ciccarelli • J. Noland White Behaviorism and Personality • Behaviorists define personality as a set of learned responses or habits. – Habits - in behaviorism, sets of well-learned responses that have become automatic. • Social cognitive learning theorists – theorists who emphasize the importance of both the influences of other people’s behavior and of a person’s own expectancies on learning. LO 13.5 Behavioral and social cognitive explanations of personality
  • 36. Copyright ©2012 by Pearson Education, Inc. All rights reserved. Psychology, Third Edition Saundra K. Ciccarelli • J. Noland White Behaviorism and Personality • Social cognitive view – learning theory that includes cognitive processes such as anticipating, judging, memory, and imitation of models. • Reciprocal determinism - Bandura’s explanation of how the factors of environment, personal characteristics, and behavior can interact to determine future behavior. LO 13.5 Behavioral and social cognitive explanations of personality
  • 37. Copyright ©2012 by Pearson Education, Inc. All rights reserved. Psychology, Third Edition Saundra K. Ciccarelli • J. Noland White Behaviorism and Personality • Self-efficacy – individual’s perception of how effective a behavior will be in any particular circumstance (NOT the same as self-esteem). LO 13.5 Behavioral and social cognitive explanations of personality
  • 38. Copyright ©2012 by Pearson Education, Inc. All rights reserved. Psychology, Third Edition Saundra K. Ciccarelli • J. Noland White Figure 13.2 Reciprocal Determinism In Bandura’s model of reciprocal determinism, three factors influence behavior: the environment, which consists of the physical surroundings and the potential for reinforcement; the person (personal/cognitive characteristics that have been rewarded in the past); and the behavior itself, which may or may not be reinforced at this particular time and place.
  • 39. Copyright ©2012 by Pearson Education, Inc. All rights reserved. Psychology, Third Edition Saundra K. Ciccarelli • J. Noland White Humanistic Theories of Personality • Humanistic perspective - the "third force" in psychology that focuses on those aspects of personality that make people uniquely human, such as subjective feelings and freedom of choice. • Developed as a reaction against the negativity of psychoanalysis and the deterministic nature of behaviorism. LO 13.6 How humanists explain personality
  • 40. Copyright ©2012 by Pearson Education, Inc. All rights reserved. Psychology, Third Edition Saundra K. Ciccarelli • J. Noland White Roger’s Theory of Personality • Self-actualizing tendency – the striving to fulfill one’s innate capacities and capabilities. • Self-concept - the image of oneself that develops from interactions with important, significant people in one’s life. • Self - archetype that works with the ego to manage other archetypes and balance the personality. LO 13.6 How humanists explain personality
  • 41. Copyright ©2012 by Pearson Education, Inc. All rights reserved. Psychology, Third Edition Saundra K. Ciccarelli • J. Noland White Roger’s Theory of Personality • Real self - one’s perception of actual characteristics, traits, and abilities. • Ideal self - one’s perception of whom one should be or would like to be. • Positive regard – warmth, affection, love, and respect that come from significant others in one’s life. LO 13.6 How humanists explain personality
  • 42. Copyright ©2012 by Pearson Education, Inc. All rights reserved. Psychology, Third Edition Saundra K. Ciccarelli • J. Noland White Figure 13.3 Real and Ideal Selves According to Rogers, the self-concept includes the real self and the ideal self. The real self is a person’s actual perception of traits and abilities, whereas the ideal self is the perception of what a person would like to be or thinks he or she should be. When the ideal self and the real self are very similar (matching), the person experiences harmony and contentment. When there is a mismatch between the two selves, the person experiences anxiety and may engage in neurotic behavior.
  • 43. Copyright ©2012 by Pearson Education, Inc. All rights reserved. Psychology, Third Edition Saundra K. Ciccarelli • J. Noland White Roger’s Theory of Personality • Unconditional positive regard - positive regard that is given without conditions or strings attached. • Conditional positive regard- positive regard that is given only when the person is doing what the providers of positive regard wish. LO 13.6 How humanists explain personality
  • 44. Copyright ©2012 by Pearson Education, Inc. All rights reserved. Psychology, Third Edition Saundra K. Ciccarelli • J. Noland White Roger’s Theory of Personality • Fully functioning person – a person who is in touch with and trusting of the deepest, innermost urges and feelings. LO 13.6 How humanists explain personality
  • 45. Copyright ©2012 by Pearson Education, Inc. All rights reserved. Psychology, Third Edition Saundra K. Ciccarelli • J. Noland White Trait Theories of Personality • Trait theories - theories that endeavor to describe the characteristics that make up human personality in an effort to predict future behavior. – Trait - a consistent, enduring way of thinking, feeling, or behaving. • Allport first developed a list of about 200 traits and believed that these traits were part of the nervous system. LO 13.7 Trait perspective
  • 46. Copyright ©2012 by Pearson Education, Inc. All rights reserved. Psychology, Third Edition Saundra K. Ciccarelli • J. Noland White Trait Theories of Personality • Cattell reduced the number of traits to between 16 and 23 with a computer method called factor analysis. • Surface traits - aspects of personality that can easily be seen by other people in the outward actions of a person. LO 13.7 Trait perspective
  • 47. Copyright ©2012 by Pearson Education, Inc. All rights reserved. Psychology, Third Edition Saundra K. Ciccarelli • J. Noland White Figure 13.4 Cattell’s Self-Report Inventory This is an example of personality profiles based on Cattell’s 16PF self-report inventory. The two groups represented are airline pilots and writers. Notice that airline pilots, when compared to writers, tend to be more conscientious, relaxed, selfassured, and far less sensitive. Writers, on the other hand, are more imaginative and better able to are think abstractly. Source: Cattell (1973).
  • 48. Copyright ©2012 by Pearson Education, Inc. All rights reserved. Psychology, Third Edition Saundra K. Ciccarelli • J. Noland White Trait Theories of Personality • Source traits - the more basic traits that underlie the surface traits, forming the core of personality. – Example: Introversion - dimension of personality in which people tend to withdraw from excessive stimulation. LO 13.7 Trait perspective
  • 49. Copyright ©2012 by Pearson Education, Inc. All rights reserved. Psychology, Third Edition Saundra K. Ciccarelli • J. Noland White The Big Five Theory • Five-factor model (Big Five) - model of personality traits that describes five basic trait dimensions. – Openness - one of the five factors; willingness to try new things and be open to new experiences. – Conscientiousness - the care a person gives to organization and thoughtfulness of others; dependability. LO 13.7 Trait perspective
  • 50. Copyright ©2012 by Pearson Education, Inc. All rights reserved. Psychology, Third Edition Saundra K. Ciccarelli • J. Noland White The Big Five Theory • Five-factor model (Big Five) - model of personality traits that describes five basic trait dimensions. – Extraversion - dimension of personality referring to one’s need to be with other people. LO 13.7 Trait perspective
  • 51. Copyright ©2012 by Pearson Education, Inc. All rights reserved. Psychology, Third Edition Saundra K. Ciccarelli • J. Noland White The Big Five Theory • Extraverts - people who are outgoing and sociable. • Introverts - people who prefer solitude and dislike being the center of attention. – Agreeableness - the emotional style of a person that may range from easygoing, friendly, and likeable to grumpy, crabby, and unpleasant. LO 13.7 Trait perspective
  • 52. Copyright ©2012 by Pearson Education, Inc. All rights reserved. Psychology, Third Edition Saundra K. Ciccarelli • J. Noland White The Big Five Theory • Introverts - people who prefer solitude and dislike being the center of attention. – Neuroticism - degree of emotional instability or stability. LO 13.7 Trait perspective
  • 53. Copyright ©2012 by Pearson Education, Inc. All rights reserved. Psychology, Third Edition Saundra K. Ciccarelli • J. Noland White
  • 54. Copyright ©2012 by Pearson Education, Inc. All rights reserved. Psychology, Third Edition Saundra K. Ciccarelli • J. Noland White Trait Theories Today • Cross-cultural research has found support for the five-factor model of personality traits in a number of different cultures. – Future research will explore the degree to which child-rearing practices and heredity may influence the five personality factors. LO 13.7 Trait perspective
  • 55. Copyright ©2012 by Pearson Education, Inc. All rights reserved. Psychology, Third Edition Saundra K. Ciccarelli • J. Noland White Trait Theories Today • Trait-situation interaction - the assumption that the particular circumstances of any given situation will influence the way in which a trait is expressed. LO 13.7 Trait perspective
  • 56. Copyright ©2012 by Pearson Education, Inc. All rights reserved. Psychology, Third Edition Saundra K. Ciccarelli • J. Noland White Biology and Personality • Behavior genetics - a field of study of the relationship between heredity and personality. – Twin and adoption studies have found support for a genetic influence on many personality traits. LO 13.8 Biology, heredity and cultural roles in personality
  • 57. Copyright ©2012 by Pearson Education, Inc. All rights reserved. Psychology, Third Edition Saundra K. Ciccarelli • J. Noland White Figure 13.5 Personalities of Identical and Fraternal Twins Identical and fraternal twins differ in the way they express the Big Five personality factors. The scores of identical twins have a correlation of about 50 percent, whereas those of fraternal twins have a correlation of only about 15 to 20 percent. These findings give support to the idea that some aspects of personality are genetically based. Source: Loehlin (1992)
  • 58. Copyright ©2012 by Pearson Education, Inc. All rights reserved. Psychology, Third Edition Saundra K. Ciccarelli • J. Noland White James Arthur Springer and James • Edward Lewis, otherwise known as the "Jim" twins. Although separated shortly after birth and reunited at age 39, they exhibited many similarities in personality and personal habits. LO 13.8 Biology, heredity and cultural roles in personality
  • 59. Copyright ©2012 by Pearson Education, Inc. All rights reserved. Psychology, Third Edition Saundra K. Ciccarelli • J. Noland White Cultural Personality • Four basic dimensions of personality along which cultures may vary: – individualism/collectivism – power distance – masculinity/femininity – uncertainty avoidance LO 13.8 Biology, heredity and cultural roles in personality
  • 60. Copyright ©2012 by Pearson Education, Inc. All rights reserved. Psychology, Third Edition Saundra K. Ciccarelli • J. Noland White Measuring Personality: Interviews • Interview - method of personality assessment in which the professional asks questions of the client and allows the client to answer, either in a structured or unstructured fashion. • Halo effect – tendency of an interviewer to allow positive characteristics of a client to influence the assessments of the client’s behavior and statements. LO 13.9 Advantages and disadvantages of various measure of personality
  • 61. Copyright ©2012 by Pearson Education, Inc. All rights reserved. Psychology, Third Edition Saundra K. Ciccarelli • J. Noland White Measuring Personality: Projective Tests • Projection - defense mechanism involving placing, or "projecting," one’s own unacceptable thoughts onto others, as if the thoughts actually belonged to those others and not to oneself. • Projective tests - personality assessments that present ambiguous visual stimuli to the client and ask the client to respond with whatever comes to mind. LO 13.9 Advantages and disadvantages of various measure of personality
  • 62. Copyright ©2012 by Pearson Education, Inc. All rights reserved. Psychology, Third Edition Saundra K. Ciccarelli • J. Noland White Measuring Personality: Projective Tests • Rorschach inkblot test - projective test that uses 10 inkblots as the ambiguous stimuli. • Thematic Apperception Test (TAT) - projective test that uses 20 pictures of people in ambiguous situations as the visual stimuli. LO 13.9 Advantages and disadvantages of various measure of personality
  • 63. Copyright ©2012 by Pearson Education, Inc. All rights reserved. Psychology, Third Edition Saundra K. Ciccarelli • J. Noland White Figure 13.6 Rorschach Inkblot Example A facsimile of a Rorschach inkblot. A person being tested is asked to tell the interviewer what he or she sees in an inkblot similar to the one shown. Answers are neither right nor wrong but may reveal unconscious concerns. What do you see in this inkblot?
  • 64. Copyright ©2012 by Pearson Education, Inc. All rights reserved. Psychology, Third Edition Saundra K. Ciccarelli • J. Noland White Figure 13.7 Thematic Apperception Test Example A sample from the Thematic Apperception Test (TAT). When you look at this picture, what story does it suggest to you? Who are the people? What is their relationship?
  • 65. Copyright ©2012 by Pearson Education, Inc. All rights reserved. Psychology, Third Edition Saundra K. Ciccarelli • J. Noland White Measuring Personality: Projective Tests • Subjective - concepts and impressions that are only valid within a particular person’s perception and may be influenced by biases, prejudice, and personal experiences. This is a problem with projective tests. LO 13.9 Advantages and disadvantages of various measure of personality
  • 66. Copyright ©2012 by Pearson Education, Inc. All rights reserved. Psychology, Third Edition Saundra K. Ciccarelli • J. Noland White Measuring Personality: Behavioral Measures • Direct observation - assessment in which the professional observes the client engaged in ordinary, day-to-day behavior in either a clinical or natural setting. • Rating scale- assessment in which a numerical value is assigned to specific behavior that is listed in the scale. LO 13.9 Advantages and disadvantages of various measure of personality
  • 67. Copyright ©2012 by Pearson Education, Inc. All rights reserved. Psychology, Third Edition Saundra K. Ciccarelli • J. Noland White Measuring Personality: Behavioral Measures • Frequency count - assessment in which the frequency of a particular behavior is counted. LO 13.9 Advantages and disadvantages of various measure of personality
  • 68. Copyright ©2012 by Pearson Education, Inc. All rights reserved. Psychology, Third Edition Saundra K. Ciccarelli • J. Noland White Measuring Personality: Personality Inventory • Personality inventory - paper and pencil or computerized test that consists of statements that require a specific, standardized response from the person taking the test. – NEO-PI - based on the five-factor model – Myers-Briggs Type Indicator - based on Jung’s theory of personality types. LO 13.9 Advantages and disadvantages of various measure of personality
  • 69. Copyright ©2012 by Pearson Education, Inc. All rights reserved. Psychology, Third Edition Saundra K. Ciccarelli • J. Noland White Measuring Personality: Personality Inventory • Personality inventory - paper and pencil or computerized test that consists of statements that require a specific, standardized response from the person taking the test. – MMPI-2 - designed to detect abnormal personality. LO 13.9 Advantages and disadvantages of various measure of personality
  • 70. Copyright ©2012 by Pearson Education, Inc. All rights reserved. Psychology, Third Edition Saundra K. Ciccarelli • J. Noland White Personality Tests and Internet • There are numerous personality tests available on the Internet. • Not all equal in quality, reliability, or validity. • Lack of professional interpretation of the results of such tests. LO 13.9 Advantages and disadvantages of various measure of personality
  • 71. Copyright ©2012 by Pearson Education, Inc. All rights reserved. Psychology, Third Edition Saundra K. Ciccarelli • J. Noland White