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Title: Personality 2


1
Personality 2
2
Prefinal Grades
  • check the web to verify your grades were
    registered accurately
  • Remember the research participation requirement
  • must be completed by April 16
  • all or none
  • Dont ask me about your credits
  • Check the web
  • http//psyclone.psych.uwo.ca/intropsy/
  • Contact Helen Harris about any issues
  • hmharris_at_uwo.ca
  • Contact Jon Cant to do alternative credit
    assignments (journal article QA)
  • jcant_at_uwo.ca

3
Three Minute Review
  • SIGMUND FREUD
  • defense mechanisms
  • denial
  • repression
  • reaction formation
  • projection
  • displacement
  • rationalization
  • conversion
  • psychopathology of everyday life
  • Freudian slips
  • suppressed intentions
  • dreams

4
  • psychosexual stages of development
  • oral
  • oral fixation
  • anal
  • anal expressive
  • anal retentive
  • phallic
  • Oedipus complex
  • Electra complex
  • penis envy
  • latent
  • genital
  • Neo-Freudians
  • Carl Jung
  • collective unconscious
  • archetypes (e.g., God, mother, earth, birth,
    gender)
  • criticisms of Freudian theory

5
  • PERSONALITY
  • distinctive patterns of behavior that
    characterize an individual
  • Barnum effect
  • watch out for generalities, even if they are
    accurate
  • Trait theories
  • assume that traits are consistent over situations
    and time
  • Non-psychological
  • Hippocrates four humors (5th century B.C.)
  • personality due to overabundance of one of the
    four humors
  • sanguine vs. melancholic (optimistic vs.
    pessimistic), phlegmatic vs. choleric (mellow vs.
    angry)
  • Astrology
  • Psychological
  • Sheldons body types
  • personality related to physique
  • ectomorph, mesomorph, endomorph

6
  • Stress reactivity
  • Type A driven, urgent, angry
  • Type B laid-back
  • Type C bottled-up
  • Optimists are healthier
  • Sensation Seekers
  • Factor Analytic Techniques
  • Cattells 16 Trait Model
  • Eysencks 3 Factors
  • Extroversion (vs. Introversion)
  • Neuroticism (vs. stability)
  • Psychoticism (vs. non-psychoticism)
  • The Big 5
  • Openness
  • Conscientiousness
  • Extroversion
  • Agreeableness
  • Neuroticism

7
Test Yourself
  • A man who sometimes has homosexual fantasies
    makes many derogatory comments about gay men and
    frequently tells homophobic jokes. Freud would
    say this is an instance of
  • denial
  • repression
  • reaction formation
  • projection
  • conversion

8
7 14 21 28 35 42 - Up
  • Give me a child until he is seven and I will
    show you the man.
  • -- Jesuit maxim
  • Documentary series (Michael Apted)
  • follows British children through interviews at
    ages 7, 14, 21, 28, 35, 42 (1998)
  • peoples personalities are quite consistent

9
Does the situation matter?
  • Trait theories assume that traits are consistent
    over situations and time -- but are they really?
  • Experiment (Hartshorne May, 1928)
  • Are children who are dishonest in one situation
    dishonest in others?
  • Not necessarily. Children who cheat in one
    situation (e.g., class test) may not cheat in
    another (e.g., athletic competition)
  • Average correlation .30
  • Do personality psychologists make the Fundamental
    Attribution Error ?!
  • personality situation

10
Situationism
  • Situationism
  • theory that situation personality
  • Consistency over time may be better than
    originally thought
  • If experiments take multiple measures within each
    of several situations, responses across
    situations are well-correlated (.80)
  • If we know how someone behaved for a single
    hour, we have little basis for predicting how he
    will behave during any other hour. But if we
    know how someone behaved for a whole week, then
    we can, with reasonable accuracy, predict what
    hell do in a subsequent week. -- Gleitman, 1999
  • Interactionism
  • theory that situation x personality determines
    behavior

11
Is Consistency a Trait?
  • Self monitoring (Snyder, 1974)
  • Gray, p. 544
  • High self-monitors
  • people who modify their behavior based on the
    situation
  • Low self-monitors
  • people who behave in a consistent manner
    regardless of the situation

12
Effects of Age
  • For most of us, by age 30, the character has set
    in plaster and will never soften again.
  • -- William James, 1890
  • As people age between the teens and age 30, they
    become
  • less neurotic
  • less extroverted
  • less open to experience
  • more conscientious
  • more agreeable
  • After age 30, people are more consistent

13
Where Do Traits Come From?
  • The usual nature/nurture debate
  • Genes
  • dog breeds have very different personalities
  • no people breeders but can genetics account for
    personality traits?
  • twin studies
  • Environment
  • effects of birth order

14
Twins
  • Case study
  • two identical twins separated at 4 weeks of age
  • coincidentally, both named Jim by their adoptive
    families
  • met in adulthood
  • were the inspiration for the Minnesota Study of
    Twins Reared Apart
  • both clerical workers
  • both enjoyed woodworking
  • both volunteered for police agencies
  • both liked vacationing in Florida
  • both had married and divorced women named Linda
  • both owned dogs named Toy
  • both drove Chevrolets
  • both liked math and hated spelling
  • both had migraines and shared identical pulse
    rates and blood pressure
  • both gained weight at same time
  • both had built benches around trees in yard

15
Twin Studies
  • Identical twins are much more alike on Big Five
    than are fraternal twins

16
Birth Order
  • Firstborns
  • more conscientious, extroverted neurotic
  • less agreeable and open to experience
  • assertive, dominant, responsible,
    achievement-oriented, anxious, jealous
  • Later-borns
  • more prone to rebellion, more liberal
  • more open to novelty, new ideas
  • Middle-borns
  • less connected to family than others

(Frank Sulloway)
17
Temperaments
  • biologically-based tendencies to feel or act in
    certain ways
  • broader than traits

18
Extroverts vs. Introverts
QUALITY OF PERFORMANCE
Low
Medium
High
LEVEL OF AROUSAL
(Hans Eysenck, 1967)
19
Brain basis?
  • Introverts (vs. Extroverts)
  • respond more strongly to stimuli
  • more sensitive to pain of electric shocks
  • salivate more when tasting lemon juice
  • show more arousal to a sudden noise
  • perform worse in noisy settings
  • are impaired by caffeine (vs. extroverts who are
    enhanced)
  • have more activation in frontal lobes (inhibition
    of impulses?) and amygdala (emotional responses)

20
Shyness
  • chronically shy people 40 of population
  • suffer impairments in pursuing life goals, making
    friends or entering relationships
  • low self esteem, blame selves for failures,
    pessimistic
  • strong evidence for heritability
  • evidence of inhibition (aversion to new
    situations) at 2 mos. predicts shyness in teen
    years
  • temperament at age 3 predicts psychopathy,
    criminality, alcoholism, and depression
  • shy children are more reactive to stress
  • ¼ of shy children are not shy adults
  • supportive environment?
  • much cultural variability (many shy Japanese, few
    shy Israelis)
  • drug treatment (SSRIs) and cognitive behavioral
    therapies seem to help

21
Is there a Woody Allen Gene?
  • genes for dopamine receptors may be related to
    sensation-seeking (controversial)
  • neuroticism may be related to genes for serotonin
    and GABA
  • a genetic impairment of GABA receptors in mice
    led them to avoid threats (unfamiliar, elevated
    or brightly lit areas) and to treat ambiguous
    cues as threats
  • there even relationships between genes and TV
    watching, getting divorced, feelings about
    capital punishment and appreciation of jazz music

22
Investment Strategies
Nortel
Air Canada
Canadian stocks
bonds
Martha Stewart Inc.
tech stocks
global stocks
Smart Strategy Diversified Portfolio
Dumb Strategy Single Investment
23
Evolutionary Explanations for Trait Variability
  • Why is there so much variability in traits and
    temperaments?
  • groups with high variability are more adaptable
  • Example Sensation-seeking
  • different individuals, different niches
  • would you want an unconscientious extrovert as
    your accountant?
  • would a disagreeable, neurotic introvert succeed
    as a car salesman?

24
Theories of Personality
  • Psychodynamic theories (Freud and others)
  • personality arises from unconscious drives and
    early experiences
  • sex aggression
  • id, ego, superego
  • defense mechanisms
  • early experiences
  • Behaviorist theories (Skinner and others)
  • personality arises from reinforcement history
  • Social-Cognitive theories (Bandura and others)
  • personality is determined by both the
    consequences of our behavior and our perception
    of them
  • Humanistic theories (Maslow, Rogers and others)
  • humans have a drive toward self-improvement that
    affects personality

25
Social-Cognitive Theories
  • personality is determined by both the
    consequences of our behavior and our perception
    of them

26
Locus of Control
  • internal locus of control
  • attribute outcomes to their own behavior
  • external locus of control
  • attribute outcomes to external factors
  • relative to externals, internals
  • get better grades
  • are more likely to suceed
  • are more likely to engage in healthy activities
    (exercising, eating well, wearing seatbelts, not
    smoking)
  • are more likely to deal with problems
  • are less likely to become depressed

27
Humanistic Theories
  • 1950s backlash against behaviorism and
    psychodynamic theories which were considered
    dehumanizing
  • Freudians see people as conflict-ridden
    emotional cripples
  • Skinnerians put too much emphasis on animal
    research and see people as dumb animals or
    unthinking automatons
  • Trait theorists see people as no more than grab
    bags of descriptors to file in sterile pigeon
    holes (quotes from Gleitman)
  • emphasizes the unique qualities of humans,
    especially their free will and their potential
    for personal growth
  • positive, optimistic view of human nature

28
Maslows Hierarchy of Needs
Abraham Maslow 1908 - 1970
  • Once basic needs have been satisfied, people seek
    psychological needs and growth

29
Self-actualization
  • finding and fulfilling ones potential
  • Maslow evaluated people who he considered to be
    the most fulfilled
  • A self-actualized person (partial list)
  • perceives reality accurately
  • is spontaneous and natural
  • has a sense of humor
  • is capable of childlike delight at the ordinary
  • needs privacy, but feels connected to others
  • has a few good friends
  • is autonomous and independent in thought and
    action
  • knows right from wrong
  • is absorbed in a cause (and perhaps a different
    one tomorrow)
  • has mystical experiences and seeks peak
    experiences

Im quite fulfilled. I always wanted to be a
chicken.
30
Carl Rogers
  • applied humanistic principles to psychotherapy
  • personality depends on self-concept
  • self-concept may not be consistent with actual
    experiences
  • incongruence undermines personal well-being
  • unconditional love fosters congruence
  • people go to great lengths to protect self-concept

Carl Rogers 1902 - 1987
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