Title: Personality
1Biological Basis of Personality
2Which Theories?
- Eysenck
- Cloninger
- Zuckerman
- Gray
3Eysencks Model
- Biological basis - two neural systems
- Introversion/Extraversion differences are based
upon levels of activity of the cortico-reticular
loop - This includes the cerebral cortex, and the
ascending reticular activating system. - The reticular formation contains several
populations of neurons - Functions include arousal, attention, cardiac
reflexes, motor functions, regulates awareness
and sleep - Reticular formation is a group of nerve fibres
located inside the brainstem - Ascending reticular activating system is the
attention center in the brain - It is a complex collection of neurons which
receives information from neurons from the spinal
cord (the ascending sensory tracts) and runs into
the midbrain - It is involved in pain, eye movements and
alertness - It has connections to sensory, motor and
autonomic neurons
4Eysencks model Extraversion/Introversion
- Introverts have higher levels of activity than
extraverts and are therefore chronically over
aroused. - What would this mean in terms of behaviour?
5Eysencks modelNeuroticism
- Neuroticism is related to the activity of the
visceral brain / limbic system - Limbic system a system of functionally related
neural structures that are involved in emotional
behaviour - Incorporates the hippocampus, amygdala, singulum,
septum and hypothalamus - Regulates emotional states such as sex, fear and
aggression - Has interconnections to the cerebral cortex
- Activity of the visceral brain produces autonomic
arousal - Is responsible for the fight or flight response
in the face of danger
6Neuroticism
- High N scorers are more likely to become agitated
when faced with stressful situations - Those who score high on N are more likely than
low scorers to become autonomically aroused - Heart rate, blood pressure, skin conductance,
sweating, breathing rate are thought to be
indices of the activation levels of the limbic
system
7Eysencks summary
- Biological theory attractive in that it is
testable - However test situation!
- Individuals who are already high on arousal
(introverts) or autonomically aroused will react
to a situation differently - If a situation is particularly arousing or
stressful it can mediate the results
8Alternative to Eysencks
- Grays alternative model
- Behavioural inhibition system (BIS) links to
punishment sensitivity, anxiety high N, low E. - Activated by fear and novelty stimuli and signals
of punishment and non-reward - Functions to inhibit on-going behaviour and to
increase arousal and attention - BIS system is more easily activated in the
anxious individual - Anxiolytic drugs?
- Behavioural activation system (BAS) links to
reward sensitivity, impulsivity high N, high E,
high P - Sensitive to signals of reward and non-punishment
- Controls approach behaviour
- BAS system is more active in the impulsive
individual - Dopaminergic?
9Cloningers Three Dimensions
- Harm Avoidance, Reward Dependence and Novelty
Seeking - Biologically based
- Relate to monoamine system Serotonin,
noradrenaline and dopamine
10Zuckerman
- One of the leading figures in the biological
basis of personality - Criticises both Gray and Eysenck for assuming
isomorphism a one to one correspondence between
personality traits and brain systems - Suggests any personality trait may relate to more
than one brain system - A brain system may be related to more than one
personality trait
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12Theories and Evidence?
- So how do we test these theories
- How can we assess whether personality has a
biological basis?
13Assessments
- Genetics
- Twin studies
- Adoption studies
- Molecular Genetic Studies
- Animal studies
- Electrophysiological studies
- Neurochemistry studies
- Normal controls
- Patients populations
- Animal studies
14Genetic Determinants of Behaviour
- Behaviour in all organisms is shaped by the
interaction of genes and environment - The relative importance varies
- Traditionally divided into two categories
- Innate
- Learned
15Can Behaviours be inherited?
- Traditionally a resistance to the notion that
behaviour can be inherited in particular human
behaviour - Accept imprinting in chicks
- But mental disorder in humans?
- The expression of inherited factors almost always
depends on an interaction of genetic and
environmental factors - For instance you may have the genes for being
tall but have a poor diet
16Species Specific Behaviours
- Instinctive behaviours are now often called
species-specific behaviours - Animals may respond to a specific stimuli for
instance a sign stimulus or releaser. - Red belly of stickleback
- Fixed action patterns more complex than a
simple reflex
17Complex Behavioural Traits
- Personality
- Mental Disorders
- Obesity
- Evidence of hereditary
18Genes
19What is the Nature of Genes?
- Chromosomes
- threadlike genetic structures
- consist of matched strands of deoxyribonucleic
acid (DNA) found in the cell nucleus - they occur in matched pairs
- humans have 23 pairs in each of their body cells
- each strand of DNA consists of a sequence of four
nucleotide bases - adenine, thymine, guanine, and cytosine
- the two strands of DNA that form each chromosome
are coiled around each other in a double-helix
(spiral) pattern.
20Genetics
- Mendel (18221884)
- A monk from central Europe
- Studied Pea Plants
- Found that pea flowers occurred in offspring
without any intermediate colours - That is - no blending
- What controls this?
21Mendelian Genetics
- dominant gene
- recessive gene
- a gene being defined as the smallest discrete
unit that is inherited by offspring intact,
without being broken up or blended (Buss, 1999,
p. 10) - genotype
- the underlying genetic potential
- phenotype
- observable traits or characteristics.
22Sexual Reproduction
- Meiosis
- the chromosomes divide, with one chromosome of
each pair forming a separate gamete - sperm cell and an egg cell combine to form a
zygote - meiosis is very important, because it plays a
major role in human genetic diversity - Pinel (1997)
- human beings can produce gametes with 8,388,608
differing combinations of chromosomes. - Mitosis
- the number of chromosomes doubles
- followed by a division of the cell to create two
cells - involves re-creating huge numbers of copies of
the original zygote.
23Behavioural Genetics
- Genetic similarity between family members
- children share 50 of the genes of each parent
- siblings share 50 of their genes
- children share 25 of their grandparents genes
- first cousins share 12.5 of their genes
- monozygotic twins (identical twins) have the same
genetic make-up - dizygotic twins (fraternal twins) share 50 of
their genetic make-up.
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25Heritability
- The extent to which individual differences in a
given characteristic or trait are determined by
heredity. - It is NOT a measure of genetic determination
- Children who are severely malnourished may show
less heritability of IQ than others because
malnutrition or extreme deprivation can place
constraints on intellectual potential as assessed
by IQ tests and thus the potential impact of
hereditary differences. Westen (1996, p. 111).
26Twin Studies
- Twin studies allow study of the effects of
genes and environment - If MZ twins are more alike that DZ twins on a
personality trait, this suggests that the trait
has a genetic component - Two types of studies
- Twins raised together
- Twins raised apart
27Adoption Studies
- Children who dont share genes with parents or
siblings raised in common environment - Children who share genes but not environment with
biological parents - Examination of correlations gives indication of
relative contribution of genes, shared
environment and non-shared environment
28Evidence??
29Definitions
- Chromosomes
- threadlike genetic structures
- consist of matched strands of deoxyribonucleic
acid (DNA) found in the cell nucleus - Gene
- A segment of DNA found on a chromosome that codes
for a particular protein, a unit of heredity - Allele
- is a form of a gene.
30Twin Studies
- Twin studies give personality questionnaires or
assess personality in MZ and DZ twins - Examine the twin pair correlation for different
personality traits - If personality could be measured without error
and the genetic contribution was 100 percent -
What would you expect the correlation to be for - MZ twin pairs
- DZ twin pairs
31Contributions to personality differences
- Genetic single gene or polygenetic?
- Environmental
- Shared or common environmental factor
- Unshared environmental factor
32Some studies
- Pedersen, Plomin, McClearn, and Friberg 1988
- Assessed Extraversion and Neuroticism
- 95 MZ twin pairs reared apart
- 150 MZ twin pairs reared together
- 220 DZ twin pairs reared apart
- 204 DZ twin pairs reared together
33Evidence for Extraversion and Neuroticism
- extraversion
- MZ twins brought up together 0.54
- DZ twins brought up together 0.06
- MZ twins brought up apart 0.3
- DZ twins brought up apart 0.04
- neuroticism
- MZ twins brought up together 0.41
- DZ twins brought together 0.24
- MZ twins brought up apart 0.24
- DZ twins brought up apart 0.28
34Non-additive Genetic Variance
- Additive genetic assumption - There is a linear
increase in trait similarity as the proportion of
genes shared increases - HOWEVER this may not be true
- Possible explanations
- Genetic Dominance
- MZ will share 100 of the gene dominance effects
- DZ only 25 not 50
- Epistasis
- the interaction between two or more genes to
control a single phenotype - MZ genes will be identical but DZ twins unlikely
to share many of the possible multigene
configurations - Therefore likely that MZ twins will be more than
twice as similar than DZ twins
35Epistasis
RRpp X rrPP RrPP RrPp Rrpp
rrPp rrPP
36Rose
Pea
Parents
Offspring
Single
Walnut
37Shared environment is it really shared?
- Why may the assumption that those who grow up in
the same household have similar shared
environments be flawed?
38Shared Environment
- Identical twins may have more similar
environments eg similar clothes - Other points
- Those with a more similar personality/temperament
may be treated more similarly - Those who look more alike may be treated more
similarly - Does similar treatment in childhood relate to
adult personality scores?
39Genes and the Environment
- Genotype-environment interaction
- Genotype-environment correlation
- Effects which look like nonshared environment may
well be active G-E correlation in this view MZ
twins reared apart acquire similar personalities
because they select similar environments. - Assessing nonshared environment and G-E
correlations are major challenges. Environments
are hard to measure. Existing measures are often
retrospective and subjective, and may well
measure genetic effects.
40Summary of results from twin and adoption studies
- All personality traits show some degree of
heritability (approx 40). - Shared environment effects are small/zero
especially in adulthood. - Non-shared environmental effects are large.
- Evidence for non-additive genetic effects due
to configurations of multiple genes acting
together. - Findings are similar for self- and peer-reports.
41Molecular Genetics
- A polymorphism is a genetic variant that appears
in at least 1 of a population. - Phenotypic characteristics can be associated with
a specific variation at a specific site on a
given chromosome - The variation is called a polymorphism
- Examples
- the human ABO blood groups
- the human Rhesus factor
42Psychiatric Diseases
- Schizophrenia
- Depression
- Bi-polar illness
- Autistic Spectrum Disorders
- All show some evidence but these disorders do not
have clear phenotypic characteristics
43Two main approaches
- Find a candidate gene and compute an association
between that loci and the characteristic - Family studies may help
- Conduct a genome sweep
- Very labour intensive
44Alleles
- An allele is a form of a gene.
- Alleles are located at the same position (locus)
on homologous chromosomes and are separated from
each other during meiosis. - We always have two alleles for every trait (even
if the trait is expressed by multiple alleles - We get one allele from our mother and one from
our father.
45Papers
- Ebstein, R. P., Novick, O., Umansky, R., et al
(1996) Dopamine D4 receptor (D4DR) exon III
polymorphism associated with the human
personality trait of novelty seeking. Nature
Genetics, 12, 78-80. - Benjamin, J., Li, L., Patterson, C., et al (1996)
Population and familial association between the
D4 dopamine receptor gene and measures of novelty
seeking. Nature Genetics, 12, 81-84. - Lesch, K.-P., Bengel, D., Heils, A., et al (1996)
Association of anxiety-related traits with a
polymorphism in the serotonin transporter gene
regulatory region. Science, 274, 1527-1531.
46Consistency
- However, these associations are prone to false
positives - Need replication
- Also look to the body of evidence -
psychopharmacology
47Psychophysiology
- Link personality traits to neural systems
- Brain structures
- Neurotransmitters
- Hormones
- Behavioural functions of key systems
48Extraversion and Psychophysiology
- Psychophysiological measures
- EEG. Technique of recording the electrical
activity of the brain through the skull - ERP Brain response linked to an event.
- Skin conductance indicator of autonomic activity
of arousal. - Heart rate, and increase in response to stress
linked to Anxiety. - Brain imaging
49Theory - EEG
- Eysenck proposed that introversion/extraversion
differences are based on levels of activity of
the cortico-reticular loop - Introverts have higher levels of activity than
extraverts - EEG is one method by which this can be tested
50Interpretation of EEG
- EEG reading involves the interpretation of wave
forms - Frequency
- Morphology
- EEG can be split into different frequency bands.
The most commonly used in EEG spectral analysis
these - Delta 0.53 - 4.22 Hz
- Theta 4.4 - 7.9 Hz
- Alpha 8.1 - 13.01 Hz
- Beta1 13.2 - 17.9 Hz
- Beta2 18.1 - 29.9 Hz
51Expectation - EEG
- What do we expect?
- Theory states that Introverts have higher levels
of activity than extraverts - So from the theory what differences would you
expect?
52Evidence - EEG
- Weak positive correlations between Extraversion
and slow-wave activity - At moderate arousal levels introverts exhibit
faster wave activity than extraverts
53Issues with Arousal and Personality
- The level of arousal of the testing situation is
crucial - Introverts and extraverts may react differently
- Need to test across different environments
- Has great face validity but results are weak and
at times difficult to interpret
54Neurotransmitters and personality
- Dopamine and Extraversion (Depue et al)
- Dopamine and Novelty Seeking Cloninger
- Neuroticism and Serotonin
- Neuroticism and mood
- Neuroticism and depression
- SSRIs and personality
- - personality as a predictor of treatment
- - antidepressants in healthy volunteers
- Serotonin and other Traits
55Neurochemistry, personality and animal behaviour
- Researchers have attempted to find correlates of
human behaviour in animal behaviour - What aspects of human behaviour do you think
could be paralleled in animal behaviour? - What are the problems?
56Extraversion and Novelty Seeking
- Cloninger proposes that Novelty Seeking is the
heritable tendency toward intense exhilaration - The individual will explore actively in pursuit
of potential rewards - Will actively avoid monotonous behaviour or
punishment - Extraversion also avoid monotonous tasks and
are sensitive to signals of reward - Depue and Collins (1999) characterise
Extraversion as having two central
characteristics - Interpersonal engagement
- Impulsivity
57Extraversion, Novelty Seeking and Dopamine
- Cloninger (1987) proposed that dopamine is the
major neuromodulator of Novelty Seeking - From dopamines role in exploratory behaviour in
animals - Role in stimulation of euphoria in humans
- A similar argument would be equally justified for
Extraversion
58Extraversion, Novelty Seeking and Dopamine II
- Research in this area has been based on reward
mechanisms and has stemmed from animal research. - Typically this involves assessing the
self-administration of drugs during different
circumstances.
59Open field maze
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62Summary of Evidence for Biological Basis of
Extraversion
- Electrophysiological
- Small effects
- Interaction between traits and testing
environment - Neurochemical
- To date have relied too heavily on work with
animals - Need more work on humans
- Genetic
- Twin studies have identified a genetic component
- Molecular genetic techniques have suggested
various alleles however there needs to be
replication and consistency
63PERSONALITY ASSESSMENT
64What do you know so far?
65Personality Tests
- Four main measures
- questionnaires
- Ratings of behaviour
- objective tests
- projective tests
66Questionnaires
- Self-report questionnaires.
- Limitations
- social desirability bias.
- aquiescence
- Personality tests
- Cattells 16PF
- Eysencks EPQ.
67Questionnaires II
- Criterion-keying approach
- the criterion method of test construction.
Items are administered to subjects and selected
if they can discriminate a criterion group eg
anxious group versus non-anxious group
68Advantages of Questionnaires
- Reliability internal consistency and
test-retest reliability - Validity
- Ease of use
- Standardisation
69Ratings
- Observers provide information about other
peoples behaviour. - Rate different types of behaviours.
- Raters can be trained and assess over long
periods of time - However, ratings usually take place over short
time, and in one or two situations - What might be the problem with this approach?
70Objective Tests
- Assess behaviour typically in a laboratory.
- Example
- ask participant to blow up a balloon until it
bursts as a measure of timidity - the extent to which people sway when standing on
tiptoe as a measure of anxiety. - Reaction of autonomic nervous system to stimuli
- Free from deliberate distortion.
- However, it is difficult to design suitable
objective tests for personality that are reliable
and valid. - Objective tests are often used in ability testing
71Projective Tests
- Participants are given an unstructured task to
perform - devising a story to fit a picture
- describing what can be seen in an ink blot.
- Rorschach Inkblot Test.
- The Thematic Apperception Test
72Projective Tests
- Richness of data
- Uniqueness
- Theory? individuals project their inner
conflicts and anxieties on to the stimuli - However this is not psychoanalytical projection
- Difficult to interpret
- Difficult to replicate
- Responses may be affected by the context
- Valid?
73A Stimulus from the Rorschach Inkblot Test
74Holtzman Inkblot Test
- Subjects choose a response to each card
- More standardised approach
- Scoring is more reliable
- There is a parallel form can achieve a test
retest coefficient - Valid?
75Thematic Apperception Test
- Murray (1938)
- Cards which portray people in ambiguous
situations - Expressions and feelings of people are also
ambiguous - Stimulate stories or descriptions about
relationships or social situations - Motivations, drives, conflicts
76Repertory Grid Technique
- Element - an individual within their life eg
brother, mother, partner - Psychological way in which elements differ from
each other not physical features or background - How are each of the elements construed? rate
the elements on a five point scale
77Example of a repertory grid
Father Mother Self
Mean 1 4 5 Generous
Happy 4 5 1 Miserable
Lively 5 4 2 Quiet
78The analysis of repertory grids
- Possibilities are endless
- Eyeballing give a general picture
- Most analysis
- Patterns of similarities between the constructs
- Similarities between the elements
79Questions?
- Model is very descriptive
- Difficult to test how can we assess whether or
not individuals are forming constructs - How can we make sense of someone elses
constructs? - What do they mean?
80Q-Sort
- Can be used to assess the self concept, the
impact of person-centred therapy, explore a
particular issue. - The items or statements can be made up by a
sensitive clinician, they can be from a standard
personality questionnaire but the tendency is to
use a standard set of items (the California
Q-set) to cover most of the standard feelings
about the self. - Items are self-referent statements e.g I usually
like people, I dont trust my emotions, I am
afraid of what other people may think of me.
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