Walter Mischel - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 15
About This Presentation
Title:

Walter Mischel

Description:

Studied clinical psychology at City College ... Allport regarded traits as 'heuristically' real. ... Allport divided traits into cardinal, central, peripheral. ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:2303
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 16
Provided by: drrichar4
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: Walter Mischel


1
Walter Mischel
  • Born in 1930 in Vienna, fled Nazis with family
    in 1938, came to NYC. Studied clinical
    psychology at City College of New York, worked as
    social worker, completed doctoral work at Ohio
    State in 1935. Influenced by Kelly, Julian
    Rotter. Taught at Stanford from 1962 - 1983,
    moved to Columbia, where he still is.

2
Issues Two questions
  • Are traits real? Allport regarded traits as
    heuristically real. They are perhaps not the
    real organizational properties of personality,
    but they do illuminate perspectives and make it
    possible to observe important relationships we
    could not observe without using them. Allport
    divided traits into cardinal, central,
    peripheral. (Say a bit about Cattells surface
    and source traits 16-PF. Eysenck reduced to
    three (introversion - extraversion neuroticism
    - emotionally stable psychoticism - superego
    big five added conscientiousness, openness,
    agreeableness dropped psychoticism)

3
  • Are they useful (for prediction, selection,
    etc.)?

4
Mischels Personality and Assessment (1968)
  • 1. Traits usually lack the consistency and
    cross-situational generality that is assumed by
    the trait name. Examples
  • Hartshorne Mays Studies of Deceit
    found correlations between honest behaviors of
    pre-teens to be .2 to .3.
  • Dudycha (1963) found that college
    students punctuality correlations from one
    situation to another correlated on average .19.
  • 2. There is low agreement in trait ratings of
    individuals (a) as described by multiple raters,
    (b) as determined by different methods
    (self-ratings, observer ratings, experimental
    tests). So even if traits are real, how can they
    be assessed accurately?
  • 3. The correlation between any general trait
    measure and specific behavior rarely exceeds .3
    (9 of the variance). Such low correlations have
    little predictive usefulness.
  • 4. Specific behaviors can best be predicted by
    other methods.

5
Responses to Mischel
  • A. Aggregation
  • 1. Reanalysis of Hartshorne and May. When
    Hartshorne and May combined several tests of
    honesty into a single score, the reliability
    coefficient increased to .73. Burton (1963)
    found that a general factor of honesty accounted
    for 50 of the variance.
  • Just as one test is an insufficient and
    unreliable measure in the case of intelligence,
    so one test of deception is quite incapable of
    measuring a subjects tendency to deceive. That
    is, we cannot predict from what a pupil does on
    one test what he will do on another. If we use
    ten tests of classroom deception, we can safely
    predict what a subject will do on the average
    whenever ten similar situations are presented.
    (H M, 1928, p. 135)

6
Epsteins four studies
  • A. Stability of self-recorded data. One month,
    students recorded daily 60 positive and negative
    emotions, behavior, impulses. Correlated
    successive days and all odd-even days. Exemplary
    results
  • All Successive
  • Emotion Happy .92 -.03
  • Tense .77 .26
  • Impulse Affiliation .68 .36
  • Achievement .58 .10
  • Mental Escape .68 -.06
  • Behavior Nurturance .95 .06
  • Pleasure .89 -.28
  • Mean .76 .19
  • B. Ratings by others over a month of the same
    dispositions produced similar results.
  • C. Directly observed behavior. Recorded daily
    tallies of social telephone calls, letters
    written, forgetting instructions (to bring a
    pencil), errors and omissions on instruction
    sheets, erasures, etc.
  • Erasures .60 .10
  • Entertainment .70 -.11
  • Phone calls .91 .43
  • Lateness .94 .53

7
Diener Larsen (1984)
  • Showed that activity level on one day correlated
    just .08 with activity level on another.
  • But the average across two three-week periods
    correlated .66.

8
Weigell Newmann (1976)
  • Showed same principle extends to attitudes.
    Students given measurement of attitudes toward
    environmentalism. Over next 8 months,
    unrelated persons offered them 14 opportunities
    to participate in environmental causes (petition
    drive, help with recycling program. Average r
    with single acts was .24 with the sum of 14 acts
    was .62.

9
Traits Predict Single Act Well --
  • When situational pressures are weak!

10
Monson (1982)
  • Study 1 Waiting room behavior in
    forced-extroversion, forced-introversion, and
    neutral conditions (created by double-blind
    stooge). Correlations between extroversion and
    extraverted behavior
  • Forced Introversion .36
  • Neutral .63
  • Forced extroversion .25

11
Monson, cont.
  • Study 2 Students given a choice of 5-page paper
    or giving a talk in front of the class. Pressure
    to do one or the other was varied. Correlations
    of choosing speech with extroversion
  • Strong pressure for speech .41
  • Moderate pressure for speech .45
  • No pressure for either .52
  • Moderate pressure for paper .49
  • Strong pressure for paper .09
  • Similar pattern on three other behaviors.

12
Gormley (1983)
  • Gave persons a free choice of how to become
    acquainted with others Interact, watch a
    videotape of them. Extroversion correlated .53
    with choosing to interact.
  • Gave persons a free choice of Performing
    physical tasks, like lifting and moving objects
    vs. fine motor tasks like tracing patterns,
    sorting nuts and bolts. A trait measure of
    energetic correlated .62 with choosing the
    first task.

13
Conclusion
  • Moral When people are free to select situations
    and behaviors without external pressures,
    personality traits can be quite predictive when
    situtational pressures are strong, traits are far
    less predictive of behavior.

14
Mischels Enduring Characteristics (Alternative
to traits)
  • a. Encodings -- constructs of self, people,
    events, situations
  • b. Expectancies and beliefs -- concerning outcome
    of behavior, meaning of stimuli in a particular
    situation, confidence of ability in a particular
    situation.
  • c. Competencies -- what one knows and can do.
  • d. Goals and values -- both positive and negative
    outcomes, affective states, life projects.
  • e. Self-regulatory plans -- like Banduras
    self-efficacies.

15
Mischels current view
  • Habitual cognitive interpretation of
    environmental events is the most central feature
    of personality to Mischel. People have an
    impressive ability to discriminate between
    situations. Idiosyncratic social learning
    histories produce idiosyncratic stimulus
    meanings. Personality must account for the
    variation in behavior (e.g. aggressiveness,
    extroversion) across situations as well as the
    central tendency. Most traits (e.g.
    aggressiveness, extroversion) are manifest in
    particular situations. An if ... then
    analysis of situation-behavior patterns, and thus
    of personality.
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com