PSY 150 403 Chapter 12 SLIDES

K
Chapter 12

Personality

PowerPoint®
Presentation
by Jim Foley
Overview: Ways of Looking at the Self
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Freudian/Psychodynamic views: the Unconscious parts of the self
Humanistic view of the Self-Actualizing Person
Examining Traits, including the Big Five Factors/Dimensions
Social and Cognitive Influences on Personality
Self-Esteem and Self-Serving Bias

These different perspectives and concepts
can help us examine:
 What we have in common: personality
components, basic drives, stages of
development, categories of traits
 Ways in which we differ: individual paths
through stages, ways of managing basic
drives and needs, levels of Trait
dimensions
Psychodynamic Theories of Personality
Bringing out the Unconscious Part of Your Personality
 Freud and the Psychoanalytic on:
 Personality Structure: id, ego,
superego
 Personality Development:
Psychosexual Stages
 Defense Mechanisms
 The Neo-Freudian, Psychodynamic
theorists: from sexual to social issues
 Assessing Unconscious Processes:
Projective Tests.
 Modern ideas about the unconscious
and other Freudian concepts
Personality: An individual’s characteristic
patterns of thoughts, feelings, and behaviors
[persisting over time and across situations]
Agreeable, Open
Introverted

Naïve

Sensitive,
Reactive

Contentedly
lethargic

Neurotically Conscientious
irritable
Psychodynamic/Psychoanalytic Theories
 These theories of human
personality focus on the inner
forces that interact to make us
who we are.
 In this view: behavior, as well as
human emotions and
personality, develop in a
dynamic (interacting, changing)
interplay between conscious and
unconscious processes, including
various motives and inner
conflicts.
Freud’s Path to Developing Psychonalysis
 Sigmund Freud started his career as a physician.
 He decided to explore how mental and physical
symptoms could be caused by purely
psychological factors.
 He became aware that many powerful mental
processes operate in the unconscious, without
our awareness.
 This insight grew into a theory of the structure
of human personality and its development.
 His name for his theory and his therapeutic
technique: psychoanalysis.
Psychoanalysis: Techniques
Techniques for revealing
the unconscious mind:
 He used creative
techniques such as free
association: encourage
the patient to speak
whatever comes to mind,
 The therapist then
interprets any potential
unconscious wishes
hidden in the client’s
hesitations, slips of the
tongue, and dreams.
Freud’s Personality/Mind Iceberg
The mind is mostly below the
surface of conscious
awareness
Personality develops
from the efforts of our
ego, our rational self, to
resolve tension between
our id, based in biological
drives, and the superego,
society’s rules and
constraints.

The Unconscious, in Freud’s
view: A reservoir of
thoughts, wishes, feelings, and
memories, that are hidden
from awareness because they
feel unacceptable.
The Developing
Personality
We start life with
a personality
made up of the
id, striving
impulsively to
meet basic
needs, living by
“the pleasure
principle.”

In a toddler, an
ego develops, a
self that has
thoughts,
judgments, and
memories
following a
“reality principle”

The ego works as the “executive”
of this three-part system, to
manage bodily needs and wishes in
a socially acceptable way.

Around age 4 or 5,
the child develops
the superego, a
conscience internalized from parents
and society,
following a
“morality principle.”
Freud’s Theory of Psychosexual Stages
 The id is focused on the
needs of erogenous zones,
sensitive areas of the body.
 People feel shame about
these needs and can get
fixated at one stage, never
resolve how to manage the
needs of that zone’s needs.
Male Development Issues
 Freud believed that as boys in the phallic stage seek genital
stimulation, they begin to develop unconscious sexual desires
for their mothers and hate their father as a rival, feeling guilt
and fearing punishment by castration.
 He named these feelings “the Oedipus complex,” after a story
from Greek mythology.
Resolution of this
conflict: Boys
identify with their
fathers rather than
seeing them as a
rival.
Defending
Against Anxiety

Freud believed that we are anxious
about our unacceptable wishes and
impulses, and we repress this anxiety
with the help of the strategies below.
Which Defense Mechanism Am I?
A politician gives anti-gay
speeches, then turns out
to have homosexual
tendencies.
 Reaction Formation
Someone with an anger
problem accuses everyone
else of being angry and
threatening.
 Projection

 These two are
sometimes confused
with each other.
 The common
theme, as with all
defense mechanisms:
they seek to prevent
being conscious of
unacceptable feelings.
 The difference: the
first one
compensates, the
second one distracts.
Neo-Freudian, Psychodynamic Theorists
Psychodynamic theorists,
such as Adler, Horney,
and Jung, accepted
Freud’s ideas about:
 The importance of the
unconscious and childhood
relationships in shaping
personality
 The id/ego/superego
structure of personality
 The role of defense
mechanisms in reducing
anxiety about
uncomfortable ideas

Psychodynamic
theorists differed from
Freud in a few ways:
 Adler and Horney believed
that anxiety and personality
are a function of social, not
sexual tensions in childhood
 Jung believed that we have
a collective unconscious,
containing images from our
species’ experiences, not
just personal repressed
memories and wishes
The Psychodynamic Theorists
Carl
Jung

Alfred
Adler

Karen
Horney

Highlighted universal themes in the
unconscious as a source of creativity and
insight. Found opportunities for personal
growth by finding meaning in moments of
coincidence.
Focused on the fight against feelings of
inferiority as a theme at the core of
personality, although he may have been
projecting from his own experience.

Criticized the Freudian portrayal of women
as weak and subordinate to men.
She highlighted the need to feel secure in
relationships.
Assessing the Unconscious:
Psychodynamic Personality Assessment
 Freud tried to get unconscious themes to be projected into
the conscious world through free association and dream
analysis.
 Projective tests are a structured, systematic exposure to a
standardized set of ambiguous prompts, designed to reveal
inner dynamics.
Rorschach test:
“what do you see in
these inkblots?”
Problem: Results
don’t link well to
traits (low validity)
and different raters
get different results
(low reliability).
Unfalsifiability:
He developed theories
that are hard to prove or
disprove: can we test to
see if there is an id? Unrepresentative
Post facto
explanations
sampling:
(hindsight bias)
He did not build his
Flaws in
rather than
theories on a broad
predictions:
sample of
Freud’s
Whether or not a
observations; he
scientific
situation makes you
described all of
anxious or not, you
humanity based on
method
could either be
people with unusual
fixated or
psychological
repressing.
problems.
Biased observations:
He based theories on his
patients, which may give
him an incentive to see
them as unwell before
his treatment.
Evidence has Updated Freud’s Ideas
 Development appears to be lifelong, not set in stone by
childhood.
 Infant neural networks are not mature enough to create a
lifelong impact of childhood trauma.
 Peers have more influence on personality, and parents less,
than Freud assumed.
 Dreams, as well as slips of the tongue, have many possible
origins, less likely to reveal deep unconscious conflicts and
wishes.
 We may ignore threatening information, but traumatic
memories are usually intensely remembered, not repressed.
 Still, sexual abuse stories are more likely to be fact, less likely
to be wish fulfillment, than Freud thought.
 Gender and sexual identity seems to be more a function of
genetics than Oedipus conflicts and relationships with
parents.
The Unconscious As Seen Today:
Processing, Perceptions, and Priming, But
Not a Place

Unconscious:
a stream, not
a reservoir

The following processes operate at an
unconscious level, not because they’re
repressed, but because they are
automatic:
 Schemas guide our perceptions
 Right hemisphere makes choices the
left hemisphere doesn’t verbalize
 Conditioned responses, learned skills
and procedures, all guide our actions
without conscious recall
 Emotions get activated
 Stereotypes influence our reactions
 Priming affects our choices
Freud’s Legacy
 Freud benefitted psychology, giving us ideas
about: the impact of childhood on adulthood,
human irrationality, sexuality, evil, defenses,
anxiety, and the tension between our biological
selves and our socialized/civilized selves.
 Freud gave us specific concepts we still use often,
such as ego, projection, regression,
rationalization, dream interpretation, inferiority
“complex,” oral fixation, sibling rivalry, and
Freudian slips.
Not bad for someone writing over 100 years ago with no
technology for seeing inside the brain.
Developing a Healthy, Genuine Human
Personality
 Maslow: Becoming a selfactualized person
 Rogers: Growing, in a
social environment of:
 Genuineness
 Acceptance
 Empathy
 Assessing the self
 Evaluating Humanistic
Theories:
 What about Evil?
 Too much individualism?
Humanistic Theories
of Personality
Abraham
Maslow

Carl
Rogers

 In the 1960’s, some psychologists began to reject:
 the dehumanizing ideas in Behaviorism, and
 the dysfunctional view of people in Psychodynamic
thought.
 Maslow and Rogers sought to offer a “third force” in
psychology: The Humanistic Perspective.
 They studied healthy people rather than people with mental
health problems.
 Humanism: focusing on the conditions that support healthy
personal growth.
Maslow: The Self-Actualizing Person
In Maslow’s view, people are
motivated to keep moving up a
hierarchy of needs, growing beyond
getting basic needs met.
At the top of this hierarchy
are self-actualization,
fulfilling one’s potential, and
self-transcendence.

In this ideal state, a
personality includes
being self-aware, selfaccepting, open, ethica
l, spontaneous, loving
caring, focusing on a
greater mission than
social acceptance.
Rogers’ Person-Centered Perspective
Rogers agreed that people have natural tendencies to
grow, become healthy, and move toward self-actualization.

The three
conditions
that facilitate
growth (just
as water,
nutrients, and
light facilitate
the growth of
a tree):

Genuineness: Being
honest, direct, not using a façade
Acceptance, a.k.a Unconditional
Positive Regard: acknowledging
feelings without passing judgment;
Empathy: tuning into the feelings of
others, showing your efforts to
understand, listening well
Assessing the Self in Humanistic
Psychology: Ideal Self vs. Actual Self

 In the humanistic perspective, the core
of personality is the self-concept, our
sense of our nature and identity.
 People are happiest with a self-concept
that matches their ideal self.
 Thus, it is important to ask people to
describe themselves as they are and as
they ideally would like to be.

• Questionnaires
can be used, but
some prefer open
interview.
• Questions about
actual self: How
do you see
yourself? What
are you like?
What do you
value? What are
you capable of?
• If the answers do
not match the
ideal, selfacceptance may
be needed, not
just self-change.
Critiquing the Humanist Perspective
What about evil?
 Some say Rogers did not
appreciate the human capacity for
evil.
 Rogers saw “evil” as a social
phenomenon, not an individual
trait:
 “When I look at the world I’m
pessimistic, but when I look at
people I am optimistic.” –Rogers

Humanist response: Selfacceptance is not the
end; it then allows us to
move on from defending
our own needs to loving
and caring for others.
Critiquing the Humanist Perspective
Too much self-centeredness?
Some say that the pursuit of selfconcept, an accepting ideal self,
and self-actualization
encouraged not selftranscendence but selfindulgence, self-centeredness.
Humanist response: The
therapist using this approach
should not encourage
selfishness, and should keep in
mind that that “positive regard”
means “acceptance,” not
“praise.”
Trait Theories, Social-Cognitive
Theories, and the Self
Getting you to think about the qualities
you may see in yourself:
Traits: Stable components
of personality
• Dimensions and factors
• Assessing traits: MMPI
• The 5 “CANOE” factors
• The impact of traits on
situations & vice versa

Social-Cognitive influences
on personality
• Reciprocal Determinism
among thoughts, social
situation, behavior
• Internal vs. external locus
of control
• Optimism and positive
psychology

The Self: Spotlight effect, Self-Esteem, Self-serving bias
Personality As Seen in Palms and Stars
And handwriting, and crystal balls,
and tea leaves, and scattered bones
By saying something
that is vague and likely to
be true of you, then
following up on
comments that you
reinforce by nodding,
someone can appear to
see into your soul.
You too can turn your
keen sense of the
obvious into a career in
predicting the present!

I see by your
handwriting you
like bananas.
Trait Theory of Personality
 Gordon Allport decided
that Freud overvalued
unconscious motives and
undervalued our
real, observable
personality styles/traits.
 Myers and Briggs wanted
to to study individual
behaviors and statements
to find how people
differed in personality:
having different traits.
 The Myers-Briggs Type
Indicator (MBTI) is a
questionnaire categorizing
people by traits.

Trait: An enduring quality
that makes a person tend to
act a certain way.
Examples: “honest.” “shy.”
“hard-working.”
MBTI traits come in pairs:
“Judging” vs. “Perceiving.”
“Thinking” vs. “Feeling.”
Trait theory of personality:
That we are made up of a
collection of traits, behavioral
predispositions that can be
identified and measured, traits
that differ from person to
person
Traits: Rooted in Biology?
 Brain: Extraverts tend to have
low levels of brain activity,
making it hard to suppress
impulses, and leading them to
seek stimulation.
 Body: The trait of shyness
appears to be related to high
autonomic system reactivity, an
easily triggered alarm system.
 Genes: Selective breeding of
animals seems to create lifelong
differences in traits such as
aggression, sociability, or
calmness, suggesting genetic
roots for these traits.
Factor Analysis and the Eysencks’
Personality Dimensions
 Factor Analysis:
Identifying factors that
tend to cluster
together.
 Using factor
analysis, Hans and Sybil
Eysenck found that
many personality traits
actually are a function
of two basic dimensions
along which we all vary.
 Research supports their
idea that these
variations are linked to
genetics.
Assessing Traits: Questionnaires
 Personality Inventory: Questionnaire assessing many
personality traits, by asking which behaviors and
responses the person would choose
 Empirically derived test: all test items have been
selected to because they predictably match the qualities
being assessed.
 Minnesota Multiphasic Personality Inventory (MMPI):
Designed to identify people with personality difficulties
 T/F questionnaire; items were selected because they
correlated with various traits, emotions, attitudes
 Example: depressed people tend to answer “true” to:
“Nothing in the paper interests me except the comics.”
Sample MMPI Test Profile
The “Big Five” Personality Factors
 The Eysencks felt that people
 Conscientiousness:
varied along two dimensions.
self-discipline, careful
 Current cross-cultural research and
pursuit of delayed
theory supports the expansion
goals
from two dimensions to five
 Agreeableness:
factors:
helpful, trusting,
friendliness
to help us
 Neuroticism: anxiety,
remember
insecurity, emotional
the five
instability
factors,
 Openness: flexibility,
remember
nonconformity,
that the first
variety
letters spell
 Extraversion:
“CANOE”…
Drawing energy from
others, sociability
The “Big Five”/ C.A.N.O.E.
Personality Dimensions

Impulsive
Trusting
Anxious
Conforming
Fun-Loving
Questions about Traits
These topics are the subject of ongoing research:
Stability: One’s
distinctive mix of traits
doesn’t change much
over the lifespan.
However, everyone in
adulthood becomes:
 More conscientious
and agreeable, and
 Less
extraverted, neurotic/
unstable, and less
open
(imaginative, flexible).

Predictive value: Levels
of success in work and
relationships relates to
traits such as openness
and conscientiousness.

Heritability: For most
traits, genes account for
50% of the variation
among individuals
Change vs. Consistency: Shifts with Age
Over years of development, we change interests, attitudes,
roles, jobs, relationships; we develop skills, maturity. Do traits
stay stable through all this change?

The evidence shows
that it takes time for
personality to
stabilize. Traits do
change, but less and
less so over time. We
change less, become
more consistent.
Person-Situation Controversy
 Trait theory
assumes that we
have traits that
are a function of
personality, not
situation.
 There is evidence
that some traits
are linked to roles
and to personas
we use in different
cultures,
environments.
Personality Affecting the Situation,
Not Just a Function of the Situation
 Your Facebook posts, your website, music lists, choice
of ringtone--these all reflect your personality.
 These choices also may shape how others treat
you, which may affect your personality.
This room may
reflect the
personality of the
guy who lives
there.
The setup and
contents of the
room may also
shape his
personality.
Social-Cognitive Perspective
Albert Bandura believes that Personality is:
The result of an interaction that takes place between a person
and their social context, involving how we think about
ourselves and our situations.
Questions raised in this perspective:
How do we
interpret and
respond to
external
events? How
do those
responses
shape us?

How do our
memories,
expectations,
schemas,
influence our
behavior
patterns?

How do the
personality
and social
environment
mutually
influence
each other?
Reciprocal Influences in Becoming
“The Kind of Person Who Does Rock Climbing”
Reciprocal: a back and forth
influence, with no primary cause
Example: a tendency
to enjoy risky behavior
affects choice of
friends, who in turn
may encourage rock
climbing, which may
lead to identifying with
the activity.
Avoiding the highway today
without identifying or
explaining any fear: the
“low road” of emotion.
Reciprocal Determinism:

How personality, thoughts, social environment
all reinforce/cause each other
 Why is Jake a happy, smiley
person? He may have started with
an “easy” temperament;
 He may attract other happy
people, and people are more likely
to smile when around him, which
reinforces his smiles;
 His mind fills in the reasons why
he’s smiling even if some of it was
a reflection of his happy
friends, and these happy reasons
give him more reason to smile.
Evaluating Behavior in Situations:
Blindness to One’s Own Faults
 Donald Trump as the host of “The
Apprentice” prided himself on
assessing executive skills in others.
 Assessments based on
performance in such simulations
predict future job performance
better than interviews and
questionnaires.
 Donald Trump as a politician could
not understand why more people
didn’t join his candidacy, his
debates, his “birther” theories.
Evaluating the Social-Cognitive
Perspective
 The social-cognitive perspective on
personality helps us focus on the
interaction of behaviors, thoughts,
and social situations.
 This focus, though, may distract us
from noticing an individual’s
feelings, emotions, inner qualities.
 Critics note that traits may be
more a function of genetics and
upbringing, not just situation.
 Example of two people with
different reactions in the same
situation: Two lottery winners
sharing a jackpot; one sobbed, the
other slept.
Biopsychosocial Approaches to
Personality
PSY 150 403 Chapter 12 SLIDES
Exploring the Self, Viewing the Self
 Research in personality
includes the topic of a
person’s sense of self.
 Topics of research include
self-talk, self-esteem, selfawareness, selfmonitoring, self-control.
 The field has refined a
definition of “self” as the
core of personality, the
organizer and reservoir of
our thoughts, feelings,
actions, choices, attitudes.

Topics for our study of
people’s sense of self:
 The Spotlight Effect
(self-consciousness)
 Self-esteem, low and
high, benefits and risks
 Self-Serving Bias
 Narcissism
 Self-disparagement
 Secure self-esteem
Self-Consciousness: The Spotlight Effect
Experiment: Students put on Barry Manilow
T-shirts before entering a room with other
students. (Manilow was not even cool “back
in the day.”)
Result: The students thought others would
notice the T-shirt, assumed people were
looking at them, when this was not the case;
they greatly overestimated the extent to
which the spotlight was on them.
The spotlight effect: assuming that people
are have attention focused on you when
they actually may not be noticing you.
Lesson: People don’t notice our errors, quirks,
features, and shirts as much as we think they
do.
Self-Esteem:
High and Low, Good and Bad
 People who have normal or
high self-esteem, feeling
confident and valuable, get
some benefits:
 Increased resistance to
conformity pressure
 Decreased harm from
bullying
 Increased resilience and
efforts to improve their
own mood
 But maybe this “high” selfesteem is really realistic, and
is a result, not a cause, of
these successes.

 Low self-esteem, even
temporarily lowered by insults,
leads to problems: prejudice,
being critical of others
Self-Serving
Bias
We all generally
tend to think
we are above
average.
This bias can
help defend
our selfesteem, as it
does for the
people in this
wheel.
Self-Focus and Narcissism
 Since 1980, song lyrics have become more focused on the
self, both gratification and self-praise.
 Empathy scores and skills are decreasing, being lost;
people increasingly don’t bother trying to see things from
the perspective of others.
 There is a rise in narcissism (self-absorption, selfgratification, inflated but fragile self-worth).
 Narcissists see themselves as having a special place in the
world.
 Danger, especially in narcissism: When self-esteem is
threatened, it can trigger defensive aggression.
 Preventing this aggressive defense of self-esteem: not
raising self-esteem, but reinforcing it, having people state
their own values and qualities
Self-Disparagement, Self-Acceptance
Left behind in the supposed increase in egotism: those
who feel worthless, unlovable

Some people have a habit of self-disparaging self-talk:
“I’m no good. I’m going to fail.”
Sometimes such remarks are a sign of depression or at
least feeling inferior.
Sometimes such remarks may elicit pity, or prepare us
for possible bad events, or help us learn from mistakes
(people are more critical of their past selves).
Moving from defensive to secure self-esteem requires
realistic expectations and self-acceptance.
Culture and the Self:
Individualism and Collectivism
 Individualist cultures value independence. They promote personal
ideals, strengths, and goals, pursued in competition with others,
leading to individual achievement and finding a unique identity.
 Collectivist cultures value interdependence. They promote group
and societal goals and duties, and blending in with group identity,
with achievement attributed to mutual support.

Individualist and Collectivist Cultures Compared
Thinking about the self:

Cultural differences
People in collectivist cultures (those which
emphasize group unity, allegiance, and purpose
over the wishes of the individual) do not make
the same kinds of attributions:
1. The behavior of others is attributed more
to the situation; also,
2. Credit for successes is given more to
others,
3. Blame for failures is taken on oneself.
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PSY 150 403 Chapter 12 SLIDES

  • 2. Overview: Ways of Looking at the Self      Freudian/Psychodynamic views: the Unconscious parts of the self Humanistic view of the Self-Actualizing Person Examining Traits, including the Big Five Factors/Dimensions Social and Cognitive Influences on Personality Self-Esteem and Self-Serving Bias These different perspectives and concepts can help us examine:  What we have in common: personality components, basic drives, stages of development, categories of traits  Ways in which we differ: individual paths through stages, ways of managing basic drives and needs, levels of Trait dimensions
  • 3. Psychodynamic Theories of Personality Bringing out the Unconscious Part of Your Personality  Freud and the Psychoanalytic on:  Personality Structure: id, ego, superego  Personality Development: Psychosexual Stages  Defense Mechanisms  The Neo-Freudian, Psychodynamic theorists: from sexual to social issues  Assessing Unconscious Processes: Projective Tests.  Modern ideas about the unconscious and other Freudian concepts
  • 4. Personality: An individual’s characteristic patterns of thoughts, feelings, and behaviors [persisting over time and across situations] Agreeable, Open Introverted Naïve Sensitive, Reactive Contentedly lethargic Neurotically Conscientious irritable
  • 5. Psychodynamic/Psychoanalytic Theories  These theories of human personality focus on the inner forces that interact to make us who we are.  In this view: behavior, as well as human emotions and personality, develop in a dynamic (interacting, changing) interplay between conscious and unconscious processes, including various motives and inner conflicts.
  • 6. Freud’s Path to Developing Psychonalysis  Sigmund Freud started his career as a physician.  He decided to explore how mental and physical symptoms could be caused by purely psychological factors.  He became aware that many powerful mental processes operate in the unconscious, without our awareness.  This insight grew into a theory of the structure of human personality and its development.  His name for his theory and his therapeutic technique: psychoanalysis.
  • 7. Psychoanalysis: Techniques Techniques for revealing the unconscious mind:  He used creative techniques such as free association: encourage the patient to speak whatever comes to mind,  The therapist then interprets any potential unconscious wishes hidden in the client’s hesitations, slips of the tongue, and dreams.
  • 8. Freud’s Personality/Mind Iceberg The mind is mostly below the surface of conscious awareness Personality develops from the efforts of our ego, our rational self, to resolve tension between our id, based in biological drives, and the superego, society’s rules and constraints. The Unconscious, in Freud’s view: A reservoir of thoughts, wishes, feelings, and memories, that are hidden from awareness because they feel unacceptable.
  • 9. The Developing Personality We start life with a personality made up of the id, striving impulsively to meet basic needs, living by “the pleasure principle.” In a toddler, an ego develops, a self that has thoughts, judgments, and memories following a “reality principle” The ego works as the “executive” of this three-part system, to manage bodily needs and wishes in a socially acceptable way. Around age 4 or 5, the child develops the superego, a conscience internalized from parents and society, following a “morality principle.”
  • 10. Freud’s Theory of Psychosexual Stages  The id is focused on the needs of erogenous zones, sensitive areas of the body.  People feel shame about these needs and can get fixated at one stage, never resolve how to manage the needs of that zone’s needs.
  • 11. Male Development Issues  Freud believed that as boys in the phallic stage seek genital stimulation, they begin to develop unconscious sexual desires for their mothers and hate their father as a rival, feeling guilt and fearing punishment by castration.  He named these feelings “the Oedipus complex,” after a story from Greek mythology. Resolution of this conflict: Boys identify with their fathers rather than seeing them as a rival.
  • 12. Defending Against Anxiety Freud believed that we are anxious about our unacceptable wishes and impulses, and we repress this anxiety with the help of the strategies below.
  • 13. Which Defense Mechanism Am I? A politician gives anti-gay speeches, then turns out to have homosexual tendencies.  Reaction Formation Someone with an anger problem accuses everyone else of being angry and threatening.  Projection  These two are sometimes confused with each other.  The common theme, as with all defense mechanisms: they seek to prevent being conscious of unacceptable feelings.  The difference: the first one compensates, the second one distracts.
  • 14. Neo-Freudian, Psychodynamic Theorists Psychodynamic theorists, such as Adler, Horney, and Jung, accepted Freud’s ideas about:  The importance of the unconscious and childhood relationships in shaping personality  The id/ego/superego structure of personality  The role of defense mechanisms in reducing anxiety about uncomfortable ideas Psychodynamic theorists differed from Freud in a few ways:  Adler and Horney believed that anxiety and personality are a function of social, not sexual tensions in childhood  Jung believed that we have a collective unconscious, containing images from our species’ experiences, not just personal repressed memories and wishes
  • 15. The Psychodynamic Theorists Carl Jung Alfred Adler Karen Horney Highlighted universal themes in the unconscious as a source of creativity and insight. Found opportunities for personal growth by finding meaning in moments of coincidence. Focused on the fight against feelings of inferiority as a theme at the core of personality, although he may have been projecting from his own experience. Criticized the Freudian portrayal of women as weak and subordinate to men. She highlighted the need to feel secure in relationships.
  • 16. Assessing the Unconscious: Psychodynamic Personality Assessment  Freud tried to get unconscious themes to be projected into the conscious world through free association and dream analysis.  Projective tests are a structured, systematic exposure to a standardized set of ambiguous prompts, designed to reveal inner dynamics. Rorschach test: “what do you see in these inkblots?” Problem: Results don’t link well to traits (low validity) and different raters get different results (low reliability).
  • 17. Unfalsifiability: He developed theories that are hard to prove or disprove: can we test to see if there is an id? Unrepresentative Post facto explanations sampling: (hindsight bias) He did not build his Flaws in rather than theories on a broad predictions: sample of Freud’s Whether or not a observations; he scientific situation makes you described all of anxious or not, you humanity based on method could either be people with unusual fixated or psychological repressing. problems. Biased observations: He based theories on his patients, which may give him an incentive to see them as unwell before his treatment.
  • 18. Evidence has Updated Freud’s Ideas  Development appears to be lifelong, not set in stone by childhood.  Infant neural networks are not mature enough to create a lifelong impact of childhood trauma.  Peers have more influence on personality, and parents less, than Freud assumed.  Dreams, as well as slips of the tongue, have many possible origins, less likely to reveal deep unconscious conflicts and wishes.  We may ignore threatening information, but traumatic memories are usually intensely remembered, not repressed.  Still, sexual abuse stories are more likely to be fact, less likely to be wish fulfillment, than Freud thought.  Gender and sexual identity seems to be more a function of genetics than Oedipus conflicts and relationships with parents.
  • 19. The Unconscious As Seen Today: Processing, Perceptions, and Priming, But Not a Place Unconscious: a stream, not a reservoir The following processes operate at an unconscious level, not because they’re repressed, but because they are automatic:  Schemas guide our perceptions  Right hemisphere makes choices the left hemisphere doesn’t verbalize  Conditioned responses, learned skills and procedures, all guide our actions without conscious recall  Emotions get activated  Stereotypes influence our reactions  Priming affects our choices
  • 20. Freud’s Legacy  Freud benefitted psychology, giving us ideas about: the impact of childhood on adulthood, human irrationality, sexuality, evil, defenses, anxiety, and the tension between our biological selves and our socialized/civilized selves.  Freud gave us specific concepts we still use often, such as ego, projection, regression, rationalization, dream interpretation, inferiority “complex,” oral fixation, sibling rivalry, and Freudian slips. Not bad for someone writing over 100 years ago with no technology for seeing inside the brain.
  • 21. Developing a Healthy, Genuine Human Personality  Maslow: Becoming a selfactualized person  Rogers: Growing, in a social environment of:  Genuineness  Acceptance  Empathy  Assessing the self  Evaluating Humanistic Theories:  What about Evil?  Too much individualism?
  • 22. Humanistic Theories of Personality Abraham Maslow Carl Rogers  In the 1960’s, some psychologists began to reject:  the dehumanizing ideas in Behaviorism, and  the dysfunctional view of people in Psychodynamic thought.  Maslow and Rogers sought to offer a “third force” in psychology: The Humanistic Perspective.  They studied healthy people rather than people with mental health problems.  Humanism: focusing on the conditions that support healthy personal growth.
  • 23. Maslow: The Self-Actualizing Person In Maslow’s view, people are motivated to keep moving up a hierarchy of needs, growing beyond getting basic needs met. At the top of this hierarchy are self-actualization, fulfilling one’s potential, and self-transcendence. In this ideal state, a personality includes being self-aware, selfaccepting, open, ethica l, spontaneous, loving caring, focusing on a greater mission than social acceptance.
  • 24. Rogers’ Person-Centered Perspective Rogers agreed that people have natural tendencies to grow, become healthy, and move toward self-actualization. The three conditions that facilitate growth (just as water, nutrients, and light facilitate the growth of a tree): Genuineness: Being honest, direct, not using a façade Acceptance, a.k.a Unconditional Positive Regard: acknowledging feelings without passing judgment; Empathy: tuning into the feelings of others, showing your efforts to understand, listening well
  • 25. Assessing the Self in Humanistic Psychology: Ideal Self vs. Actual Self  In the humanistic perspective, the core of personality is the self-concept, our sense of our nature and identity.  People are happiest with a self-concept that matches their ideal self.  Thus, it is important to ask people to describe themselves as they are and as they ideally would like to be. • Questionnaires can be used, but some prefer open interview. • Questions about actual self: How do you see yourself? What are you like? What do you value? What are you capable of? • If the answers do not match the ideal, selfacceptance may be needed, not just self-change.
  • 26. Critiquing the Humanist Perspective What about evil?  Some say Rogers did not appreciate the human capacity for evil.  Rogers saw “evil” as a social phenomenon, not an individual trait:  “When I look at the world I’m pessimistic, but when I look at people I am optimistic.” –Rogers Humanist response: Selfacceptance is not the end; it then allows us to move on from defending our own needs to loving and caring for others.
  • 27. Critiquing the Humanist Perspective Too much self-centeredness? Some say that the pursuit of selfconcept, an accepting ideal self, and self-actualization encouraged not selftranscendence but selfindulgence, self-centeredness. Humanist response: The therapist using this approach should not encourage selfishness, and should keep in mind that that “positive regard” means “acceptance,” not “praise.”
  • 29. Getting you to think about the qualities you may see in yourself: Traits: Stable components of personality • Dimensions and factors • Assessing traits: MMPI • The 5 “CANOE” factors • The impact of traits on situations & vice versa Social-Cognitive influences on personality • Reciprocal Determinism among thoughts, social situation, behavior • Internal vs. external locus of control • Optimism and positive psychology The Self: Spotlight effect, Self-Esteem, Self-serving bias
  • 30. Personality As Seen in Palms and Stars And handwriting, and crystal balls, and tea leaves, and scattered bones By saying something that is vague and likely to be true of you, then following up on comments that you reinforce by nodding, someone can appear to see into your soul. You too can turn your keen sense of the obvious into a career in predicting the present! I see by your handwriting you like bananas.
  • 31. Trait Theory of Personality  Gordon Allport decided that Freud overvalued unconscious motives and undervalued our real, observable personality styles/traits.  Myers and Briggs wanted to to study individual behaviors and statements to find how people differed in personality: having different traits.  The Myers-Briggs Type Indicator (MBTI) is a questionnaire categorizing people by traits. Trait: An enduring quality that makes a person tend to act a certain way. Examples: “honest.” “shy.” “hard-working.” MBTI traits come in pairs: “Judging” vs. “Perceiving.” “Thinking” vs. “Feeling.” Trait theory of personality: That we are made up of a collection of traits, behavioral predispositions that can be identified and measured, traits that differ from person to person
  • 32. Traits: Rooted in Biology?  Brain: Extraverts tend to have low levels of brain activity, making it hard to suppress impulses, and leading them to seek stimulation.  Body: The trait of shyness appears to be related to high autonomic system reactivity, an easily triggered alarm system.  Genes: Selective breeding of animals seems to create lifelong differences in traits such as aggression, sociability, or calmness, suggesting genetic roots for these traits.
  • 33. Factor Analysis and the Eysencks’ Personality Dimensions  Factor Analysis: Identifying factors that tend to cluster together.  Using factor analysis, Hans and Sybil Eysenck found that many personality traits actually are a function of two basic dimensions along which we all vary.  Research supports their idea that these variations are linked to genetics.
  • 34. Assessing Traits: Questionnaires  Personality Inventory: Questionnaire assessing many personality traits, by asking which behaviors and responses the person would choose  Empirically derived test: all test items have been selected to because they predictably match the qualities being assessed.  Minnesota Multiphasic Personality Inventory (MMPI): Designed to identify people with personality difficulties  T/F questionnaire; items were selected because they correlated with various traits, emotions, attitudes  Example: depressed people tend to answer “true” to: “Nothing in the paper interests me except the comics.”
  • 35. Sample MMPI Test Profile
  • 36. The “Big Five” Personality Factors  The Eysencks felt that people  Conscientiousness: varied along two dimensions. self-discipline, careful  Current cross-cultural research and pursuit of delayed theory supports the expansion goals from two dimensions to five  Agreeableness: factors: helpful, trusting, friendliness to help us  Neuroticism: anxiety, remember insecurity, emotional the five instability factors,  Openness: flexibility, remember nonconformity, that the first variety letters spell  Extraversion: “CANOE”… Drawing energy from others, sociability
  • 37. The “Big Five”/ C.A.N.O.E. Personality Dimensions Impulsive Trusting Anxious Conforming Fun-Loving
  • 38. Questions about Traits These topics are the subject of ongoing research: Stability: One’s distinctive mix of traits doesn’t change much over the lifespan. However, everyone in adulthood becomes:  More conscientious and agreeable, and  Less extraverted, neurotic/ unstable, and less open (imaginative, flexible). Predictive value: Levels of success in work and relationships relates to traits such as openness and conscientiousness. Heritability: For most traits, genes account for 50% of the variation among individuals
  • 39. Change vs. Consistency: Shifts with Age Over years of development, we change interests, attitudes, roles, jobs, relationships; we develop skills, maturity. Do traits stay stable through all this change? The evidence shows that it takes time for personality to stabilize. Traits do change, but less and less so over time. We change less, become more consistent.
  • 40. Person-Situation Controversy  Trait theory assumes that we have traits that are a function of personality, not situation.  There is evidence that some traits are linked to roles and to personas we use in different cultures, environments.
  • 41. Personality Affecting the Situation, Not Just a Function of the Situation  Your Facebook posts, your website, music lists, choice of ringtone--these all reflect your personality.  These choices also may shape how others treat you, which may affect your personality. This room may reflect the personality of the guy who lives there. The setup and contents of the room may also shape his personality.
  • 42. Social-Cognitive Perspective Albert Bandura believes that Personality is: The result of an interaction that takes place between a person and their social context, involving how we think about ourselves and our situations. Questions raised in this perspective: How do we interpret and respond to external events? How do those responses shape us? How do our memories, expectations, schemas, influence our behavior patterns? How do the personality and social environment mutually influence each other?
  • 43. Reciprocal Influences in Becoming “The Kind of Person Who Does Rock Climbing” Reciprocal: a back and forth influence, with no primary cause Example: a tendency to enjoy risky behavior affects choice of friends, who in turn may encourage rock climbing, which may lead to identifying with the activity. Avoiding the highway today without identifying or explaining any fear: the “low road” of emotion.
  • 44. Reciprocal Determinism: How personality, thoughts, social environment all reinforce/cause each other  Why is Jake a happy, smiley person? He may have started with an “easy” temperament;  He may attract other happy people, and people are more likely to smile when around him, which reinforces his smiles;  His mind fills in the reasons why he’s smiling even if some of it was a reflection of his happy friends, and these happy reasons give him more reason to smile.
  • 45. Evaluating Behavior in Situations: Blindness to One’s Own Faults  Donald Trump as the host of “The Apprentice” prided himself on assessing executive skills in others.  Assessments based on performance in such simulations predict future job performance better than interviews and questionnaires.  Donald Trump as a politician could not understand why more people didn’t join his candidacy, his debates, his “birther” theories.
  • 46. Evaluating the Social-Cognitive Perspective  The social-cognitive perspective on personality helps us focus on the interaction of behaviors, thoughts, and social situations.  This focus, though, may distract us from noticing an individual’s feelings, emotions, inner qualities.  Critics note that traits may be more a function of genetics and upbringing, not just situation.  Example of two people with different reactions in the same situation: Two lottery winners sharing a jackpot; one sobbed, the other slept.
  • 49. Exploring the Self, Viewing the Self  Research in personality includes the topic of a person’s sense of self.  Topics of research include self-talk, self-esteem, selfawareness, selfmonitoring, self-control.  The field has refined a definition of “self” as the core of personality, the organizer and reservoir of our thoughts, feelings, actions, choices, attitudes. Topics for our study of people’s sense of self:  The Spotlight Effect (self-consciousness)  Self-esteem, low and high, benefits and risks  Self-Serving Bias  Narcissism  Self-disparagement  Secure self-esteem
  • 50. Self-Consciousness: The Spotlight Effect Experiment: Students put on Barry Manilow T-shirts before entering a room with other students. (Manilow was not even cool “back in the day.”) Result: The students thought others would notice the T-shirt, assumed people were looking at them, when this was not the case; they greatly overestimated the extent to which the spotlight was on them. The spotlight effect: assuming that people are have attention focused on you when they actually may not be noticing you. Lesson: People don’t notice our errors, quirks, features, and shirts as much as we think they do.
  • 51. Self-Esteem: High and Low, Good and Bad  People who have normal or high self-esteem, feeling confident and valuable, get some benefits:  Increased resistance to conformity pressure  Decreased harm from bullying  Increased resilience and efforts to improve their own mood  But maybe this “high” selfesteem is really realistic, and is a result, not a cause, of these successes.  Low self-esteem, even temporarily lowered by insults, leads to problems: prejudice, being critical of others
  • 52. Self-Serving Bias We all generally tend to think we are above average. This bias can help defend our selfesteem, as it does for the people in this wheel.
  • 53. Self-Focus and Narcissism  Since 1980, song lyrics have become more focused on the self, both gratification and self-praise.  Empathy scores and skills are decreasing, being lost; people increasingly don’t bother trying to see things from the perspective of others.  There is a rise in narcissism (self-absorption, selfgratification, inflated but fragile self-worth).  Narcissists see themselves as having a special place in the world.  Danger, especially in narcissism: When self-esteem is threatened, it can trigger defensive aggression.  Preventing this aggressive defense of self-esteem: not raising self-esteem, but reinforcing it, having people state their own values and qualities
  • 54. Self-Disparagement, Self-Acceptance Left behind in the supposed increase in egotism: those who feel worthless, unlovable Some people have a habit of self-disparaging self-talk: “I’m no good. I’m going to fail.” Sometimes such remarks are a sign of depression or at least feeling inferior. Sometimes such remarks may elicit pity, or prepare us for possible bad events, or help us learn from mistakes (people are more critical of their past selves). Moving from defensive to secure self-esteem requires realistic expectations and self-acceptance.
  • 55. Culture and the Self: Individualism and Collectivism  Individualist cultures value independence. They promote personal ideals, strengths, and goals, pursued in competition with others, leading to individual achievement and finding a unique identity.  Collectivist cultures value interdependence. They promote group and societal goals and duties, and blending in with group identity, with achievement attributed to mutual support. Individualist and Collectivist Cultures Compared
  • 56. Thinking about the self: Cultural differences People in collectivist cultures (those which emphasize group unity, allegiance, and purpose over the wishes of the individual) do not make the same kinds of attributions: 1. The behavior of others is attributed more to the situation; also, 2. Credit for successes is given more to others, 3. Blame for failures is taken on oneself.

Hinweis der Redaktion

  1. Click to reveal all bullets.
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  3. Click to reveal bullets.To help and understand people was to focus on bringing out unconscious thoughts, feelings, conflicts, including those rooted in childhood.These models of understanding the mind began with the man who once said he was “the only worker in a new field”: Sigmund Freud.
  4. Click to reveal bullets.Instructor, you can mention that he saw patients with unusual symptoms, such as recurring blindness or paralysis only of the hand, that did not seem to have physical causes. He sought to understand how the different parts of the human personality interacted, including the hidden, unconscious parts.
  5. Click to reveal bullets.How did Freud use Psychoanalysis to bring unconscious processes of patients into conscious awareness, especially an embarrassing process such as a shame about touching one’s genitals (leading to the hand paralysis)?
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  8. Click to reveal bullets and table.Instructor: See if students can describe how the cartoons (one will be revealed later in the slide content) relate to one of the psychosexual stages.
  9. Click to reveal bullets.The Oedipus story, which Freud apparently saw as an allegory to the general male experience: Oedipus kills a man he later realizes is his birth father, and later marries a queen that he eventually realizes was his birth mother.
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  11. Click to reveal questions, answers, and text box.Reaction formation seeks to compensate for an unacceptable desire by acting in the opposite direction.Projection distracts the attention of self and others away from one’s own unacceptable traits, points the finger of blame elesewhere.
  12. Click to reveal bullets.Instructor: although few psychodynamic theorists and clinicians today accept Jung’s idea of the collective unconscious, they do accept a similar idea, that we do have some universal human tendencies, formed through evolutionary rather than cultural history, that operate at an unconscious level.
  13. Click to reveal description of each.
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  17. Click to reveal bullets.The title refers to the unconscious not being a storage area for repressed memories, but more a set of processes that operate without the need for the involvement of our conscious awareness.
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  22. Click to show three boxes and text on the right.Note: Empathy is NOT sympathy: what is important to nurture growth is to have someone understand you, consider your feelings and hold them for you. This is more vital to growth than having someone feel sorry for you.
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  24. Click to reveal bullets.About the capacity for evil, it doesn’t necessarily contradict the humanistic model: it is possible to say that some people are not moving far up the hierarchy, are stuck pursuing basic survival and security needs even if they already have enough money to survive, or are stuck seeking and defending self-esteem.
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  29. Click to reveal bullets and text boxes.A full description of the scales on the Myers-Briggs:Energy: Extraversion vs. IntroversionLearning: Senses vs. IntuitionDecisions: Thinking vs. FeelingRelating: Judging vs. Perceiving.Example of a profile: ENTJs supposedly make good executives.
  30. Click to reveal bullets.Other species show evidence that individuals have distinct, differing, and enduring personality traits.
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  33. Click to reveal bullets and five CANOE factors. Then click to show canoe.
  34. No animation.Instructor: Here we have the dimensional profile of a dog. I refer to the big five factors as Dimensions here to emphasize that each person can have a profile of a varying levels, rather than factors to be multiplied. The word “variables” would also work, but “dimensions” is more commonly used regarding when describing a person with traits that vary on a spectrum.
  35. Click to reveal three text boxes.Stability question:note that although there are general trends affecting most people, your unique profile, including your levels of each trait relative to other people, doesn’t change much.This suggests that from the trait perspective, though we still go through some changes with adult development, personality is stable. Prediction question:success in school and work obviously relates to levels of conscientiousness, but there are other patterns: in our communication, extraverts use more personal pronouns, agreeableness predicts use of positive emotion words, and neuroticism predicts use of negative emotion words.
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  41. Click to reveal bullets.An optional slide, giving another example to help illustrate this concept and how it relates to personality.
  42. Click to reveal bullets.Two topics that otherwise wouldn’t exactly go together if they didn’t cross in the same person.
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  46. Click to reveal bullets.Instructor: it might be accurate to add to the definition on the left by saying that the “self” is the consciously aware (and self-aware) part of our personality. One could also say that the self is not just the identity but our feelings about that identity.
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  52. Click to reveal bullets.On the last domain on each list, related to attributions for behavior, you might add/clarify that people in collectivist societies are more likely to give credit to others for accomplishments, as mentioned in the text when describing interviews with successful athletes.
  53. Optional slideClick to reveal bullets.Instructor: See if students can explain why this might generally be true, why one’s experience in collectivist cultures might encourage different attributions: is there pressure to interpret things differently, to take blame for failures, or in the collectivist experience, is this more likely to be an accurate view, that successes and behavior are guided by the group and failures are caused by individuals?Does this cultural difference make this less fundamental? Fundamental doesn’t mean universal, it means most important; to judge someone as having a certain trait just because you see them do a behavior (is a soldier a murderer?) is considered here to be the most basic error you can make in viewing another person.