Notes on Personality Theories

(page numbers reflect 2011 updates; pages we use in class correlate with Test Study Guide and Test Powerpoint review)

Lord of the Rings: Frodo’s friend Sam Gamgee: he is ever faithful and supportive of Frodo; this distinctiveness and consistency as seen through the book/movie series exemplifies Sam’s personality.

Personality: your characteristic pattern of thinking, feeling, acting

I. Sigmund Freud’s Psychoanalytic perspective 480

Freud was to the history of psychology what Elvis Presley was to rock music. (And, Elvis was the King.)

A.  Psychoanalysis: a technique for exposing and interpreting unconscious tensions

Dreams are the royal road to unconsciousness

1. Free association: saying what comes to mind to explore the unconscious

2. Unconscious

Origin of mostly undesirable thoughts, feelings; we temporarily store material in our preconscious area.

Freud searched for people’s inner conflicts in their dreams. He told patients the story line of their dream was the manifest content, but the really important meaning was the latent, or symbolic content. These were issues that people were afraid to deal with consciously and they were presented in dreams in symbolic form.

3. Freud’s tripartite personality structure 481

a. Id

Source of unconscious psychic energy

Operates on the pleasure principle

b. Ego

Mediates between Id and superego

Operates on the reality principle

c. Superego

Represents internal ideals; standards for judging

B. Personality Development: Psychosexual stages 482

Conflicts arise between our biology and social constraints

1. Terms:

a. Oedipus complex

Boy desires mother; jealous feelings toward father (phallic stage)

b. Identification

Incorporating your parents’ values into your superego

c. Fixate

Focusing energies at an earlier stage where you have an unresolved conflict

d. Gender identity:

One’s sense of being male or female

2. Stages:

a. Oral

0-18 mos. Pleasure centers around the mouth

b. Anal

18-36 mos. Pleasure centers on bowel movements

c. Phallic

3-6 yrs. Pleasure in genital zones; sexual feelings for parent

d. Latency

6 to puberty Genital feelings are dormant

e. Genital

Puberty onward maturation of sexual feelings

Defense mechanisms 483

How did Freud think people defended themselves against anxiety?

These mechanisms are used by ego for reducing anxiety by distorting reality

Repression: banishing thoughts

Regression: you retreat to a psychosexual stage with fixated psychic energy

Reaction formation: you express feelings opposite to your anxiety producing unconscious feelings

Projection disguising your impulses by projecting onto others

Rationalization offering self-justifying explanations so the real, threatening ones aren’t exposed

Displacement shifting aggressive or sexual impulses toward a less threatening object or person

Sublimation defense mechanism by which the ego unconsciously protects itself by expressing impulses through socially acceptable activities.

Denial facts are rejected because they are too painful to accept

The Neo Freudian and Psychodynamic Theorists 484

Which of Freud’s ideas did his followers accept or reject?

1.  Adler: focused on the importance of childhood tension

a. Inferiority complex a cluster of repressed fears, based on physical inferiority.

It describes feelings of inferiority and the overcompensation that often ensues.

2. Horney: emphasized feminine; suggested counterpart to Freud’s penis envy: womb envy; Self-analysis: minor neurotic problems could be addressed by self

3. Both felt Freud overemphasized sex and aggression and should focus on childhood social tensions.

Carl Jung and the collective unconscious: inherited memory traces that contained a common reservoir of images derived from our species’ past. This is why many cultures share certain myths and images such as the mother being a symbol of nurturance. Inherited experience is rejected today, but universal dispositions are due to our evolutionary history.

Other archetypes besides mother: the hero, the quest, the scapegoat, the witch, the princess. There are many more.

Freud’s valid ideas have been incorporated into the Psychodynamic approach of today.

Assessing Unconscious Processes 485

What are projective tests, and how are they used?

Freud never used these preferring dream study and free association.

Projective tests: give you ambiguous stimuli toward which to project your inner dynamics

a.  Projective tests may misdiagnose a normal individual as pathological (validity).

b.  Henry Murray developed the Thematic Apperception Test with subjects telling stories about ambiguous photos.

c.  TAT: a projective test in which people express their inner feelings and interests through the stories they make up about ambiguous scenes; you project part of yourself in completing an ambiguous story

d.  When evaluating the same patient, even trained raters come up with different interpretations (reliability).

Rorschach inkblots Henry Rorschach developed; 10 blots identify your inner feelings by analyzing your interpretations

Evaluating the Psychoanalytic Perspective 487

How do contemporary psychologists view Freud and the unconscious?

Freud overestimated parental influence.

His views on childhood sexuality were colored by his unwarranted skepticism of the sexual abuse suffered by his patients.

We use defense mechanisms, but not to disguise sexual and aggressive impulses.

Is Repression a Myth? 487
The majority of children, death camp survivors, and battle-scarred veterans are unable to repress painful experiences into their unconscious mind.

The Modern Unconscious mind 488

Freud was right about the unconscious mind being important but not for the reasons he thought. Modern research shows the existence of non-conscious information processing, a kind of implicit learning occurs.

1.Schemas that automatically control perceptions and interpretations (Unit 4)

2.Parallel processing during vision and thinking (Units 4 and 7B)

3.Implicit memories (Unit 7B)

4.Emotions that activate instantly without consciousness (Unit 8B)

One concept Freud called projection---viewing our attitudes in others---we now see at the false consensus effect, overestimating the degree to which others share our beliefs.

C Terror management theory Protecting from fear of death and anxiety by faith in worldview and pursuit of self-esteem, leading to prejudice against others (Greenberg, Solomon and Pyszczynski, 1997)

Freud’s Idea’s as Scientific Theory 489

Some evidence for defense mechanisms.

E It’s hard to test his ideas to determine their validity

Crews: what is original about Freud is not good and what is good is not original (1998).

Evaluating the Psychoanalytic Perspective

1.Personality develops throughout life and is not fixed in childhood.

2.Freud underemphasized peer influence on the individual, which may be as powerful as parental influence.

3.Gender identity may develop before 5-6 years of age.

4.There may be other reasons for dreams besides wish fulfillment.

5.Verbal slips can be explained on the basis of cognitive processing of verbal choices.

6.Suppressed sexuality leads to psychological disorders. Sexual inhibition has decreased, but psychological disorders have not.

II. Humanistic perspective 490

In contrast to Freud’s negative focus, these theorists emphasized the ways healthy people strive for self-determination. Humanism became the “third force” in psychology (after psychoanalysis and behaviorism).

A.  Maslow’s self actualization

Studied famous people as they self-actualize (fulfill potential) and self-transcend (meaning and purpose beyond self)

B. 

C. 

D. 

E. 

F. 

G. 

H. 

I. 

Carl Roger’s Person-Centered Perspective 491
A.  *Genuineness dropping the façade and being open
B.  *Acceptance: offering unconditional positive regard

*Empathy: nurturing our growth by mirroring and understanding our feelings

* Self-concept central to personalit

Assessing the Self 492

Questionnaires are used rather than standardized tests to assess personality

Standardization is depersonalizing in this perspective.

Each person is unique.

Evaluating the Humanistic Perspective 492

How has the humanistic perspective influence psychology? What criticisms has it faced?

1.  Its concepts are vague

2.  Lack of concern for others

3.  Capacity for evil is ignored because it emphasizes healthy ind.

4.  Has affected child rearing, management, etc.

5.  Underestimated the value of social influence

6. They criticize standardized testing of personality

III. Trait Theory 493

How do psychologists use traits to describe personality?

Traits: a characteristic pattern of behavior

Emphasis in on describing rather than explaining behavior

Gordon Allport had a meeting with Freud which didn’t go well, leading to his effort to better describe personality.

Isabel Briggs Myers sorted out Carl Jung’s personality types in a testing format that assigns four letters representing four different types. (Myers- Briggs Type Indicator). For example, a feeling type personality is sympathetic, appreciative, and tactful.

Gordon Allport

Cardinal traits: so strong they affect all behavior

Central traits: 5 to 10 major characteristics

Proprium: our “self” as we experience life

W.H. Sheldon: Body Type=Personality

Endomorph Wide hips and narrow shoulders, a lot of body fat spread across the body

Sociable, Fun-loving, Love of food, Tolerant, Even-tempered, Good humored

Ectomorph

Narrow shoulders and hips, very little body fat, Self-conscious,

Private, Introverted, Inhibited, Socially anxious, Artistic

Mesomorph broad shoulders and narrow waist, Muscular body,

Very little body fat, Adventurous, Courageous,

Assertive/bold, Zest for physical activity, Competitive

Exploring Traits 494

How to narrow down 18,000 traits to a manageable number for research?

2.  Factor analysis and Raymond Cattell: a statistical procedure that identifies clusters of related items and recognized as a trait.

3.  Cattell used this approach to develop a 16 Personality Factor (16PF) inventory. According to his research, human personality traits could be summarized by 16 personality factors (PF) or main traits.

4.  He described these 16 traits on a continuum. In other words, everybody has some degree of every trait.

5.  Hans and Sybil Eysenck’s Two Personality factors can be reduced to two polar dimensions:

  1. Introversion-extraversion; emotionality-stability (see fig. 10.4)

Biology and Personality 495

Extraversion may occur because the brain is normally low in arousal; and an area of the brain that inhibits is less active.

Jerome Kagan, in his temperament studies found that shyness is related to autonomic nervous system reactivity.

Dogs and other higher level creatures have personalities as well. So, for example, selective breeding can change birds’ personalities.

Assessing Traits 496

What are personality inventories, and what are their strengths and weaknesses as trait-assessment tools?

1.  Personality inventories Gather information by self-reports

2.  Astrology and palm reading

a.  Barnum effect: accepting favorable descriptions attributable to anyone. (Thinking Critically About, pp. 498-499)

3.  MMPI, Minnesota Multiphasic Personality Inventory (Starke Hathaway, 1960)

a.  Most widely used
b.  Developed for emotional illness

Empirical and objective: researchers take a large number of items, search for differences between groups, finally creating 10 clinical scales (masculine-feminine, introvert-extravert, etc.); projective tests are score subjectively while these are scored objectively.

The Big Five Factors 497

For those who believe that Eysencks’ personality dimensions are too narrow and Cattell’s 16PF too large, a middle range (five factors) of traits is more useful.

McCrae and Costa have an approach which is the best approximation of basic human traits.

How stable are these traits? In adulthood, quite stable.

How heritable are they? 50 percent.

Do they predict other personality attributes? Affirmative. Conscientious people are morning types and evening types tend to be extraverted.

Evaluating the Trait Perspective 500

Does research support the consistency of personality traits over time and across situations?

The Person-Situation Controversy

As we age our personalities become more stable (fig. 10.5, p. 500)

Walter Mischel (1968, 1984, 2004) points out that traits may be enduring, but the resulting behavior in various situations is different. Therefore, traits are not good predictors of behavior. You might score high on extraversion but be shy in the shopping mall.

Traits are actually “responses” to your “experience.”

Abilities, perceiving style, expectations, values, and rules all affect your responses to the environment

Mischel is an “interactionist”.

Trait theorists respond that behaviors from a situation may be different, but average behavior remains the same. Averaging behavior across situations seems to indicate that people do have distinct personality traits Therefore, traits matter.

Situational influences on behavior are important to consider.

People can fake desirable responses on self-report measures of personality.

Consistency of behavior across situations is overestimated

Samuel Gosling finds evidence for traits in our musical preferences, personal space organization, social media presentations, and email communication.

IV. Social Cognitive perspective 503

In the view of social-cognitive psychologists, what mutual influences shape an individual’s personality?

Reciprocal Influences 503

A.  Reciprocal determinism of Albert Bandura says our traits interact with our situations.

The interaction of the personal behaviors, internal personal factors and the environment

Ex: bad academics and feelings of academic inferiority

Example: different people choose different environments.

Example: Our personalities shape how we interpret events.

Example: Our personalities create situations to which we react.

This theory reinforces the biopsychosocial level of analysis.

Personal Control 505

What are the causes and consequences of personal control?

Julian Rotter’s theory. Personal control: do you see yourself as controlling or being controlled.

Our sense of controlling the environment v. being helpless

Internal: you feel you control your own fate

External: chance or outside forces determine your fate

Internals deal better with stress

Benefits of Personal Control 506

Learned helplessness (Martin Seligman)

The sense that outside forces determine your fate so you give up; become apathetic or pessimistic Ex: dogs getting shocked

Judith Rodin’s and Elinor Langer’s nursing home experiment: when elderly were given more control they were more active, alert and happy (1983)

Too much choice leads to tyranny of choice and people are less satisfied, according to Sheena Iyengar’s research (2000).

Barry Schwartz (2000) argues that too much choice leads to depression, paralysis and decreasing satisfaction.

Optimism Versus Pessimism 507

Your attributional style: how do you explain events? Positively? Negatively?

There are three components to pessimism which optimists avoid in their thinking:

Permanence: you believe bad events are permanent, and will never change

Pervasiveness: bad results affect everything, rather than just this one thing

Personal: poor experiences are the result of something inside of you, not circumstances

Your health benefits from basic optimism.

Excessive optimism blinds you to real risks.

Blindness to one’s own incompetence.

Caputo and Dunning (2005): ignorant people are blind to their own incompetence.