Freud's psychodynamic theory of personality proposed that personality is composed of three structures: the id, ego, and superego. The id operates unconsciously and is driven by sexual and aggressive urges. The ego mediates between the demands of the id and reality. The superego incorporates social and moral standards. Freud believed personality develops through psychosexual stages from infancy to adulthood, and that fixation at a stage can result in adult personality traits. Jung and Adler revised Freud's theory, with Jung proposing additional unconscious aspects and personality types, and Adler emphasizing superiority and compensation for inferiority. While influential, the psychodynamic approach has been criticized for being nonfalsifiable and lacking empirical validation.
Freud's psychodynamic theory of personality proposed that personality is composed of three structures: the id, ego, and superego. The id operates unconsciously and is driven by sexual and aggressive urges. The ego mediates between the demands of the id and reality. The superego incorporates social and moral standards. Freud believed personality develops through psychosexual stages from infancy to adulthood, and that fixation at a stage can result in adult personality traits. Jung and Adler revised Freud's theory, with Jung proposing additional unconscious aspects and personality types, and Adler emphasizing superiority and compensation for inferiority. While influential, the psychodynamic approach has been criticized for being nonfalsifiable and lacking empirical validation.
Freud's psychodynamic theory of personality proposed that personality is composed of three structures: the id, ego, and superego. The id operates unconsciously and is driven by sexual and aggressive urges. The ego mediates between the demands of the id and reality. The superego incorporates social and moral standards. Freud believed personality develops through psychosexual stages from infancy to adulthood, and that fixation at a stage can result in adult personality traits. Jung and Adler revised Freud's theory, with Jung proposing additional unconscious aspects and personality types, and Adler emphasizing superiority and compensation for inferiority. While influential, the psychodynamic approach has been criticized for being nonfalsifiable and lacking empirical validation.
Freud's psychodynamic theory of personality proposed that personality is composed of three structures: the id, ego, and superego. The id operates unconsciously and is driven by sexual and aggressive urges. The ego mediates between the demands of the id and reality. The superego incorporates social and moral standards. Freud believed personality develops through psychosexual stages from infancy to adulthood, and that fixation at a stage can result in adult personality traits. Jung and Adler revised Freud's theory, with Jung proposing additional unconscious aspects and personality types, and Adler emphasizing superiority and compensation for inferiority. While influential, the psychodynamic approach has been criticized for being nonfalsifiable and lacking empirical validation.
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Personality: Theory, Research,
and Assessment REVIEW OF KEY IDEAS THE NATURE OF PERSONALITY 1. Define the construct of personality in terms of consistency and distinctiveness. 1-1. I can always tell when my colleague across the hall has finished for the day because I hear squeaking as he carefully moves his computer table under his bookcase. And I know what follows: He closes and reshelves his books, sorts the papers on his desk into two piles, and slides the pens and pencils into his desk drawer bin. The fact that my colleague engages in the same behaviors almost every day illustrates the feature of personality termed _ 1-2. When I'm done, on the other hand, I usually just stand up and walk out, leaving my generally messy desk behind. The fact that my colleague and I differ with respect to office neatness illustrates the feature of personality termed _ Answers: 1-1. consistency (stability) 1-2. distinctiveness (behavioral differences). 2. Explain what is meant by a personality trait and describe the five factor model. 2-1. A consistent or durable disposition to behave in a particular way is referred to as a personality _________. Personality trait descriptions frequently consist of a series of _________, such as anxious, excitable, shy, aggressive, and so on. 2-2. There are an enormous number of trait words that could be used to describe people. Gordon Allport, for example, listed several thousand. Raymond Cattell reduced Allport's list to just traits, and more recently McCrae and Costa have described yet a simpler model involving only traits. 2-3. Some researchers maintain that more than five factors are needed to describe personality. Others contend , that fewer than five factors are needed. Of the various models, however, the dominant conception of personality structure is currently the -factor model. 221 2-4. Below are listed some of the adjectives that describe each of the five factors. List the name of each of the factors next to the appropriate adjectives. (The five factors are relatively easy to remember if one thinks ofNEO, which may mean "new," and adds AC: NEOAC.) _______________: outgoing, sociable _______________: imaginative, nonconforming _______________: anxious, insecure ______________: dependable, disciplined _______________: sympathetic, trusting Answers: 2-1. trait, adjectives 2-2. 16, five 2-3. five 2-4. extraversion, openness to experience, neuroticism, conscien tiousness. agreeableness. PSYCHODYNAMIC PERSPECTIVES 3. List and describe the three components into which Freud divided the personality and indicate how these are distributed across three levels of awareness. 3-1. Below is a schematic illustration of the three Freudian structures of personality. Label each. (b) _ (c) _ (a) .,----- Instinctive urges; contains all psychic energy 3-2. Freud superimposed levels of consciousness on the psychic structures. The following illustration makes clear that two of the structures exist at all three levels while one is entirely unconscious. Label the levels. (a) _ (b) _ (c) _ 222 JE Answers: 3-1. (a) id (b) ego (c) superego 3-2. (a) conscious (b) preconscious (c) unconscious. (The diagram shows that the ego emerges from the id and that the superego grows out of the ego.) 4. Explain the preeminence of sexual and aggressive conflicts in Freud's theory and describe the operation of defense mechanisms. 4-1. Freud believed that most of our conflicts arise from and _ urges. Conflicts relating to these areas were preeminent in his mind because (1) they are subject to subtle social and, for that reason, are a source of confusion; and (2) they are less likely to be immediately gratified and more apt to be than other urges. 4-2. Following is a list of the defense mechanisms. Match each with the correct description by placing the appropriate letters in the blanks. A. rationalization D. displacement F. regression B. repression E. reaction formation G. identification C. projection A return to an earlier, less mature stage of development. Forming an imaginary or real alliance with a person or group; becoming like them. Creating false but reasonable-sounding excuses. Pushing distressing thoughts into the unconscious. Attributing ones own thoughts, feelings, or conflicts to another. Expressing an emotion that is the exact opposite of the way one really, but unconsciously, feels. Diverting emotional feelings from their original source to a substitute target. 4-3. Using the letters from the previous question, match the defense mechanisms with the following examples. After John and Marsha break up, John says he hates Marsha; this statement helps him defend against his real feelings of affection. "Society is filled with perverts," says the preacher; but later evidence suggests that he is the one with the sexual conflicts. In reaction to the stress of entering college, Alice starts acting like a grade-school kid. Bruce acts like John Wayne, and he owns tapes of all the Duke's movies. Mary is angry at her mother, so she kicks her baby brother. Answers: 4-1. sexual, aggressive, norms (rules, controls), frustrated (thwarted, unfulfilled) 4-2. F, G, A, B, C, E, D 4-3. E, C, F, G, D. PERSONALITY: THEORY. RESEARCH AND ASSESSMENT 223 5. Outline Freud's psychosexual stages of development and their theorized relations to adult personality. 5-1. List Freud's stages of psychosexual development, in the order in which they are supposed to occur, in the blanks below. Place the ages in the parentheses. (a) _ (b) _ (c) _ (d) _ (e) _ 5-2. The following behaviors or personality characteristics are supposed to result from fixation at a particular psychosexual stage. Place the names of the correct stages in the blanks. (a) She has problems with anger control, is hostile toward people in authority, and defies any attempt at regulation of her behavior. _ (b) He eats too much, drinks too much, and smokes. _ (c) He has occasional outbursts of hostility toward his father that he can't understand. In family argu ments he sides with his mother. _ 5-3. The Oedipus complex occurs during the stage, between the ages of _________ and . This complex theoretically involves an erotically tinged attraction toward the (same-sex/opposite-sex) parent and a strong hostility toward the (same-sex/ opposite-sex) parent. Resolution of the Oedipus complex involves..{increasing/stopping) both the child's erotic attraction and the child's hostility. Answers: 5-1. (a) oral (first year) (b) anal (second year) (c) phallic (ages 3 through 5) (d) latency (age 5 to puberty) (e) genital (puberty on) 5-2. (a) anal (b) oral (c) phallic 5-3. phallic, 3, 5, opposite-sex, same-sex, stopping. 6. Summarize the revisions of Freud's theory proposed by Jung and Adler. 6-1. Freud devised the theory and method of treatment termed psychoanalysis. To differentiate his approach from Freud's, lung called his theory . Like Freud, lung emphasized the unconscious determinants of personality. Unlike Freud, he proposed that the unconscious consists of two layers, a unconscious and a unconscious. The personal unconscious is similar to Freud's unconscious, but it has less emphasis on sexuality. The collective unconscious is a repository of inherited, ancestral memories that lung termed 6-2. lung's major contribution to psychology is considered by many to be his description of two major personality types: , reserved, contemplative people who tend to be concerned with their own internal world of thoughts; and , outgoing people who are more interested in the external world of others. 224 CHAPTER TWELVE 6-3. For Freud, the driving energy behind the human personality was sexuality; for lung it may have been the collective unconscious. For Adler, it was striving for and the attempt to over come childhood feelings of inferiority. Efforts to overcome imagined or real inferiorities involve _________ through development of one's abilities. While Adler considered compensation to be a normal mechanism, he saw as an abnormal attempt to conceal feelings of inferiority. 6-4. Adler is associated with the term , an exaggerated feeling of inadequacy supposedly caused by parental pampering or neglect in early childhood. To a greater extent than either Freud or lung, Adler emphasized the effects of the social context on personality development. For example, he thought that (that is, whether one is an only child, first-born, second-born, etc.) had a major effect on personality. Although the concept created considerable interest, birth order has turned out to be a (weaker/ stronger) and (more/less) consistent factor than he had supposed. Answers: 6-1. analytical psychology, personal, collective, archetypes 6-2. introverts, extraverts 6-3. superiority, compensation, overcompensation 6-4. inferiority complex, birth order, weaker, less. 7. Summarize the strengths and weaknesses of the psychodynamic approach to personality. 7-1. Psychoanalytic formulations have had a major impact on the field of psychology. List the three contribu tions discussed in your text. 7-2. Psychoanalytic formulations have also been extensively criticized. After each of the following statements list the particular criticism, from the discussion in your text, that the statement invites. (a) Freud proposed that females develop weaker superegos and that they have a chronic sense of inferiority caused by penis envy. _ (b) Although he discussed some characteristics associated with the psychosexual stages, Freud didn't really specify which events, occurring during which childhood stages, produce which sets of personality traits. _ (c) Support for the theories has been provided solely by clinical case studies and by clinical intuition. Answers: 7-1. the discovery that unconscious forces can influence behavior, that internal conflict may generate psychological distress, and that early childhood experiences influence the adult personality 7-2. (a) sexism (b) vague (untestable ideas) (c) inadequate or weak evidence. PERSONALITY: THEORY, RESEARCH AND ASSESSMENT 225 BEHAVIORAL PERSPECTIVES 8. Discuss how Skinner's principles of operant conditioning can be applied to the structure and development of personality. 8-1. Which of the following processes plays an important part in Skinner's ideas about human behavior? a. mental conflict b. the mind c. free will d. none of the above 8-2. According to Skinner, much of our behavior is affected by reinforcement, punishment, or extinction-in other words, by the environmental that follow our behavior. For example, if some individuals behave in a consistently aggressive manner (i.e., have aggressive personality traits), they do so because they have been for behaving aggressively in the past. 8-3. Skinner recognized that there are differences between people and that people behave relatively consis tently over time. Distinctiveness and consistency occur, however, not because of what's going on in an individual's mind but because of what has occurred previously in their _ 8-4. Thus, for Skinner, personality is not mental, but environmental. People's minds don't change, their environment changes. Skinner makes a strong case for the point of view that our behavior is caused or _________ rather than free, and that the determinants are largely _ rather than genetic. Answers: 8-1. d 8-2. consequences (stimuli, events), reinforced 8-3. environment 8-4. determined, environmental. 9. Describe Bandura's social learning theory and compare it to Skinner's viewpoint. 9-1. In what respect is Bandura's point of view similar to Skinner's? 9-2. Three of the major differences between Bandura's and Skinner's viewpoints involve the concepts listed below. Carefully define and explain these concepts and indicate how they represent a difference from Skinner's position. (a) reciprocal determinism: (b) observational learning: (c) self-efficacy: 226 CHAPTER TWELVE 9-3. According to Bandura whom do we imitate, and in what circumstances? Answers: 9-1. It is similar in that Bandura believes that personality is largely shaped through learning. 9-2. (a) Reciprocal determinism refers to the point of view that not only does environment determine behavior, as Skinner asserted, but that behavior determines environment, and, further, that behavior, environment, and mental processes all mutually affect one another. (b) Observational learning is the process through which we learn behaviors by observing the consequences of someone else's (i.e., a model's) behavior. For example, we learn not only by being reinforced, as Skinner proposed, but by observing someone else being reinforced. (c) Self-efficacy is a belief in our ability to perform certain behaviors. This belief affects whether we undertake those behaviors and how well we perform them. Skinner makes no allowance for mentalistic concepts such as self-efficacy. 9-3. We tend to imitate models whom we like, consider attractive and powerful, view as similar to ourselves, and whom we observe being reinforced. 10. Identify Mischel's major contribution to personality theory and indicate why his ideas have generated so much controversy. 10-1. Mischel's major contribution to personality theory is his contention that human behavior is determined to a much greater extent by the than by 102. Why is this such a controversial idea for personality theory? Answers: 10-1. situation (situational factors), personality (personality traits) 10-2. The notion is controversial because the very definition of personality involves the word consistency. Mischel's findings suggest that behavior is not as consistent as personality theorists may have thought, that it is strongly affected by an ever-changing situation. 11. Summarize the strengths and weaknesses of the behavioral approach to personality. 11-1. The major strengths of the behavioral approach have been its commitment to empirical _________. Empirical means observable, and for the behaviorists the subject matter of the science of human behavior must be, at some level, _ 11-2. The major weaknesses of the behavioral approach, according to its critics, have been its overdependence on research involving subjects, the nature of its objec tion to the concepts of free will and cognition, and its view of personality as nothing more than a series of stimulus-response associations. Answers: 11-1. research, observable 11-2. animal, dehumanizing, fragmented. HUMANISTIC PERSPECTIVES 12. Explain how humanism was a reaction against both the behavioral and psychodynamic approaches and discuss the assumptions of the humanistic view. 12-1. The humanistic movement reacted against the behavioral approach because of its mechanistic view of personality and its emphasis on research, and against the psychoanalytic ap proach because of its emphasis on drives. PERSONALITY: THEORY, RESEARCH AND ASSESSMENT 227 12-2. The humanistic viewpoint found fault with both movements because they stressed _________, or absolute causation. The humanists also thought that the behaviorists and the Freudians failed to recognize the (unique/common) qualities of human behavior. 12-3. Humanistic psychology emphasizes the (similarities/differences) between human beings and the other animal species; believes we (are controlled by/can rise above) our biological heritage; asserts that we are largely (rational/irrational) creatures; and maintains that a person's (subjective/objective) view ofthe world is more important than reality. Answers: 12-1. animal, primitive (animalistic) 12-2. determinism, unique 12-3. differences, can rise above, rational, subjective, objective. 13. Identify the single structural construct in Rogers's person-centered theory and summarize his view of personality development. 13-1. Who are you? What are you like? What are your unique qualities? What is your typical behavior? Your answers to these questions are likely to reflect what Rogers called the _ 13-2. Although Ralph tends to be a submissive and somewhat lazy person (and that is the way his friends, . family, and co-workers describe him), he views himself as hard-working and dynamic, a leader both on the job and at home. (a) What is Ralph's self-concept? (b) Is his self-concept congruent or incongruent? (c) According to Rogers, what parental behavior may have led to this incongruence? (d) According to Rogers, what parental behavior would have resulted in Ralph's achieving congruence rather than incongruence? 13-3. Define the following Rogerian concepts. (a) conditional love: (b) unconditional love: 228 CHAPTER TWELVE 13-4. What is defensiveness for Rogers? Answers: 13-1. self or self-concept 13-2. (a) that he is hard-working, dynamic, and a leader (b) incongruent (c) conditional love or acceptance (d) unconditional love or acceptance 13-3. (a) affection given conditionally, the condition being that the child or adult must live up to another's expectations (b) affection given without conditions, full acceptance of the person not dependent on what he or she is or does. 13-4. As with Freud, people defend against anxiety by distorting or denying reality. For Rogers, people's defensiveness arises when people defend their self concepts against inconsistent experiences. Thus, defensiveness is related to incongruence. 14. Explain Maslow's hierarchy of needs and summarize his findings on the characteristics of self actualizing people. 14-1. Maslow proposed that human needs are arranged in a hierarchy, usually depicted as a pyramid, with the most basic, physiological needs at the and higher-level needs closer to the 14-2. The lower level needs would include needs for food, water, and factors related to survival and security. Next in the hierarchy would be a need for acceptance by others. Higher level needs, called ________ needs, would include the need for knowledge and aesthetic beauty. At the top of the pyramid is the need for , the need to express one's full potential. 14-3. A higher level need would be activated only after a lower level need is satisfied. For example, a need for knowledge would be activated (before/after) needs for esteem, belongingness, and several lower level needs had been reasonably well satisfied. 14-4. In a few words, what did Maslow mean by self-actualization? 14-5. Suppose a woman had the talent and ambition to be a mathematician but followed the urging of others and became a nurse instead. How does her behavior relate to self-actualization and mental health, according to Maslow? 14-6. Which of the following, according to Maslow, are characteristic of self-actualized people? Place Y in the blank if the description applies, N if it does not. spontaneous has more profound emotional experiences than others uncomfortable being alone not dependent on others for approval thrive on their work extreme in personality (e.g., either conforming or rebellious) PERSONALlrY: THEORY, RESEARCH AND ASSESSMENT 229 Answers: 14-1. bottom, top 14-2. growth, self-actualization 14-3. after 14-4. the need to fUlfill one's potential 14-5. She is not self-actualized, so she is not as healthy as she could be. 14-6. Y, Y, N, Y, Y, N. 15. Summarize the strengths and weaknesses of the humanistic approach to personality. 15-1. To its credit, the humanistic movement called attention to the possibility that a person's __________ views may be more important than objective reality; The movement also emphasized the importance of the or self-concept and stressed the study of the (normaVabnormal) personality. 15-2. Critics have also identified several weaknesses of the humanistic formulations. Match the weaknesses listed below with the statements by placing the appropriate letters in the blanks. a. poor testability b. unrealistic view of human nature c. inadequate evidence Humanistic psychologists tend to scorn research, so little experimental support for their views has emerged. Even without research, some of the descriptions, such as of self-actualized personalities, have an idealized, perfectionistic ring. Humanistic ideas are frequently difficult to define, so research on some concepts is difficult or impossible. Answers: IS-I. subjective, self, normal 15-2. C, B, A. BIOLOGICAL PERSPECTIVES 16. Describe Eysenck's theory of personality. 16-1. According to Eysenck, individual differences in personality can be understood in terms of a hierarchy of traits. At the top of the hierarchy are three fundamental higher-order traits from which all other traits derive: , and _ 16-2. Eysenck asserted that a major factor in personality involves the ease with which people can be _________. Eysenck believed that differences in conditionability, like personality differ ences in general, are to a large extent (environmentally/genetically) determined. 16-3. Conditionability, in turn, is related to extraversion-introversion. According to Eysenck (extraverts/ introverts) have higher levels of physiological arousal, a characteristic that makes them (more/less) readily conditioned. 16-4. Why would conditionability be related to introversion? Because easily conditioned people could be readily conditioned to fear social situations. People who fear social situations may be classified as 230 CHAPTER TWELVE 16-5. Research evidence examining Eysenck's idea about introversion ilnd physiological arousal is (mixed! clearcut). While there does seem to be a physiological basis for introversion, it has been hard to establish the role of arousal. Answers: 16-1. extraversion, neuroticism, psychoticism 16-2. conditioned, genetically 16-3. introverts, more 16-4. introverts 16-5. mixed. 17. Summarize behavioral genetics research on personality and its conclusions. 17-1. The most important and conclusive result from the various twin studies is the finding that the personali ties of (identical/fraternal) twins reared (together/apart) were more similar than those of (identical/ fraternal) twins reared (together/apart). This outcome has been found with several dependent measures, including the factors of the Big Five personality inventory as well as peer ratings. 17-2. Approximately what percentage of the variance in personality is assumed to be caused by genetic factors? a. 10 to 20 percent b. 20 to 40 percent c. 40 to 60 percent d. 60 to 80 percent 17-3. How important a determinant of personality is family environment, according to the results of these studies? a. of very little importance b. of about the same importance as heredity c. more important than heredity 17-4. The twin studies have had a major impact on the way psychologists think about the causes of human behavior. Why are the results so important and so surprising? 17-5. Since twin studies conclude that heredity has a major impact on personality, then at some point personal ity should be linked to specific genetic structures. In fact this has occurred for the characteristic of ______ seeking. Although the result has been replicated, the findings have been (inconsistent! consistent), which suggests that the relationship between the gene and the trait may be somewhat weak. Answers: 17-1. identical, apart, fraternal, together. This is the most important comparison because, even though the fraternal twins shared the same environment, their common environment did not make them nearly as similar as twins who did not have a common environment but who shared the same heredity. 17-2. c 17-3. a 17-4. Theories of develop ment and personality have tended to stress the importance of the environment, especially the family environment; the recent twin studies find heredity to be very important and family environment to be of little importance. Thus, the results are contrary to the expectations of most of us and of much of the theorizing in the field of personality. 17-5. novelty, inconsistent. PERSONALITY: THEORY, RESEARCH AND ASSESSMENT 231 18. Outline Buss's explanation for why the Big Five traits are important. 18-1. As group animals, we gain an advantage by being able to predict the behavior of other human beings. That is, the ability to recognize the "Big Five" characteristics in others has for our species. value 18-2. For example, it is desirable to know who in our group will fulfill their commitments, the trait of _________ ; who will fall apart under stress, the trait of ; who will be a good problem solver, the trait of , and so on. 18-3. The fact that these traits appear as dimensions across a variety of cultures attests to their importance. For Buss, our ability to these traits in others also has adaptive significance. Answers: 8-1. adaptive (survival, evolutionary) 18-2. conscientiousness, neuroticism, openness to experience 18-3. recognize. 19. Summarize the strengths and weaknesses of the biological approach to personality. 19-1. People frequently blame parents for kids' personalities. I recently asked a friend of mine why she thought a mutual acquaintance of ours was so obnoxious. She said, "Well, raised with such crazy parents, what would you expect?" I asked, "Is that an argument for environment or heredity?" That is one of the benefits of the twin studies: They put data in place of speculation. But what are some of the weaknesses of the biological approach? One is that heritability ratios should be regarded only as _________ that will vary depending on sampling and other procedures. Another is that the attempt to apportion variance into heredity and environment is artificial since heredity and environment always . Finally, there is no truly comprehensive biological _________ of personality. Answers: 19-1. estimates, interact, theory. CONTEMPORARY EMPIRICAL APPROACHES TO PERSONALITY 20. Discuss the meaning of sensation seeking and identify the characteristics of high sensation seekers. 20-1. Sensation seeking refers to the degree to which people tend to seek or avoid high levels of sensory stimulation, a tendency that is to a large extent genetically inherited, according to Zuckerman. Indicate which of the following characteristics describe high-sensation seekers and which describe low, by placing an H or L in the blanks. Risk taking Easily bored Takes comfort in the routine More likely to drink heavily More likely to engage in recreational drug use 232 CHAPTER TWELVE Tends to ignore middle class rules and conventions Relishes extensive travel, finding new and unusual friends Tends toward sexual experimentation Tends to like mountain climbing, skydiving, scuba diving Relatively tolerant of stress More likely to have difficulty in school, exhibit poor health habits 20-2. Sensation seeking seems to be a fairly potent personality characteristic that may influence the course of romantic relationships. Do people tend to prefer partners who are similar to themselves in sensation seeking, or do opposites attract with regard to this characteristic? Answers: 20-1. H, H, L, H, H, H, H, H, H, H, H 20-2. As is the case with personality traits in general, people prefer partners who are similar to themselves in sensation seeking. 21. Explain what is meant by self-monitoring and discuss the effects of self-monitoring on interpersonal relationships. 21-1. Describe the characteristics of people who are high in self-monitoring with regard to the following situations: (a) impression management They are relatively (good at/poor at) creating the desired impression. (b) control of facial expressions: They are (able/not able) to feign emotion by controlling their facial expressions. (c) spotting deception: They are (good at/poor at) spotting deception in others. (d) dating and sexual relationships: They tend to have (more/fewer) partners and (stronger/weaker) emotional commitments. 21-2. The two personality traits discussed in this and the previous learning objective overlap to some extent. To review these concepts, match the specific trait with the behavioral descriptions by placing the appropriate abbreviations in the blanks. Hi-SS high sensation seeking Lo-SS low sensation seeking Hi-SM high self-monitoring Lo-SM low self-monitoring. (a) __ Last summer Ralph decided on the spur of the moment to sell his car and spend two months traveling by foot in India. Ralph's hobbies include sky-diving and gambling. (b) __ Margie figures she knows what people want and she successfully adjusts her personality to fit the occasion or person she is with. She is good at feigning emotion and also good at detect ing deception in others. She changes sexual partners frequently and avoids emotional commitments. PERSONALITY: THEORY, RESEARCH AND ASSESSMENT 233 (c) __ Alice usually doesn't try to hide her feelings and isn't very goud at it when she does try. She prefers close relationships with the opposite sex to playing the field. She isn't especially gullible, but she also isn't really good at figuring out when people are trying to deceive her. (d) __ Jan hates it when her boyfriend drives too fast, and she refuses to go skiing with him because she thinks it's too dangerous. Answers: 21-1. (a) good at (b) able (c) good at (d) more, weaker 21-2. (a) Hi-SS (b) Hi-SM (c) Lo-5M (d) La-55. CULTURE AND PERSONALITY 22. Summarize research on the cross-cultural validity of the five-factor model and on cultural variations in conceptions of self. 22-1. For a decade or so after World War II, researchers using the Freudian model attempted to find a modal personality type representative of each culture. This attempt was (successful/not successful). 22-2. With the current increased attention to cultural factors, interest in the relationship between personality and culture has again surfaced, and the new data have revealed both cross-cultural similarities and differences. With regard to similarity, precisely the same" " personality factors tend to emerge in different cultures. 22-3. With regard to differences, research by Markus and Kitayama clearly indicates that the individualistic orientation characteristic of the West is not universal across cultures. While Americans tend to value (independence/connectedness), Asians value (interdependence/uniqueness) among people. Similarly, while American parents encourage their children to (stand out/blend in), Asian parents emphasize taking pride in the accomplishments of (each individual/the group). 22-4. Even though the Big Five traits appear to emerge in widely different cultures, this does not mean that these and other traits have the same meaning in different cultures. For example, Eastern cultures empha size (self-enhancement/self-criticism), which tends to correlate with lower self-esteem. Somewhat surprisingly, however, self-esteem in these cultures (does/does not) correlate with subjective well-being. Answers: 22-1. not successful 22-2. Big Five 22-3. independence, interdependence, stand out, the group 22-4. self criticism, does not. PUTTING IT IN PERSPECTIVE 23. Explain how the chapter highlighted three of the text's unifying themes. 23-1. We've just discussed one of the three themes emphasized in this chapter, that our behavior is influenced by our cultural heritage. Two other themes prominently demonstrated in the area of personality are that the field is theoretically and that psychology evolves in a _ context. 234 CHAPTER TWELVE 23-2. Freudian, behavioral, and biological perspectives of personality assume that behavior is determined; the __________ perspective does not. The biological perspective stresses genetic inheritance; the behavioral perspective stresses (heredity/environment). As these examples illustrate, the study of personality has produced an enormous amount of theoretical _ 23-3. Concerning sociohistorical context, it is clear that theories of personality have strongly affected our culture. For example, the surrealist art movement, begun in the I920s, derives directly from _________ psychology. as do other movements in literature and the arts. And the current debate on the effects of media violence is to a large extent a product of research in social _________ theory. 23-4. In turn, culture has affected psychology. For example, it seems quite likely that the sexually repressive climate of Victorian Vienna caused Freud to emphasize the aspects of human behavior; and it is clear, from Freud's own description, that World War I influenced his development of the second Freudian instinct, the instinct. Thus, psychology evolves in a _________ context. Answers: 23-1. diverse, sociohistoricaI23-2. humanistic, environment, diversity 23-3. psychoanalytic (Freudian), learning 23-4. sexual, aggression, sociohistorical. APPLICATION: UNDERSTANDING PERSONALITY ASSESSMENT 24. Outline the four principal uses of personality tests. 24-1. List the four principal uses of personality tests in the blanks next to the correct descriptions. (a) Psychological : Measuring personality traits in empirical studies. (b) _________: Advising people on career plans and decisions. (c) _________ selection: Choosing employees in business and government. (d) Clinical : Assessing psychological disorders. Answers: 24-1. (a) research (b) Counseling (c) Personnel (d) diagnosis. 25. Describe the MMPI, 16PF, and NEO Personality Inventory and summarize the strengths and weaknesses of self-report inventories. 25-1. The MMPI, 16PF, and NEO Personality Inventories are (projective/self-report) tests. All three tests are also used to measure (single/multiple) traits. 25-2. Identify which tests (MMPI, 16PF, or NEO) are described by each of the following. (a) Originally designed to diagnose psychological disorders. (b) Originally designed to assess the normal personality. (c) Contains 187 items. (d) Contains 567 items. PERSONALITY: THEORY. RESEARCH AND ASSESSMENT 235 (e) Measures the "big five" personality traits. (f) Includes four validity scales to help detect deception. 25-3. The major strength of self-report inventories, in comparison with simply asking a person what they are like, is that they provide a more precise and more (objective/personal) measure of personality. 25-4. The major weakness of self-report inventories is that they are subject to several sources of error, includ ing the following: (1) Test-takers may intentionally fake responses, that is, may engage in deliberate ______~ __. (2) While not realizing it, peOQkrnay answer questions in ways to make themselves "look good," the bias. (3) In addition, some people tend either to agree or to disagree with nearly every statement on a test, a source of error involv ing sets. Answers: 25-1. self-report, multiple 25-2. (a) MMPI (b) l6PF, NEG (c) l6PF (d) MMPI (e) NEG (f) MMPI 25-3. objective 25-4. deception, social desirability, response. 26. Describe the projective hypothesis and summarize the strengths and weaknesses of projective tests. 26-1. If you have ever looked at clouds and described the images you've seen, you've done something similar to taking a projective test. If you thought that the images you saw reflected something about your personality, then you also accepted the projective hypothesis. The projective hypothesis is the idea that people will tend to their characteristics onto ambiguous stimuli, so that what they see reveals something about their personalities and problems. 26-2. Two major projective tests are the Rorschach, a series of , and the TAT, a series of simple 26-3. The advantages of projective tests are that (1) since the way the tests are interpreted is not at all obvious, it is difficult for people to engage in intentional ; and (2) projective tests may help tap problems or aspects of personality of which people are _ 26-4. The major weakness of projective tests concerns inadequate evidence that they are either _________ (consistent) or (measure what they are intended to measure). Nonetheless, the tests are still valued and used by many clinicians. It should also be noted that when users agree on a systematic scoring procedure, some projective tests have shown adequate reliabil ity and validity. Thus, as discussed in Chapter 10, the has proven to be a particularly useful test in research on achievement motivation. Answers: 26-1. project 26-2. inkblots, pictures (scenes) 26-3. deception, unconscious (unaware) 26-4. reliable, valid, TAT. 236 CHAPTER TWELVE CRITICAL THINKING APPLICATION 27. Discuss how hindsight bias affects everyday analyses of personality, as well as some theoretical analyses of personality. 27-1. I am writing this sentence on the weekend after an enormous drop in the stock market, the largest point loss (not percentage loss) in Dow history. I know what faces me Monday morning: the pundits and my / colleagues will say they saw it coming. If everyone saw it coming, why didn't everyone sell last week? Because we didn't see it coming. Rather, once exposed to information, we are inclined to believe that we already knew it, the cognitive tendency known as the _ 27-2. Recall from Chapter 11 the experiment with the three-year-old and the candy box. The child first guesses that candy is in the candy box. After the child sees that crayons are in the candy box, the three-year-old will usually insist that he always thought that there were crayons in the box. The five-year-old doesn't make this mistake, but these data suggest that the begins early, that from a young age we reconstruct past events in terms of information. 27-3. Suppose you meet someone who is achievement motivated and fiercely independent. You learn that this person was brought up by adoptive parents who were somewhat distant and undemonstrative. Would you connect the events, thinking that the parent's child-rearing style accounted for their child's indepen dence? Or, suppose that the person brought up by these parents is depressed and chronically unemployed. Would you connect the parenting and personality in this case, too? You might, because people tend to interpret events in terms of , which is a definition of the hindsight bias. 27-4. What is the hindsight bias? Write a definition in the space below. 27-5. In what way might psychoanalytic interpretations involve the hindsight bias? 27-6. How might evolutionary theory's account of the emergence of the Big Five traits reflect the hindsight bias? Answers: 27-1. hindsight bias (By the way, it is now Monday morning and the market is up. I knew it!) 27-2. hindsight bias, present (current, outcome, recent) 27-3. past (previous), present information (outcomes, current information) 27-4. Once we know something, we tend to reinterpret past events in terms of that information. Or, once exposed to information, we tend to think we knew it all along. Or, knowing the outcome of events tends to bias our recall and interpretation of those events. 27-5. Once exposed to the fact that the Big Five traits appear world-wide. a theorist can fairly easily explain why that might be the case. If a dozen entirely different traits had emerged, one could imagine that there could be an evolutionary explanation for that occurrence as well. 27-6. Once the analyst is exposed to an individual's personality, he or she can easily explain how the person's childhood experiences could account for the present behavior. PERSONALITY: THEORY, RESEARCH AND ASSESSMENT 237 REVIEW OF KEY TERMS Archetypes Incongruence Rationalization Behaviorism Introverts Reaction formation Collective unconscious Model Reality principle Compensation Need for self-actualization Reciprocal determinism Conscious Observational learning Regression Defense mechanisms Oedipal complex Repression Displacement Personal unconscious Self-actualizing persons Ego Personality Self-concept Extraverts Personality trait Self-efficacy Factor analysis Phenomenological approach Self-monitoring Fixation Pleasure principle Self-report inventories Hierarchy of needs Preconscious Sensation seeking Hindsight bias Projection Striving for superiority Humanism Projective tests Superego Id Psychodynamic theories Unconscious Identification Psychosexual stages 1. An individual's unique constellation of consistent behavioral traits. 2. A characteristic that represents a durable disposition to behave in a particular way in a variety of situations. 3. A systematic arrangement of needs, according to priority, in which basic, physiological needs must be met before social or growth needs are aroused. 4. All the diverse theories, descended from the work of Sigmund Freud, that focus on unconscious mental forces. 5. The primitive, instinctive component of personality that operates according to the pleasure principle. 6. The id's demands for immediate gratification of its urges. 7. The decision-making component of personality that operates according to the reality principle. 8. The ego's delay of gratification of the id's urges until appropriate outlets and situations can be found. 9. The moral component of personality that incorporates social standards about what represents right and wrong. 10. Consists of whatever you are aware of at a particular point in time. 11. Contains material just beneath the surface of awareness that can be easily retrieved. 12. Contains thoughts, memories, and desires that are well below the surface of conscious awareness. 13. The series of largely unconscious Freudian reactions that protect a person from unpleasant emotions such as anxiety or guilt. 14. The defense mechanism that pushes distressing thoughts and feelings into the unconscious or keeps them from emerging into consciousness. 15. Attributing your own thoughts, feelings, or motives to another. 16. Creating false but plausible excuses to justify unacceptable behavior. 17. Diverting emotional feelings (usually anger) from their original source to a substitute target. 238 CHAPTER TWELVE 18. 19. 20. 21. 22. 23. 24. 25. 26. 27. 28. 29. 30. 31. 32. 33. 34. 35. 36. 37. 38. 39. 40. 41. 42. 43. 44. PERSONALITY: THEORY, RESEARCH AND ASSESSMENT Behaving in a way that is exactly the opposite of one's true (but unconscious) feelings. Reverting to immature patterns of behavior. Bolstering self-esteem by forming an imaginary or real alliance with some person or group. Developmental periods with a characteristic sexual focus that leave their mark on adult personality A failure to move forward from one stage to another as expected. Characterized by erotically tinged desires for one's opposite-sex parent and hostility toward one's same-sex parent. Jungian concept referring to the structure holding material that is not in one's awareness because it has been repressed or forgotten. A storehouse of latent memory traces inherited from our ancestral past. Emotionally charged images and thought forms that have universal meaning. People who tend to be preoccupied with the internal world of their own thoughts, feelings, and experiences. People who tend to be interested in the external world of people and things. An Adlerian concept referring to a universal to improve oneself, and to master life's challenges. Efforts to overcome imagined or real inferiorities by developing one's abilities. Personality tests that ask people a series of questions about their characteristic behavior. A statistical procedure that identifies clusters of variables that are highly correlated with one another. A theoretical orientation based on the premise that scientific psychology should study only observable behavior. The assumption that internal mental events, external environmental events, and overt behavior all influence one another. Learning that occurs when an organism's responding is influenced by the observation of others. A person whose behavior is observed by another. Our belief about our ability to perform behaviors that should lead to expected outcomes. A theoretical orientation that emphasizes the unique qualities of humans, especially their freedom and potential for personal growth. Approach that assumes we have to appreciate individuals' personal, subjective experiences to truly understand their behavior. A collection of beliefs about one's own nature, unique qualities, and typical behavior. A Rogerian concept referring to the degree of disparity between one's self concept and one's actual experience. The need to fulfill one's potential. People with exceptionally healthy personalities, marked by continued personal growth. The biased interpretation of past events in terms of present information. 239 45. A generalized preference for high or low levels of sensory stimulation. 46. The degree to which people attend to and control the impression they make on others in social interactions. 47. A person's overall assessment of her or his personal adequacy or worth. Answers: 1. personality 2. personality trait 3. hierarchy of needs 4. psychodynamic theories 5. id 6. pleasure principle 7. ego 8. reality principle 9. superego 10. conscious 11. preconscious 12. unconscious 13. defense mechanisms 14. repression 15. projection 16. rationalization 17. displacement 18. reaction formation 19. regression 20. identifica tion 21. psychosexual stages 22. fixation 23. Oedipal complex 24. personal unconscious 25. collective unconscious 26. archetypes 27. introverts 28. extraverts 29. striving for superiority 30. compensation 31. self-report inventories 32. factor analysis 33. behaviorism 34. reciprocal determinism 35. observational learning 36. model 37. self-efficacy 38. humanism 39. phenomenological approach 40. self-concept 41. incongruence 42. need for self-actualization 43. self-actualizing persons 44. hindsight bias 45. sensation seeking 46. self-monitoring 47. self-esteem. REVIEW OF KEY PEOPLE Alfred Adler Sigmund Freud Walter Mischel Albert Bandura Carl Jung Carl Rogers Raymond Cattell Abraham Maslow B. F. Skinner Hans Eysenck 1. The founder of psychoanalysis. 2. Developed the theory called analytical psychology; anticipated the humanists' emphasis on personal growth and self-actualization. 3. Founder of an approach to personality named individual psychology. 4. Modern behaviorism's most prominent theorist, recognized for his theories of operant conditioning. 5. A contemporary behavioral theorist who elaborated the concept of observational learning. 6. His chief contribution to personality theory has been to focus attention on the extent to which situational factors govern behavior. 7. One of the fathers of the human potential movement, he called his approach a person-centered theory. 8. The humanist who developed a theory of self-actualization. 9. Theorist who proposed that there are 16 basic personality factors. 10. He went against the spirit of the times by proposing a biologically oriented theory of personality. Answers: 1. Freud 2. lung 3. Adler 4. Skinner 5. Bandura 6. Mischel 7. Rogers 8. Maslow 9. Cattell 10. Eysenck M SELF-QUIZ 1. Personality traits are characterized by a. consistency and distinctiveness b.. charm and wit c. change as a function of the situation d. lack of individual differences 240 CHAPTER TWELVE 2. Someone attributes his thoughts or feelings or conflicts to someone else. For example, although he chronically interrupts people, he thinks that other people interrupt him. What Freudian defense mechanism is illustrated? a. rationalization b. reaction formation c. regression d. projection 3. Which of the following is entirely unconscious, according to Freud? a. the id b. the ego c. the superego d. the archetype 4. Although Osmo at an unconscious level has great hatred for Cosmo, he believes that he likes Cosmo and, to the outside world, gives all the appearance of liking him. Which defense mechanism is Osmo using? a. regression b. reaction formation c. projection d. rationalization 5. The Oedipal complex occurs during the a. oral stage b. anal stage c. phallic stage d. genital stage 6. Which of the following concepts did Carl lung originate? a. id b. superego c. inferiority complex d. introversion-extraversion 7. Which of the following did Adler emphasize in his theory of personality? a. striving for superiority b. castration anxiety c. introversion-extraversion d. the collective unconscious 8. Much of the behavior that we call personality results from reinforcement and observational learning, according to a. lung b. Skinner c. Bandura d. Adler 9. Which of the following tends to emphasize freedom and personal growth in its view of human behavior? a. the psychoanalytic approach b. the biological approach c. the behavioral approach d. the humanistic approach 10. According to Rogers, what causes incongruence? a. an inherited sense of irony b. conditional acceptance or affection c. unconditional acceptance or affection d. unconditioned stimuli PERSONALITY: THEORY. RESEARCH AND ASSESSMENT 241 11. Herb had the desire and potential to be a violinist but became, instead, a trader in hog futures. He decided never to touch the violin again. What is wrong with Herb, according to Maslow? a. He suffers from incongruence. b. He suffers from castration anxiety. c. He has not achieved self-actualization. d. He has an inferiority complex. 12. Which of the following views personality in terms of the adaptive significance to the Big Five traits? a. Abraham Maslow b. William James c. the behavioral approach d. the evolutionary approach 13. Your friend spends money like water. When you learn that he is from a poverty-stricken background, you attribute his spending patterns to his earlier deprivation. According to the critical thinking analysis, you are likely to do this because of a. the hindsight bias b. a self-serving attribution . c. the consistency and distinctiveness of personality d. circular reasoning 14. According to Mischel, what is the major factor that predicts human behavior? a. childhood experience b. specifics of the situation c. extraversion and introversion d. central and peripheral traits 15. You are asked to tell stories about a series of pictures. Which test is being administered to you? a. Rorschach b. MMPI c.TAT d.16PF Answers: 1. a 2. d 3. a 4. b 5. c 6. d 7. a 8. c 9. d 10. b 11. c 12. d 13. a 14. b 15. c. 242 CHAPTER TWELVE
(Series in Affective Science) Paul Gilbert, Bernice Andrews - Shame - Interpersonal Behavior, Psychopathology, and Culture - Oxford University Press, USA (1998)
(Perspectives On Individual Differences) Kenneth H. Craik (Auth.), Kenneth H. Craik, Robert Hogan, Raymond N. Wolfe (Eds.) - Fifty Years of Personality Psychology-Springer US (1993) PDF