14. Personality Flashcards

1
Q

personality

A

The relatively consistent patterns of thought, feeling, and behavior that characterize each person as a unique individual

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2
Q

trait

A

A hypothetical, relatively stable, inner characteristic that influences the way a person responds to various environmental situations

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3
Q

trait theories of personality

A

Theories of personality that are based on the idea that people can be described and differentiated in terms of hypothetical underlying personality dimensions, called traits, which can be measured by questionnaires or other quantitative means

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4
Q

factor analysis

A

A statistical procedure for analyzing the correlations among various measurements (such as test scores) taken from a given set of individuals; it identifies hypothetical, underlying variables called factors that could account for the observed pattern of correlations and assesses the degree to which each factor is adequately measured by each of the measurements that was used in the analysis.

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5
Q

five-factor model

A

Model holding that a person’s personality is most efficiently described in terms of his or her score on each of five relatively independent global trait dimensions: neuroticism, extraversion, openness to experience, agreeableness, and conscientiousness.

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6
Q

Grit

A

A personality trait defined as perseverance and passion for long-term goals, composed of two lower-order factors, perseverance of effort and consistency of interest

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7
Q

dark triad

A

Three related socially aversive personality traits—narcissism, Machiavellianism, and psychopathy—describing people with “dark personalities.”

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8
Q

narcissism

A

An extreme selfishness in which a person has a grandiose view of his or her own abilities and a need for admiration

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9
Q

Machiavellianism

A

A personality type in which the person is predisposed to manipulate other people, often through deception.

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10
Q

psychopathy

A

A personality trait involving amoral or antisocial behavior, coupled with a lack of empathy and an inability to form meaningful personal relationships. At its extreme, psychopathy is a personality disorder, but it can also be expressed at preclinical levels.

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11
Q

differential susceptibility to environmental influence

A

The idea that people are differentially susceptible to being influenced by their environment. Highly susceptible children (sometimes referred to as orchid children) will flourish in good environments and do especially poorly in adverse environments. Less-susceptible children (sometimes referred to as dandelion children) are less affected by their rearing conditions so that extreme environments (both good and bad) will have less of an impact on their psychological outcomes.

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12
Q

sibling contrast

A

Tendency to emphasize and exaggerate the differences between siblings.

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13
Q

split-parent identification

A

Tendency for each of two siblings to identify with a different one of their two parents

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14
Q

psychoanalysis

A
  1. The theory of the mind developed by Freud, which emphasizes the roles of unconscious mental processes, early childhood experiences, and the drives of sex and aggression in personality formation; also called psychoanalytic theory. (p. 556) 2. Freud’s therapy technique in which such methods as free association, dream analysis, and analysis of transference are used to learn about the person’s unconscious mind; the goal is to make the unconscious conscious.
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15
Q

psychodynamic theories

A

Any theory that describes personality and its development in terms of inner mental forces that are often in conflict with one another and are shaped by experiences in early childhood.

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16
Q

defense mechanisms

A

In psychoanalytic theory, self-deceptive means by which the mind defends itself against anxiety.

17
Q

repression

A

The defense mechanism by which the mind prevents anxiety-provoking ideas from becoming conscious

18
Q

displacement

A

The defense mechanism by which a drive is diverted from one goal to another that is more realistic or acceptable. Also called sublimation in cases where the goal toward which the drive is diverted is highly valued by society.

19
Q

sublimation

A

A form of displacement in which one directs his or her energies toward activities that are particularly valued by society, such as artistic, scientific, or humanitarian endeavors

20
Q

reaction formation

A

The defense mechanism by which the mind turns a frightening wish into its safer opposite

21
Q

projection

A

The defense mechanism by which a person consciously experiences his or her own unconscious emotion or wish as though it belongs to someone else or to some part of the environment

22
Q

rationalization

A

The defense mechanism by which a person uses conscious reasoning to justify or explain away his or her harmful or irrational behaviors or thoughts

23
Q

humanistic theories

A

Personality theories that attempt to focus attention on the whole, unique person, especially on the person’s conscious understanding of his or her self and the world

24
Q

Phenomenological reality

A

Humanistic theorists’ term for each person’s conscious understanding of his or her world

25
Q

self-actualization

A

In humanistic psychology, the fulfillment of drives that go beyond one’s survival needs and pertain to psychological growth, creativity, and self-expression

26
Q

social-cognitive theories of personality

A

Theories of personality that emphasize the roles of beliefs and habits of thought that are acquired through one’s unique experiences in the social environment, sometimes called social-learning or social-cognitive-learning theories

27
Q

locus of control

A

According to Rotter, a person’s perception of the typical source of control over rewards. Internal locus of control refers to the perception that people control their own rewards through their own behavior, and external locus of control refers to the perception that rewards are controlled by external circumstances or fate.

28
Q

self-efficacy

A

A person’s subjective sense of his or her own ability to perform a particular task or set of tasks.