Personality & The Environment: A Unidirectional Model Flashcards

1
Q

The unidirectional model; behaviour is seen as?

A

A reflexive and automatic function of the environment [B=f(E)].

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2
Q

What is the most popular unidirectional model?

A

Behaviourism

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3
Q

According to Thorndike, learning is the result of associations forming between?

A

Stimuli and responses (S-R bonds)

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4
Q

Unidirectional model (Thorndike): these associations or habits (or S-R bonds) become strengthened or weakened by?

A

The nature of the S-R pairing.

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5
Q

What was the classic example of Thorndike’s S-R theory?

A

Cat learning to escape from a puzzle box to reach a dish of food just outside the door.

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6
Q

What is essential in order for S-R bonds to become strengthened or weakened?

A

The consequences must be immediate.

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7
Q

Thorndike’s Law of Effect refers to?

A

The strengthening or weakening of a connection between a stimulus and a response as a result of the consequences of the response.

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8
Q

According to Thorndike, what is a satisfying state of affairs and what is an annoying state of affairs? Give an example?

A

Satisfying state of affairs (reward) - the cat pushes the lever and the door immediately opens to reveal the yummy smelling fish.
Annoying state of affairs (punishment) - the cat pushes the lever which immediately activates an electric shock.

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9
Q

Cats in the puzzle box consistently demonstrated a gradual decrease in time to solution as a function of successive trials, leading Thorndike to conclude what?

A

Learning is always incremental rather than insightful.

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10
Q

According to the unidirectional model, behaviour is directly strengthened and weakened by its immediate consequences. Learning is always automatic, mechanical and not …?

A

Mediated by thinking and reasoning.

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11
Q

Social cognitive theory was born out of the social learning theory of Bandura. Bandura rejected the notion that all behaviour , no matter how complex, could be reduced to ..,,?

A

Simple, mechanical stimulus-response bonds.

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12
Q

Social cognitive theory states that mediational processes occur between stimulus and response. Mediational processes include?

A

Memory, thinking, problem solving etc

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13
Q

From the perspective of social cognitive theory, external consequences (extrinsic reward and punishment ) are only one kind of outcome that can regulate human behaviour. What 3 regulatory systems does Bandura propose?

A
  • external consequences
  • vicarious consequences
  • self-produced consequences
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14
Q

Bandura argued that external consequences determine behaviour largely through their …?

A
  • Informative value (expectations)
  • Motivational vale (incentives)
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15
Q

Bandura’s external value: informative value - in the course of learning, people do not only perform responses but also ….. ?

A

Notice the effects they produce.

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16
Q

Bandura’s external value: informative value - by observing the different outcomes of their actions, ….. ?

A

People develop hypotheses about which responses are most appropriate in which settings.

17
Q

Bandura’s external value: informative value - these hypothesised or predicted consequences ….. ?

A

Then serve as a guide for future action ( they enable foresight).

18
Q

Bandura’s external value: informative value - This capacity for reflective thought, foresight and intentional action is grounded in symbolic activity.
Through verbal, numerical, imaginal and other symbols people process and preserve in memory experiences in representational forms. Provide example

A

By manipulating symbols that convey relevant information, one can gain understanding if causal relationships, create new forms of knowledge, solve problems, and deduce consequences without actually performing any activities.

19
Q

External consequences: motivational value - once people discern the existence of conditional relationships between situation, actions and outcomes, they can convert predicted consequences into current motivators of behaviour. Give example.

A
  • They fear and avoid things that have been associated with aversive experiences, but like and seek out those things that have had pleasant associations.
20
Q

External consequences: motivational value - therefore most actions are under the control of …. ?

A

Anticipatory incentives rather than being controlled by immediate consequences.

21
Q

Vicarious consequences: according to social cognitive theory, most learning phenomena occur on a vicarious basis by observing and modelling the behaviour of others. Response consequences experienced by others convey ….. ?

A

Information to observers about the types of actions that are likely to be rewarded and the types of actions that are likely to be punished.

22
Q

Vicarious consequences: the capacity to learn by observation enabled people to …. ?

A

Acquire large integrated patterns of behaviour without having to form them gradually by tedious trial and error.

  • Imagine, how many times would we need to crash a car in order to incrementally strengthen the S-R bond so that we learn to stop at a red light!?!
23
Q

What are Self produced consequences?

A

Refers to a motivational process in which individuals set certain standards of behaviour for themselves and respond to their own actions in self-rewarding ways or self punishing ways.

24
Q

Social cognitive theory emphasises the importance of forethought, goal setting and personal standards in directing human behaviour. Our expectations of personality efficacy around these goals are central to Bandura’s theory. What is perceived self-efficacy?

A

Refers to the beliefs we hold about our ability to achieve our goals and overcome the obstacles that come our way in life.

25
Q

Our sense of ourselves as being capable and able to overcome obstacles is programmed through 4 sources of information according to Bandura. What are these 4 sources of information?

A
  • Performance accomplishment
  • Vicarious experience
  • Verbal persuasion
  • Emotional arousal
26
Q

Explain the self-efficacy program, performance accomplishments

A

Our efforts to overcome obstacles to solve problems are either successful or unsuccessful. Successes raise our mastery expectations, while repeated failures lower them. Especially if the failures occur early in the course of events.

27
Q

Explain the self-efficacy program, vicarious experience.

A

Watching someone else attempt to overcome obstacles can create efficacy expectations in the observer. If I watch someone else succeed in their efforts, then I might be able to persuade myself that I can do it too. Although it helps if the observed person is similar in ability.

28
Q

Explain the self-efficacy program, verbal persuasion,

A

Is the most freely available information source but as Bandura notes, it is also the least effective. “Jade, I have a feeling you are going to ace this test “. My performance accomplishments are more likely to have a great impact on my expectations.

29
Q

Explain the self-efficacy program, emotional arousal.

A

If I am walking out onto the dance stage and I feel my heart beating, my hands sweating, etc. these arousal messages might lower my feelings of self-efficacy. But emotional arousal can have the opposite effect. Feeling wired and tense might indicate to me that I am focused and in the zone.

30
Q

How does Bandura’s perceived self-efficacy have some parallels with Adler’s notion of the mastery motive?

A

The need to become a better adaptation.
The basic human motivation according to Adler is to strive from a felt minus situation to a felt plus situation.

31
Q

According to Bandura perceptions of self-efficacy are largely, generalised or domain specific? Explain.

A

Domain specific
- “Because competencies and evaluative standards vary for different activities, performance in dissimilar areas (eg, school, social and athletic) are likely to produce different self evaluations” Bandura.
- vary Across situations rather than manifest uniformly.

32
Q

Although Bandura generally argues self-efficacy perceptions are largely domain specific, some individuals maintain that the concept of trait self-efficacy has some utility for predicting behaviour. Give an example.

A

Schwarzer (1995) - General self-efficacy scale - the strength of an individual’s belief in his/her own ability to respond to novel or difficult situations and to deal with any arising obstacles and setbacks.

33
Q

What evidence is there in support of the idea that perceived self-efficacy contains a dispositional quantity?

A

Field of quantitative genetics:
- Dispositional self-efficacy
- 1394 adolescent twin pairs
- 75% of the variance in a measure of generalised self-efficacy due to genetic factors.
- non shared environment accounted for the remaining 25% of the variance

34
Q

If self-efficacy expectations do have some trait like features where might generalised self-efficacy sit within the FFM?

A

Meta-analysis by Judge et al (2007) showed generalised self-efficacy population effect size:
N (p = -.35)
E (p = .33)
C (p = .22)
O (p = .20)

35
Q

What domain specific measures of self-efficacy have been linked to the FFM?

A

Studies have found;
C & E positively predict career efficacy
N linked to inefficacious career beliefs
C, E & N explained much of the variance in self-efficacy for participating in self/managed work groups

36
Q

Today most social cognitive theorists account for personality in terms of the person’s distinctive …….?

A

Cognitive affective processing system ( CAPS)