Personality Change Flashcards

1
Q

Historical Perspectives

A

Freud (1923), personality fixed by age 5 - psychosexual development suggests personality determined in childhood
- McCrae & Costa (1999), personality fixed by 30
- Lewis (1999) environment is only influence of personality

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2
Q

Problems with personality being set

A
  • There would be no point in rehab
  • If personality can change then people will be more open to attempts at bettering a person
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3
Q

Rank order consistency

A
  • How are people placed within a group over time, is most anxious person always the most anxious.
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4
Q

Test-retest correlation

A
  • across two assessment time points easiest way to quanitify rank rank order stability
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5
Q

Mean level change

A
  • How the group changes over time. I.e. whole population of 21 year olds over time.
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6
Q

Individual differences

A
  • Personality change on a individual level
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7
Q

Longitudinal study

A
  • same measure used on a population at time point 1 and 2
  • Could be a large loss of participants it’s called attrition when this happens
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8
Q

Meta analysis

A
  • Quantitative statistical analysis of several but similar experiments or studies in order to test the pooled data for statistical significance
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9
Q

How to carry out meta analysis

A
  • Inclusion criteria has to be set.
  • All the studies have to meet the strict criteria for example, size of the sample
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10
Q

Roberts & DelVecchio (2000)

A
  • meta analysis examining longitudinal studies
  • Strict Criteria i.e sample non clinical
  • Results suggest personality is stable after 20 years
  • no gender differences found.
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11
Q

How can childhood temperament predict adult behaviours
Slustke et al (2012)

A
  • 1000 children recruited at birth
  • Assessed at 3 years
  • cog and motor assessment
  • Observer completed behaviour rating scales
  • only 100ps undercontrolled, this group was used
  • They had above mean for neurotcism
  • More likely to have gambling problems
  • This study is important as interventions can be put in place at a young age.
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12
Q

Cross sectional study

A
  • Different people at different ages at one point in time
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13
Q

Roberts, Walton and Viechtbaur (2006)

A
  • Meta analysis
  • 50,000 participants
  • openness to experience increases in teenage years, decline over all
  • Extraversion decreases from 25-55
  • More agreeable the older you get
  • Personality traits continue to change at any point
  • Time has positive affect on personality trait change
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14
Q

Individual differences in personality traits

A
  • RCI - amount of change that occurs against the amount of change that could be expected given the fact that measures are not perfectly reliable.
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15
Q

Individuals differences for personality trait change can be as a result of many different reasons

A
  • Parenting styles
  • Fork force participation
  • Romantic relationship
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16
Q

Participating in the work force
Roberts, Bogg, Walton & Caspi, 2006

A
  • Workers who participate in stealing and fighting with co workers have more neurotic traits
17
Q

Involvement in romantic relationships
Robins, Caspi & Moffitt, 2002

A
  • Young adults in dissatisfying and abusive relationships tend to become neurotic and less agreeable
18
Q

Is Happiness good for your personality

A

Positive personality changes occur when people are leading meaningful and satisfying lives (Soto, 2015)
- sample 16,367 australians

19
Q

The Sociogenomic Theory of Personality

A
  • Changes to personality traits is believed to occur by consistent experiences that lead to lasting changes in the way one behaves thinks or feels.
20
Q

Does the military make the man or the man make the military?
Jackson et al (2012)

A
  • Compulsory military service
  • 1,261 male participants
  • Some performed military service some performed civilian community service
  • individuals who chose military service were less agreeable, less open and less neurotic
  • Life experience associated with lasting personality change
21
Q

Do adverse life events affect personality

A
  • Lockenhoff et al (2009)
  • time one OCEAN traits assessed in 458 people
  • time 2 reassessed 8 years later
  • Structured interviews where asked about life up to 2 years between t1 and t2
  • Asked about extreme events or if witnessed anything horrifying
  • Found ‘scar’ perspective i.e. personality scarred by negative events
  • more neurotic
  • Two years not enough time for personality to revert
22
Q

Conclusions

A
  • personality traits show normative trends, more mature with age
  • Traits aren’t static
  • Individual differences in traits