Chapter 11 - Personality Flashcards

1
Q

Personality:

A

: the characteristic ways in which people differ from one another

- Individuals unique, consistent pattern of thoughts, feelings and behaviors
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1
Q

Psychoanalytical Perspective:

A

proposes that childhood sexuality and unconscious motivations influence personality
- Believes the mind contains a large unconscious region of suppressed feelings and ideas which can only be addressed when it is in our conscious region

   - Human personality arises from a conflict between ones impulse and restraint
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2
Q

Components of PsychoAnalytical Perspective:

A
  • Ego: the unconscious and conscious part of your brain which seeks to satisfy ID impulses in realistic ways
    • Reality principle; gratifies the sexual and aggressive id impulses
  • Superego: judgmentally and morally correct part of your brain
    • A moral guide which makes us feel guilty for doing something wrong
  • ID(it): impulsive part of your personality driven by pleasure and repulsed by pain
    • Pleasure principle; Satisfies basic drives and seeks instant gratification
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3
Q

Free Association

A

the expression of the content of consciousness without censorship in the attempt to gain access to unconscious processes
- Used by Freud to release hidden thoughts

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4
Q

Defense Mechanisms(Psychoanalytical Perspective)

A

a term coined by Freud for strategies the ego uses to reduce anxiety by unconsciously distorting reality
- protects the ego
- Distorts reality to protect the ego from anxiety caused by id
- Bad way of justifying our experiences as not our fault

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5
Q

Types of Ego Defenses:

A
  • Repression: suppressing painful memories and thoughts
  • Denial: refusing to accept events
  • Sublimation: redirecting unacceptable desires through socially acceptable channels
  • Reaction formation: reducing anxiety by adopting beliefs contrary to your own
  • Rationalization: justifying a behavior with more acceptable reasons for less acceptable real reasons.
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6
Q

Psychosexual Stage Model

A

contends that early in life we progress through a sequence of developmental stages with its own unique mode of sexual gratification

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7
Q

Psychosexual Stages

A
  • Oral: birth to yr 1(satisfaction from putting things in mouth satisfy libido)
    ○ Someone who is insufficiently fed or overly fed might become an orally fixated person leading to oral personalities(E.g. nailbiter, smoker)
    ○ Successful navigation stage leads to healthy developed Ego
    • Anal: yr1-yr3(bowel and bladder control and elimination become a source of gratification)
      ○ Having control over their elimination allows them to have their own rights and wishes whereas potty training feels imposed
      ○ First conflict with authority
      § Harsh potty training = anal retentive where they are tight fisted and hate mess
      § Liberal potty training = anal expulsive where they are messy, rebellious
    • Phallic: yr 3- yr 6(source of gratification around genitals)
      ○ Become aware of sex differences which starts erotic attraction, resentment, rivalry and jealousy
      ○ Oedipus complex: boys develop sexual desires for mother and want to get rid of father
      ○ Electra complex: girl desires father but realises she doesn’t have a penis(mad at mom) and gets penis envy before suppressing this thought and changing it for a wish for a baby
      § If both are unresolved it leads to selfish, impulsive and lack of genuine feelings for each other
      § For this to be resolved children have to undergo identification and want to be like their same sex parents, not take their place
      ○ Successful completion develops super ego
    • Latent: yr 6- puberty(sexual activity inactive or repressed)
      ○ Sexual interest is converted into socially acceptable activities like hobbies and friendships
      ○ Same sex relationships become important
    • Genital Stages: puberty - death(reaches physical sexual maturity)
      ○ Begins expressing sexual desires in appropriate ways like one on one heterosexual relationships
      ○ If unresolved, freud suggests people become homosexuals
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8
Q

Humanistic Perspective

A

emphasizes looking at the whole individual and stresses concepts such as free will, self-efficacy and self-actualization

  • Client centered
  • Strives to help people fulfil their potential and maximize their wellbeing
  • Focuses on the conscious rather than the unconscious
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9
Q

Differences Between Maslow and Rodgers on Achieving Self-Actualization

A
  • maslow suggests it is very hard and not everyone can achieve it
  • Rodgers suggests everyone can do it however they must be genuine, have acceptance and be empathetic
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10
Q

Carl Rodgers Person Centered Perspective

A

uses ideas of Maslow’s but says that these qualities are nurtured early in life and that self-actualization is a constant growth process

 - Humans are primed to reach their potential in a growth promoting environment
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11
Q

Environments created impacting childrens ability to reach self actualization

A

Unconditional Positive Regard: you love the child regardless of their mistakes
- Fosters a good sense of self actualization

Conditional Positive Regard: children are loved when their behavior is correct

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12
Q

Trait

A

a relatively stable, predisposition/ enduring pattern of behavior to feel and act in a certain way

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13
Q

Types of Traits:

A

Cardinal traits: traits that dominate and characterize most of a persons behavior

Central traits: prominent traits everyone has

Secondary traits: traits exhibited in some situations

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14
Q

Big 5 Traits

A

a theory of 5 traits which are on a continuum which every falls on

  • openness
  • conscientiousness
  • extraversion
  • agreeableness
  • Neuroticism:
  • healthy people have the ability to lean to an extreme but can pull themselves back to the center
  • Unhealthy people learn towards an extreme and can’t pull themselves back to the normal limits
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15
Q

Big 5 Traits: Openness

A
  • Fantasy prone
  • Open to feelings
  • Open to diverse behavior
  • Open to new and different ideas
  • Open to various values and beliefs
16
Q

Big 5 Traits: Conscientiousness

A
  • Competent
  • Orderly
  • Dutiful
  • Achievement oriented
  • Self-disciplined
  • Deliberate
17
Q

Big 5 Traits: Extraversion

A
  • Gregarious
  • Warm
  • Assertive
  • Active
  • Excitement-seeking
  • Positive emotionally
18
Q

Big 5 Traits: agreeableness

A
  • Straightforward
  • Altruistic
  • Compliant
  • Trusting
  • Modest
  • Tender minded
19
Q

Big 5 Trait: Neuroticism

A
  • Anxious
  • Angry
  • Depressed
  • Self conscious
  • Impulsive
  • Vulnerable
20
Q

Social Cognitive Theory:

A

views behavior as influenced by the interaction between persons and their social context

  • Emphasizes the importance of external events and how we interpret them on our personality and behavior
  • Many of our behaviors are learned either through conditioning or through observation
    Emphasizes the importance of mental processing and our thoughts in helping us take back control
21
Q

Locus of Control and the two types

A

how you control your thoughts/feelings
- The belief system about where the control is within your life
- External locus of control: external factors control your life
○ Leads to learned helplessness
- Internal locus of control: you are able to control what happens
○ Leads to greater personal control

22
Q

Personal Control

A

consists of a person’s beliefs about how well they can bring about good events and avoid bad events
- Beliefs determine future behavior

23
Q

Learned Helplessness

A

when you feel as though you have no control over the bad events that take place in your life

24
Q
A