Chapter One - Personality Theory Flashcards

1
Q

Define

Personality

A

Those characteristics of the person that account for the consistent patterns of experience and action.

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2
Q

Define:

Process

A

In persnality theory, the concept that refers to the motivational aspects of personality.

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3
Q

Define:

Structure:

A

In personality theory, the concept that refers to the more enduring and stable aspcts of personality.
- Stable, enduring aspects of personality.
- Qualities that endure from day to day and from year to year.
- Comparable to concepts such as atoms and molecules in physics.

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4
Q

Define:

System:

A

A collection of highly interconnected parts that function together; in the study of personality, distinct psychological mechanism may function together as a system that produced the psychological phenomena of personality

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5
Q

Define:

Temperature:

A

Biologically based emotional and behavioral tendencies that are evident in early childhood.

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6
Q

Define:

Trait:

A

An enduring psychoogical characteristic of an individual; or a type of psychological construct that refers to such characteristics.

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7
Q

Define:

Type

A

A cluster of personality traits that may constitute a qualitively distinct category of persons [ie. a personality trait].

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8
Q

Define:

Units of Analysis:

A

A concept that refers to the basic variables of a theory; different personality theories invoke different types of variables ,or diffeent basic units of analysis, in conceptualizing personality structure.

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9
Q

Defing Personality: Three Issues that are Difficult to Reconcile?

A
  1. Human universals.
  2. Individual Differences.
  3. Individual Uniqueness.
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10
Q

Psychological Quality:

Enduring?

A
  • Consistent across time and across different situations.
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11
Q

Psychological Quality:

Distinctive?

A
  • Features that differentiate people from one another.
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12
Q

Psychological Quality:

Contributes to?

A
  • Factors that casually influence, and thus at least partly explain, an individual’s tendencies.
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13
Q

Systematic Theory?

A
  • Systematic [if/then statements].
  • Testable.
  • Comprehensive.
    **How do we take out observations and put them into practice? **
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14
Q

Compete Theory of Personality Answers:

What, How, and Why?

A
  • What = characteristics of a person and how they are organized in relation to one another.
  • How = determinants of someone’s personality.
  • Why = causes of and reasons behind an individual’s behaviour.
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15
Q

Personality as a Hierarchy?

A
  • Different theories differ in the way in which they view the structures of personality hierarchically.
  • Trait focus = a small set of basic traits organises the lower level.
  • Other approaches = personality is fluid, with little to none fixed hierarchically structure.
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16
Q

Process?

A
  • Psychoogical reactions that change dynamically; over relatively brief periods of time.
  • Rapid, dynamic flow of motivation, emotion, and action.
17
Q

Growth and Development Challenges?

A

Two challenges:
1. To characterize patterns of development that are experienced by most people.
2. To understand developmental factors that contribute to individual differences.

18
Q

Genetic Determinants?

A
  • Genetic factors contribute strongly to personality and individual differences.
  • ie. IQ.
19
Q

Steven Pinker?

A
  • He brought many issues to large.
  • Argues that there might be features of human psychology that are difficult to change because they are products of our evolution.
20
Q

Environmental Determinants?

A
  • Culture = individualism vs. collectivism.
  • Social Class = upper vs. lower.
  • Family = emphasis on parenting, reward & punishment.
  • Peers = peer pressure.
21
Q

Nature vs. Nurture?

A
  • It should be nature x nurture, not vs.
  • Cannot say one or the other influened personality, it is a combo.
22
Q

The Concept of ‘Self’?

A
  • There is unity to our experience and action.
  • Patterns of interconnections enable the system to function in a smooth coherent manner.
  • So, despite that we share experiences and life events the same as others, we have a consistent perspective, being our sense of self.
23
Q

States of Awareness?

A
  • There are varying states of awareness and the concept of the unconscious.
24
Q

Psychoanalytical Theory?

A
  • Suggests that we are primarily prisoners of our past.
  • Freud suggested personality is pretty much set in stone by the time we are five.
25
Q

3 Key Functions of Peronality Theories?

A
  1. Organize existing information.
  2. Generate new knowledge about important issues.
  3. Identify entirely new issues that are deserving of study.
26
Q

Key Function of Peronality Theory?

Organize Existing Information?

A
  • A logical, systematic ordering of facts would enable one to keep track of what scientists know about personality.
  • Easier to put knowledge to use, and build upon past work and such.
27
Q

Key Function of Peronality Theory?

Generate New Knowledge about Important Issues?

A
  • A good theory is generative.
  • Helps to generate new knowledge about important topics to the field.
28
Q

Key Function of Peronality Theory?

Identify Entirely New Issues that are Deserving of Study?

A
  • A theory may identify areas of study that might have never have been known.
29
Q

Define:

Psychodynamic Theory?

A
  • Freud.
  • Views the mind as an energy system.
  • Mental energies.
  • Id, ego, and superego.
30
Q

3 Indications of the Influence of Personality Psychology?

A
  1. End of 20th century, scholars identifies the most influential psychologists of 20th century.
  2. The end of the century was also end of millennium, and Freud was annouced on a list of most influential people of the past 1000 years.
  3. In 2007, stat analysis identiied the highest impact book in social sciences and Albert Bandura was the most cited.
31
Q

Scientific Observation?

A
  • Study diverse groups of people.
  • Ensure that observations of people are object.
  • Use specialized tools to study thinking, emotion, and neurobilogical systems.
32
Q

Scientific Theory?

A
  • Systematic.
  • Testable.
  • Comprehensive.
33
Q

Application [Theories to Practice]?

A
  • Aims are to (1) observe people scientifically, (2) develop theories that are systematic, testable, & comphrensive, and (3) to turn the research findings and theoretical concepts into practical applications.
34
Q

Dynamics?

A
  • Refers to psychological processes that change over time.
35
Q

3 Ways in Which Parent’s Influence Their Children?

A
  1. Through their own behaviour.
  2. Role models for identification.
  3. Selectively rewarding certain behaviours.
36
Q

Internal vs. External Determinants of Behavior?

A
  • According to Freud we are controlled by internal forces, impulses and emotions in our unconscious mind.
  • Skinner said we are controlled by our external forces, environmental rewards and punishments that govern actions.
37
Q

How do people develop a consist, unified sense of self?

A
  1. Multiple components of the mind function as a complex system, the parts that are interconnected, and the patterns of interconnection enable the multipart system to function smoothly.
  2. The concept of self. Although we may experience a potentially bewildering diverstiy of life events, we do expereinece them from a consistent perspective, being our own.