WEEK 1 Flashcards

1
Q

What is personality psychology?

A
  • The study of people’s thoughts, feelings, and behaviours
  • The science of human experience
  • The study of individual differences
  • The science of what makes me “me” and you “you”
  • What makes one person similar to or different from another
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2
Q

What are some unique challenges in psychology?

A

People’s inner thoughts are:
• Inaccessible
• Measured indirectly
• Self-report - can be inaccurate

Keeping participants from getting bored/distracted

Measures things that are subjective

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3
Q

What is experimenter demand?

A

When participants act in a way that they think the experimenter wants them to behave just to please them. Even if it’s not how they would typically behave.

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4
Q

What is reactance in experimenter demand?

A

When people do the opposite of what the research wants despite what they would normally do.

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5
Q

What is social desirability in experimenter demand?

A

When people do what they think the researcher wants, even if it’s not what they would typically do.

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6
Q

What is Funder’s second law?

A

There are no perfect indicators of personality; there are only clues, and clues are always ambiguous.

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7
Q

Is there a best method to study personality?

A

No, all methods have pros and cons

• Choose which one is best for your research question

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8
Q

What are Sources of Data in personality research?

A
  • Self-report
  • Informants
  • Life Outcomes
  • Behavioral observation
  • Biology
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9
Q

What is informant reporting?

A

When you ask a 3rd person about their opinions of a persons personality

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10
Q

What is life outcomes?

A

When you look at things such as their social media feed etc to see if they have achieved anything (e.g. gotten drivers license) or gotten into trouble

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11
Q

What are the pros/cons of self reporting?

A

Pros
• Access to people’s inner
thoughts
• Easy to get responses

Cons
• Participants may lie
 - To try to help you (social desirability)
 - To hide their true motives
 - To make themselves look good
 - To appear humble 
 - To mess with you (reactance)

• Participants may not know (if asked hard question and find it difficult to introspect and find an answer)

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12
Q

What are advantages/ disadvantages of self report?

more focused on things like money and time

A
Advantages:
• It’s easy!
• Research dollars are finite
• Fast answers to scientific questions
• Access to large samples

• But too easy….
–> Crowds out other methods

Disadvantages:
• Maybe people won’t tell you

• Sensitive questions and personal information

  • How much money do you make?
  • How many sexual partners have you had?

• Questions that could make them look bad

  • Would you say you’re antisocial?
  • Are you a selfish person?

• Questions that could interfere with relationships

  • Who did you vote for?
  • Do you think you’re better than your friends?

• They just don’t want to share

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13
Q

What is Beeper Method/Experience Sampling for self reporting?

A
  • Texting people at times you want to know information about them

e. g. how they’re feeling at 2PM
- > results in more accurate responses as the participants will know exactly how they’re feeling at that time when they receive the text

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14
Q

What is Informant Report (I) Data and the pros and cons?

A

• 3rd party reports target’s
- personality/thoughts/feelings/behavior

• Pros and Cons
- Largely similar to self-report

  • Lack of first person knowledge –> Lack of first person biases
  • Potential for 3rd person biases
    e.g. Parents judging their child or Enemies judging each
    other
  • 3rd person may have limited knowledge of the target
  • -> may only remember extreme behaviours
  • People rely on narratives
  • Lack of 1st person insight
  • -> Know yourself better than anyone
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15
Q

What is Life Outcomes Data and the pros and cons?

A
  • Obtained from archival records, social media, or self report
  • The results, or “residue,” of personality

Advantages:
• Objective and verifiable
• Publicly available
• Often important outcomes (criminal record, housing status, alive)

Disadvantage:
• Multidetermination (what caused it?)
- Outcome is a big leap from personality (Low conscientiousness –> death)

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16
Q

What is Behavioural Observation and the pros and cons?

A

• Objective measure

• Bypass problems of self report
–> Said you wouldn’t but you did…

• Operationalization often closer to aims of study
e.g. • Risk-taking: Dollar amount someone bets in blackjack
• Persistence: Length of time working on a tough anagram

Multideterminism

  • Behaviour is a big leap from personality
  • personaility –> something in your mind –> behaviour

Disadvantages:
• Social desirability - Behaviour can be changed temporarily

• Lots of work! - Most “behaviour” is finger movements or games (simplified versions of what we’re interested in)

17
Q

Ultimately, “type” of data only

matters if…

A
  • the data are high quality
  • and can answer the research question
  • Causality often really tricky to establish
18
Q

Why is it good to have so many different methods of research?

A

• Every method has limitations
- Strengths of one match weakness of another

However this can be expensive and time consuming