Chapter 42: Personality Theories Flashcards
What is a personality theory
Is a system of concepts assumptions ideas and principles proposed to explain personality.
What are trait theories
Are theories of personality concerned with describing people in terms of traits then explaining origin of traits
What is Allports trait theory
Gordon Allports (1937) believed best way to understand and predict people’s behaviour was to find what they value of the things they will strive to attain. His view was that most important traits are motivational related to values
Trait theories believe one of the important aspect is way traits are organised or related to each other.
What 3 aspects of traits did Allport describe?
Cardinal traits which are those very important to an individual that they dominate an individual’s life.
Central traits are important traits that influence and organise most of our behaviour. The desire for power being on of them
Secondary traits are more specific and less important as a description of behaviour
What is Cattells source trait theory
Raymond B Cattell (1950) wanted to know the link between traits and observed surface traits often appeared in clusters or groups and appeared together so often they seemed to represent a basic trait or underlying personality characteristic called a source trait and he went on to develop 16 source traits
What is the 5 factor model of personality
According to this theory personality can be understood in terms of 5 innate universal dimensions which are stable over time and have important consequences across our lifespan. These 5 traits are a reduction of cattells 16 source traits. It’s believed we all possess these traits to a different degree and a combination of them describe our personality.
What are the 5 factors for 5 factor model
Extroversion : how introverted or extroverted one is
Agreeableness: how friendly nurturing and caring - cold indifferent spiteful or self centred
Conscientiousness : how self disciplined responsible and achieving- irresponsible careless and undependable
Neurocism : how negative or having upsetting emotions - to being calm even tempered and comfortable
Openness to experience: how intelligent imaginative and open to experience- conventional lacking curiosity and creativity.
What is the psychodynamic approach
They try to probe under the surface of personality to examine what makes us behave the way we do.
Emerged from Sigmund Freud where the central theme of his theory is that behaviour is the outcome of the wishes desires and feelings that people are unaware of or their subconscious thoughts
What are the 3 types of primative unconscious instincts
Sexual instincts: these influence the experience and behaviour that generates pleasure.
Ego instincts: influence experience and behaviour associated with preservation of the self
Hostility instincts: influence aggressive Experience and behaviour.
What are the 2 principles regulating instinctual energy
Pleasure principle: directs energy in direction of immediate gratification of needs wishes and desires.
Reality principle: enables person to delay the immediate gratification of needs so that greater pleasure may be experienced later.
What is the id
It refers to Innate biological impulses and urges which are unconscious irrational and self serving. It demands immediate gratification such as food sex or to cause harm.
Works on the pleasure principle- looks for expressions of pleasure seeking urges. This energy is called libido which underlies efforts to survive as well as sexual desires and pleasure seeking. Freud also described death instincts called Thanatos that produces aggressive and destructive urges.
What is the ego
Refers to executive part of the self that regulates the Expression of ids instinctual energy. The ego in touch with reality and can foresee the consequences of behaviour. The ego is part of system of thinking planning and problem solving. It has conscious control of the self.
It directs the energies supplied by I’d which can be described as a blind king/queen who has power but must rely on others to carry out orders. Ego directs power by linking desires of id to external reality. Ego is guided by reality principle- delays action until activity is practical or appropriate.
What is the superego
Refers to conscience. The superego is like a judge or cencor if someone doesn’t adhere to standards for acceptable behaviour the superego allows person to experience guilt feeling and anxiety.
The other part is the ego ideal which is a reflection of behaviour that has been approved or rewarded and is a source of goals and aspirations when they are attained we feel pride. Superego acts as a parent to bring behaviour under control.
People with weak superegos may be delinquent criminal or antisocial. A strict superego may result in too much control and lead to inhibition rigidity or excessive guilt.
According to Freud how does personality develop
The core of an individual’s personality is formed before the age of 6 in a series of psychosexual stages. At each stage a different part of the body becomes primary area capable of producing pleasure.
What does the behaviourist approach emphasize
It emphasizes that personality is no more or no less than a collection of learned behaviour and according to this approach personality is acquired through classical and operant conditioning, learning through observation, reinforcement, extinction, generalisation and stimulus discrimination.
They believe personality is acquired through learning and reject idea of personality traits. They are concerned about situational determinants ( external factors) of behaviour and prefer replacing traits with prior learning to explain behaviour.