lec 10: personality Flashcards
what is personality shaped by?
biological, situational and mental processes embedded in a sociocultural and development context.
combination of:
- biology/evolution (nature)
- social networks/culture
- development
- environment (nurture)
define disposition.
refers to relatively stable personality pattern, including temperaments, traits, and personality types.
what is personality process?
internal working of personality, involving motivation, emotion, perception, learning and unconscious processes.
differentiate between individualism and collectivism.
individualism values individual achievements and distinction, while collectivism values group loyalty and pride.
individualism is common in euro-american societies while collectivism is common in asia, africa, latin america and the middle east.
describe hippocrates’ humor theory.
hippocrates believes that our individual personality is influenced by our predominant body fluid, or “humor”, which could either be:
- blood - from the heart, temperament: sanguine (cheerful)
- choler (yellow bile) - from liver, temperament: choleric (angry)
- melancholer (black bile) - from spleen, temperament: melancholy (depressed)
- phlegm - from brain, temperament: phlegmatc (sluggish)
define dispositional theory
a general term including temperament, trait and type approaches to personality.
true or false: we still use hippocrates’ humor to describe the biological basis of personality today.
false.
- humor replaced with neurotransmitters
- depressed personality can be explained by imbalance of certain neurotransmitters, so can anger, anxiety and euphoria
define traits.
traits are multiple stable personality characteristics that an individual has, that guide her thoughts and actions in certain situations.
temperament vs trait
temperament is the foundation of personality, deeply rooted in our biological nature while trait is a multidimensional structure built on temperament as a foundation, but also influenced by experiences.
state the 5-factor theory.
5-factor theory states that personality is composed of 5 fundamental personality dimensions (aka big 5):
1. openness to experience
2. conscientiousness
3. extraversion
4. agreeableness
5. neuroticism
OCEAN
elaborate on each of the big 5 under the 5-factor theory.
- openness to experience: independence, curiosity (opp. closed-mindedness, unimaginative)
- conscientiousness: dependability, prudent, perseverance, goal-directedness (opp. carelessness, irresponsibility, impulsiveness)
- extraversion: sociability, boldness, self-confidence (opp. introversion, shyness)
- agreeableness: warm, liked (opp. cold, negative, antagonistic)
- neuroticism: anxiety, emotionality (opp. emotional stability)
what are NEO-PI and MMPI-2?
- personality asessment instruments
- NEO-PI measures personality on the 5 factors
- MMPI-2 measures signs of mental disorders
- excellent reliability and validity
differentiate between reliability and validity.
reliability refers to consistency of results while validity refers to the test measuring exactly what it wants to measure.
what are personality types?
categories representing common clusters of personality characteristics.
whare some strengths and limitations of the dispositional theory?
strengths
1. explains individual differences when they grow up in the same environment
2. ability to predict behaviour in common situations
limitations
1. considers personality as fixed, when there will be developmental changes
2. dangers of self-fulfilling prophecy (purposely doing things to satisfy your “personality”)
3. describe behaviour without explanations, again leading to self-fulfilling prophecy
4. oversimplification
what do the psychodynamic theories emphasise on?
motivation and mental disorders
who demonstrated that physical symptoms can disappear in hysteria patients while they are hypnotised? who did he then inspire?
jean charcot. he inspired sigmund freud who then came up with the freudian theories of id, ego and superego as well as psychosexual stages.
what is psychoanalysis?
treating mental disorders using psychoanalytic theory (freud’s theory of personality and mental disorders). its goal is to release the unacknowledged conflicts, urges and memories from the unconscious mind.
define unconscious in freudian theory.
unconsciousness is the psychic domain storing repressed urges, conflicts and memories unavailable to the consciousness.
define thanatos.
death instinct driving harmful acts to self and others (reckless driving, smoking, drug abuse)
define psychic determinism.
states that all human behaviours stem from unconscious urges, conflict and memories.