Lecture 8: Cognitive Topics in Personality Flashcards
What is the cognitive experiential domain?
- memories, thoughts, cognitive experiences
- Differences in personality based on processing information
Am I driven by my mental activities?
- Answer: yes and no
- When we are conscious we are driven by conscious processes, but we are also driven by unconscious
- Self concept is relatively stable over time. Those cognitive representations of ourselves play a central role in how we perceive information and process it. These patterns can be gleaned from personality differences.
What does cognition refer to?
- Cognition refers to awareness and thinking, as well as to specific mental acts such as perceiving, interpreting, remembering, believing, anticipating
- All of these mental activities transform sensory input into mental representations (information processing)
- We process information uniquely even though reality is objective
What 3 levels of cognition are personality psychologists interested in?
- Perception: process of imposing order on information received by our sense organs
- Human perception not only describes what you see but how you process it (beyond what meets the eye). The process of imposing order on what we see - Interpretation: process of making sense of, or explaining, events in the world
- Gives us info about human personality - Conscious goals: standard and goals people develop for evaluating themselves and others
- Guiding future actions - And an additional domain related to cognition
Intelligence
How is personality revealed through perception?
- We all perceive reality through our own lens (mental representation). Based on our sensory and perceptual systems.
- Individual differences in perceptual style: Field dependence-independence. Pain tolerance and sensation reducing augmenting.
What is field dependence?
Field dependent people see big picture more readily than details; more focused on surrounding context (see patterns; they are dependent on the field)
What is field independence?
Field independent people have the ability to focus on details despite the clutter of background information
What measures are used to assess field dependence-independence?
- Rod and frame test (RFT)
- Embedded figure test (EFT)
- Field dependent and independent people vary along a continuum, it is not categorical.
- Measure show this is stable over time
Describe Wilkin’s rod and frame test?
- Conditions: darkroom, glowing rod
- Task: keep rod upright using dial
- Manipulation: adjust tilt of rod, frame (square box around it), chair
- Field independence: ignoring external cues around rod (i.e., the frame, not distracted by tilting of the frame) and use body orientation as guide
- Field dependence: adjust rod in the direction of tilted frame
- Quite time consuming and difficult to set up
Describe the characteristics of field-dependent vs. independent people
- Field independent people are better able to attend to task relevant cues. Less distracted by extraneous details and More analytic approach to problem-solving
- Field dependent people do not perform as well as field independent people in situations marked by unusual degrees of novelty or lack of structure. Strong social skills –> More attentive to social context (attending to cues, body language, tone of voice, environment, i.e., reading the room)
Field dependence-independence and life choices
- Education: Field independent people favor natural sciences, math, engineering, whereas field dependent people favour social sciences and education
- Interpersonal relations: Field independent people are more interpersonally detached, whereas field dependent people are attentive to social cues, oriented toward other people.
What is the current research on field dependence-independence
- Information and focus on a task: Study of police officers (making shooting decisions, 100 police officers. They found that field-dependent police officers made more mistakes than field-independent police officers. They removed distractions in their environment and made more correct shooting decisions.). Better at paying attention to detail and filtering out what is not relevant
- Field independent students learn more effectively than field-dependent students in multimedia-based instructional environments (e.g., graphics, sound, and video). Embedded points, selective attention
- One isnt better than the other necessarily, and you can practice or train the skills to be one or the other
What is Aneseth Petrie’s reducer-augmenter theory of pain tolerance?
- People with low pain tolerance (augmenters) have a nervous system that amplifies or augments subjective impact of sensory input
- People with high pain tolerance (reducers) have a nervous system that dampens or reduces effects of sensory information
i. Reducers seek strong stimulation, perhaps in order to compensate for lower sensory reactivity (i.e., thrill-seeking, parachute jumping)
ii. Reducers may use substances (nicotine, caffeine, alcohol, other drugs) to artificially ‘lift” their arousal level
iii. Reducers listen to their music louder and find boredom really unpleasant
How is personality revealed through interpretation?
- Locus of control (LOC)
- Learned helplessness
- George Kelly’s theory
- Walter Mischel CAPS theory
What is locus of control?
- Locus of control describes a person’s interpretation of responsibility for events in his/her life
- Internally vs. externally: where does responsibility lie for your success/failures