Personality and Temperament-Kim revised Flashcards
Temperament refers to “________based but also _________ influenced tendencies to respond in ________ ways to events that serve as the building blocks of __________”
What is the stability and by what age?
Temperament refers to “genetically based but also environmentally influenced tendencies to respond in predictable ways to events that serve as the building blocks of personality” (Sigelman & Rider, 2015, p. 336). Research investigating the stability of temperament over time has generally found low to moderate stability, with temperament becoming more stable after three years of age (e.g., Roberts & DelVecchio, 2000).
Thomas and Chess:
How many dimensions?
How many groups?
Thomas and Chess (1977) conceptualize temperament as a behavioral style that can be described in terms of nine dimensions (e.g., activity level, distractibility, adaptability, intensity of reaction) and that most infants can be categorized on the basis of these dimensions into one of three groups: Easy Children, Slow-to-warm-up children, and difficult children.
Thomas and Chess posit that easy children tend to have a ____ mood
_______easily to new people and situations
can ______ frustration
and have _______feeding
and sleeping routines.
They tend to have a positive mood
adapt easily to new people and situations
can tolerate frustration
and have regular feeding
and sleeping routines.
Thomas and Chess Slow-to-warm-up children have a mildly________ mood, take ____ to adapt to new people and situations, have ____ levels of activity, and have _________ regular feeding and sleeping routines.
They have a mildly negative mood, take time to adapt to new people and situations, have low levels of activity, and have moderately regular feeding and sleeping routines.
Thomas and Chess difficult children have a
They have a negative mood, cry frequently, respond negatively to new people and situations, are very active, and have irregular feeding and sleeping routines.
Thomas and Chess’s goodness-of-fit model proposes that a child’s behavioral and emotional outcomes are affected by the match between the child’s_________ and the __________ of his/her social environment.
Proposes that a child’s behavioral and emotional outcomes are affected by the match between the child’s temperment and the demands of his/her social environment. For example, infants with a difficult temperament can become less difficult and more adaptable if their parents provide them with a stable environment and allow them to respond to new experiences at a slow pace.
Rothbart describes temperament As _________differences in_______ and _________, with ‘constitutional’ seen as the relatively ___________ biological makeup of the organism influenced over time by heredity, maturation, and experience” (Rothbart & Derryberry, 1981, p. 37).
As “constitutional differences in reactivity and self-regulation, with ‘constitutional’ seen as the relatively enduring biological makeup of the organism influenced over time by heredity, maturation, and experience” (Rothbart & Derryberry, 1981, p. 37).
Rothbart’ s Surgency/extraversion
What type of activity do they seek?
Surgency/extraversion is characterized by a high activity level, intense pleasure seeking, and a low level of shyness
Rothbart’ s theory of negative affectivity is characterized by _____ instability and a tendency to be________.
is characterized by mood instability and a tendency to be sad, fearful, and irritable
Rothbart’ s Self-regulation refers to processes that
facilitate, maintain, and inhibit _____ and consists of one factor – _______ – which is the ability to “inhibit a _______ response … in order to perform a __________ response” (Rothbart, 2011, p. 57)._________ and her colleagues have developed several questionnaires that are used to assess temperament over the lifespan.
Self-regulation refers to processes that facilitate, maintain, and inhibit reactivity and consists of one factor – effortful control – which is the ability to “inhibit a dominant response … in order to perform a subdominant response” (Rothbart, 2011, p. 57). Rothbart and her colleagues have developed several questionnaires that are used to assess temperament over the lifespan.
Kagan (1989) focused on the temperamental characteristic of __________.
How high is this characteristic?
The temperamental characteristic of behavioral inhibition (BI), which he described as the tendency to respond to unfamiliar people and situations with negative affect and withdrawal. with high levels of this characteristic.
Imagine a shy depressed kid saying, “I’m oKA” while with a group of new kids
Longitudinal research has produced evidence of both continuity and discontinuity in BI from infancy to adolescence.
BI is associated with an increase risk for ____________ during what lifespan stages?
Parents of children with BI had higher rates of ___________.
with greater continuity being found for individuals with high levels of this characteristic. Studies have also found that BI is associated with an increased risk for anxiety (especially social anxiety), depression, and poorer social functioning in childhood, adolescence, and adulthood and that parents of children with BI had higher rates of childhood anxiety disorders themselves as well as continuing anxiety disorders in adulthood (Svihra & Katzman, 2004; Tang, Crawford, Morales, Degnan, Pine, & Fox, 2020).
Freud’s Theory of Psychosexual Development consists of five stages that begin at ____ and end in ______. . It proposes that ______ is focused in a different area of the body in each stage and that excessive gratification or frustration of a child’s impulses during a stage can result in fixation at that stage, which affects the child’s outcomes
birth
adolescence
It proposes that libido (sexual energy) is focused in a different area of the body in each stage and that excessive gratification or frustration of a child’s impulses during a stage can result in fixation at that stage, which affects the child’s outcomes. For instance, libido is focused on the mouth during the oral stage, and fixation at this stage can result in thumb-sucking in childhood and chain smoking and excessive dependence on others in adulthood
Erikson’s Theory of Psychosocial Development emphasizes _______ and _________influences on personality. He sees personality developing throughout the ________. It distinguishes between _____ stages that each involves a different psychosocial _____ and proposes that, the more successful the _________ of the crisis at each stage, the better the outcomes.
Emphasizes social and cultural influences on personality and views personality development as continuing throughout the lifespan. It distinguishes between eight stages that each involves a different psychosocial conflict and proposes that, the more successful the resolution of the crisis at each stage, the better the outcomes.
What are Freud _________ stages and Erickson__________ stages/virtues
Age.Freud’s Psychosexual Stages/Erikson’s Psychosocial Stages/Virtues
birth-1year:
Freud-oral
trust vs. Erickson-mistrust/hope
1-3 years:Freud=anal
Ericson-autonomy vs. shame and doubt/will
3-6 years
Freud-:Phallic, Erickson-initiative vs. guilt/purpose
6-12 years:
Freud-latency
Ericson-industry vs. inferiority/competence
Adolescence:genital
Ericson /identity vs. role confusion/fidelity
Erickson-young adulthood” intimacy vs. isolation/love
Erickson- middle adulthood: generativity vs.stagnation/care
Erickson-late adulthood: integrity vs. despair/wisdom
Effects of Parenting Style on Children’s Personality and Behavior:
Baumrind (1975) and Maccoby and Martin (1983) distinguish between four parenting styles that represent different combinations of two parenting dimensions: _________ which is also known as control, and _____________, which is also known as acceptance and warmth.
Baumrind (1975) and Maccoby and Martin (1983) distinguish between four parenting styles that represent different combinations of two parenting dimensions: demandingness, which is also known as control, and responsiveness, which is also known as acceptance and warmth.
Authoritative parents are high in both ________ and ________.
In which ways do they view rules?
How warm and affectionate are they?
How do they view independence and individuality?
What are the outcomes?
How does race play a role?
Are high in both demandingness and responsiveness. They establish clear rules for their children, expect them to comply with the rules, but respect their children’s opinions and seek their input when making rules. These parents are warm and affectionate and encourage their children’s independence and individuality. Children of authoritative parents have the best outcomes: They’re self-confident, independent, and cooperative, and have good social skills. Authoritative parenting has also been linked to high levels of academic achievement, but the strength of this link may be affected by culture. For example, there’s evidence that the positive impact of authoritative parenting on academic achievement is not as strong for Asian American and African American students as it is for European American students.
Authoritarian Parents are high in ____________ and _________ in responsiveness.
They provide many _________ for their children and resort to ________when their children disobey
What do they emphasize?
Childen often feel _______, _____, _________
How are their social and academic skills
What do they discourage?
What is the risk of bullying?
Are high in demandingness and low in responsiveness. They have many rules for their children, emphasize parental control and respect for authority, and often resort to harsh forms of punishment when their children disobey. These parents provide their children with little nurturance and affection and discourage their autonomy. Their children tend to be insecure, moody, and dependent, are easily annoyed, and have poorer social skills and lower levels of academic achievement than children of authoritative parents do. This parenting style has also been linked to an increased likelihood that a child will bully others or be the victim of a bully, with the risk for bullying others being greater than the risk for being the victim of a bully.