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Introduction
to Psychology PSY101
VU
Lesson
32
PERSONALITY
II
Allports'
Trait Theory
As
said earlier, after skimming
an unabridged dictionary, Gordon
Allport identified 18000
separate
terms
that could be used to
describe personality. After
eliminating synonyms he came up
with a list
of
4500 descriptions. BUT the
important question was that
what were the most
basic traits?
Allport's
Basic Traits Categories included
three classic categories of
traits:
·
Cardinal
traits
·
Central
traits
·
Secondary
traits
Cardinal
Traits refer
to a single personality trait
directing most of the
person's behaviors and
activities
e.g. affection, affiliation,
kindness, and greed. The
person's whole life, or behavior,
is
influenced
by this trait. A person who
served the poor and
the weak all his
life may have a very
high
degree
of " kindness" or " nurturance". Or a
person who likes to hoard
things, people, and
wealth
may
be ruled by a high degree of "
greed", or perhaps "
inferiority".
Central
Traits refer
to those major characteristics
that make up the core of
someone's personality.
Most
people develop a group or
set of traits rather than a
single one, that form
the core of their
personality.
·Central
traits usually number from 5- 10 in a
person.
·e.g.,
affection, love for
humanity, and nurturance
will form one type of
personality.
·Inferiority,
need for control, and
greed may give a different
shape to personality.
Secondary
Traits,
qualities or characteristics that do
have an effect on our personality but
are much less
influential
than cardinal or central
traits.
These
affect fewer life situations
as compared to the cardinal or
central traits, for
example
preferring
to wear certain colors, or a
liking for specific tastes
or smells.
Trait
Theories Based Upon Factor
Analysis
A
number of trait theories are
based upon factor
analysis.
Factor
analysis: a
statistical method whereby
relationships between a large
number of variables are
summarized
into fewer patterns. These
patterns are more general in
nature.. The
extensive list is
For
example: A researcher prepares a
list of traits that people
may like in an ideal man
then
administered
to a large number of people,
who are asked to choose
traits that may describe
an
ideal
man.
Through
the factor analysis, the
responses are statistically
combined and the traits
associated with
one
another in the same set
(or person) are computed.
Thus the most fundamental
patterns are
identified.
These patterns are called
factors.
Psychologists
Raymond B Cattell, and Hans
Eysenck presented trait
theories based upon factor
analysis
Raymond
Cattell's Sixteen Personality
Factors
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Introduction
to Psychology PSY101
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After
using factor analysis
Cattell proposed that two
types of characteristics form
our personality:
·
Surface
traits, and
·
Source
traits
Surface
traits
·
Cattell's
factor analysis showed that
there are 46 surface traits or
clusters of related
behavior.
·
These
traits are the characteristics that we
can observe in a given
situation.
·
The
frequently quoted example in
this regard is that of a
friendly, gregarious librarian,
who is so helpful that he
might go
out
of his way to help you; as a
result of your interaction
with him it can be decided that he
possesses the trait of sociability.
His
sociability is a surface trait in
Cattell's terms.
·
BUT
surface traits may not
necessarily represent the traits that
actually underlie the personality of a
person;
Surface traits are what we directly
observe, and these are
based upon our perceptions
and
representations
of personality. These may not be the
true descriptions of the actual
underlying
dimensions
of someone's personality.
·
The
characteristics that form the
actual roots and basis of
all behavior may be
different, and fewer in
number.
Source
Traits
·
In
order to go beyond the
surface traits, Cattell
carried out further factor
analysis.
·
He
could identify 16 traits
that that represent basic
dimensions of personality.
·
He
called these traits, source
traits.
16
Pf: Sixteen Personality Factor
Questionnaire
Cattell
developed a measure that
provided a score for each of
the 16 source
traits.
High
scorer
Low
scorer
Factor
symbol
A
Outgoing
Reserved
B
More
intelligent
Less
intelligent
C
Stable
Emotional
E
Assertive
Humble
F
Happy-go-lucky
Sober
G
Conscientious
Expedient
H
Bold
Shy
I
Tender-minded
Tough-minded
L
Suspicious
Trusting
M
Imaginative
Practical
N
Shrewd
Forthright
O
Apprehensive
Placid
Q1
Experimenting
Traditional
Q2
Self-sufficient
Group-tied
Q3
Controlled
Casual
Q4
Tense
Relaxed
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Eysenck's
Dimensions of Personality
According
to Eysenck, personality can be
understood and described in
terms of just two
major
dimensions:
·
Introversion-extroversion,
·
Neuroticism-stability.
On
the first dimension, people
can be rated ranging from
introverts to extroverts: the
rest of the
traits
fall in between.
The
second dimension is independent of
the first one, and
ranges from being neurotic
to being
stable.
Introversion-extroversion
Introvert
Quiet,
passive, and careful
people.
Extroverts
Outgoing,
sociable, and active
people.
Neuroticism-stability
Neurotics
Moody,
touchy, and anxious
people.
Stable
Calm,
carefree, and even-tempered
people.
Eysenck
evaluated a number of people along these
dimensions. Using the information thus
obtained, he
could
accurately predict people's behavior in a
variety of situations.
The
Recent Approach to Understanding
Personality Traits
The
"Big Five":
Five
broad trait factors lie at
the core of
personality:
1.
Surgency: Extroversion and
sociability
2.
Neuroticism: Emotional stability
3.
Intellect
4.
Agreeableness
5.
Conscientiousness
3.
Learning Approaches to
Personality
·
Approaches
that focus upon the
"observable" person rather
than the inner dives,
instincts,
motives,
thoughts, or traits.
·
For
the learning
theorists:
Personality
is the aggregate of a person's
learned responses to the
external environment.
·
Variables
considered most important by
the learning theorist are
the features of a
person's
environment.
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Learning
approaches are primarily
based upon the principles
of:
·
Classical
Conditioning
·
Operant
Conditioning
·
Cognitive
Learning
B.
F. Skinner's Approach
·
Personality
is a collection of learned behavioral
patterns.
·
Patterns
of reinforcement that have
been received in various
situations in the past
cause
similarities
in responses across different
situations, when same or
similar situations
are
encountered.
·
For
example a student tries to
make a good presentation
every time he has to present
because
he
has been receiving positive
reinforcement for good
presentations in the past...not
because of
an
inborn drive or a trait of being a
hard working or industrious
person. Similarly, a person
who
is
never aggressive may be so
because he was always punished
for aggressiveness and
rewarded
for
being polite.
For
learning theorists
·
Consistencies
in behavior across different
situations are not as
important as the strategies
for
modifying
behavior are.
Learning
theorists are more optimistic in
their approach, as compared to the
psychodynamic
theorists;
they believe in the potential for
change, and do not believe in the
passivity of psychic
determinism.
4.
Social Cognitive Approach to
Personality
·
The
approaches that lay emphasis
upon the role of people's
cognitions in determining
their
personalities.
·
Cognitions
include: people's thoughts,
feelings, expectations, and
values.
·
These
approaches consider the
"inner" variables to be important in
determining one's
personality.
These
approaches emphasize the reciprocity
between individuals and their
environment.
There
exists a web of reciprocity,
consisting of the interaction of
environment and people's
behavior. Our
environment
affects our behavior, and
our behavior in turn
influences our environment
and causes
modifications
in the environment. The modified
environment in turn, affects
our behavior.
Albert
Bandura
According
to him, we possess the ability to
foresee the probable
consequences of certain of
our
behaviors
in a given setting, without
actually having carried out
those behaviors or actually
being
in
those settings. This so
happens primarily as a result of
"observational learning" i.e., having
seen
the
outcomes of others (models)
performing the same
behaviors in same or similar
situations.
For
example, this is how we
learn to be aggressive, sociable, or
industrious.
Bandura
also emphasized
·
Self-efficacy,
and
·
Reciprocal
determinism
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Self-efficacy
·
Self-efficacy
consists of learned expectations
that one is capable of
performing a certain
behavior,
or producing a desired
outcome.
·
Self-efficacy
is the underlying variable in
people's faith in their
ability to carry out a
particular
behavior.
·
The
higher the sense of
self-efficacy in a person the
greater will be the persistence in
his
behavior,
and also the greater will be
the likelihood of his
success.
Reciprocal
Determinism
·
According
to Bandura, the key to
understanding behavior lies in
reciprocal determinism.
·
We
can understand the
personality and behavior of a
person by understanding the
interaction
between
the environment, behavior,
and the individual; and
how this interaction causes
people
to
behave in the manner they
do.
·
Environment
affects behavior and the
behavior in turn affects the
environmental factors.
For
example
·
A
woman likes to make friends.
She gets an opportunity to make
friends at parties. She in
turn
arranges
parties herself and invites
people she likes, or those she
thinks are potential
friends.
Her
desire for finding friends
is satisfied as a result, at the
same time she becomes
confident
that
she can achieve what she
wants by working on it. This
causes persistence in her
behavior.
5.
Humanistic approach to
Personality
·
The
humanistic approach stresses
that people possess a basic
goodness, and have a
natural
tendency
to grow to higher levels of
functioning.
·
They
have a conscious, self-motivated
ability to change and
improve.
·
The
basic goodness, and the
natural tendency to grow,
along with their unique
creative
impulses
form the core of
personality.
Carl
Rogers
·
All
people require be loving and
respecting. This is a universal
phenomenon that is reflected
in
their
need for positive
regard.
·
This
love and regard comes to us
from other people. When
other people provide for
this basic
need,
we become dependent on them. We
begin to rely on others'
values and evaluate
and
judge
ourselves through the eyes
of others.
Self-concept
and conflicts
·
Our
self-concept and others'
opinions are
related.
·
At
times there may be
discrepancies or conflicts between
our self-concept
(self-impression)
and
our actual
experiences.
·
Minor
discrepancies lead to minor
problems, whereas deeper
conflicts lead to
psychological
disturbances
in daily functioning e.g.
frequent obsessions or
anxiety.
Unconditional
positive regard
·
A
person's conflicts can be
resolved if he receives unconditional
positive regard from
another
person.
·
Unconditional
positive regard means an
attitude of total acceptance
and respect from
another
person
without any conditions. No
matter what you say or do,
the person accepts
it.
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to Psychology PSY101
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·
As
a result of this acceptance, a
person gets an opportunity to
evolve and grow cognitively
as
well
as emotionally, and to develop a
more realistic
self-concept.
Self-actualization
·
According
to the humanistic approach,
self-actualization is the ultimate
goal of personality
growth
(see Rogers and
Maslow).
·
Self-actualization
is a state of self-fulfillment in which
people realize their optimal
potential.
·
Self-actualization
occurs when our everyday
life experiences and our
self-concept match
closely.
·
Self-actualized
people accept themselves the
way they are in reality.
This enables them
to
achieve
happiness and a feeling of
fulfillment.
6.
Biological Approaches to
Personality
·
Approaches
that emphasize the
significance of biological variables
and inherited
personality
characteristics.
·
These
approaches propose that
important components that
constitute our personality
are
inherited
or genetically determined e.g.
temperament.
Temperament
·
Temperament
is one of the main
ingredients of personality.
·
Temperament
is the basic, innate
disposition that emerges
early in life.
·
Even
very young infants show
signs of different dispositions
e.g. some smile, some
frown even
when
otherwise at ease, some are
irritable, some calm, some
shy, and some
restless.
·
Such
behaviors persist and at an
early stage in their life
the children are labeled as
stubborn,
shy,
restless etc.
Inhibited
children
·
According
to Jerome Kagan children who
are unusually fearful of the
sight of unfamiliar
adults,
and
fret when confronted with
unfamiliar objects or new
settings are the inhibited
children.
·
Such
children are labeled as
"shy' by their parents and
teachers by the age of 3-4
years.
·
They
are consistently shy and
emotionally restrained and
noticeably quite in
unfamiliar
situations.
·
The
constitute around 10% of all
children.
There
are biological differences
between the inhibited and
uninhibited children:
·
At
age 5 muscle tension
(especially in the vocal
cords and the larynx) is
higher in inhibited
children.
·
They
differ in the heart beat
pattern too. They experience
more of rapid resting
heartbeat. In
case
of confronting a new situation
their heart beat increases
more.
·
Hormonal
differences and variations in
the excitability of the
limbic system of the brain
have
also
been seen to be different in
the two groups.
Kagan
concluded that these
differences can be explained in terms of
an inborn characteristic of the
inhibited
children i.e., their greater
physiological reactivity.
Twin
studies supporting the genetic
argument
·
A
number of studies on twins
reared together and reared
apart have supported the
biological
approach
to understanding personality.
·
Study
by Auke Telegen and
colleagues (1988):
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A
sample of 350 pairs of twins
was studied. They included 44
genetically identical twins
who were
reared
apart.
·
The
subjects were given a
battery of tests, including
one that measured
personality traits.
The
results showed that
·
The
twins were quit similar in
their personality, in major
respects.
·
There
are certain traits that
are more influenced by
heredity than
others.
·
Genetic
component was found to be particularly
strong in case of social
potency and
traditionalism.
·
Genetic
component was relatively weak in
case of achievement and
social closeness.
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