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Personality
Psychology PSY 405
VU
Lesson
31
HENRY
MURRAY'S PERSONOLOGY
(CONTINUED)
5-Tension
Reduction
Murray
conceived of the individual as set into
action by a complex set of
motives. Further, he granted
that
when
a need is aroused the individual is in a
state of tension, and satisfaction of the
need involves
reduction
of
the tension. Finally, the organism will
learn to attend to objects and perform
acts that it has found in
the
past
to be associated with tension
reduction.
Although
this conventional formulation
met with Murray's approval,
he contended that it is an
incomplete
picture.
Not only does the individual
learn ways respond in such a
manner as to reduce tension
and thus
experience
satisfaction, but also he or
she learns to respond in
such a manner as to develop tension so
that it
can
later be reduced, thereby enhancing the amount of
pleasure.
One
should note that this
formulation applies only to
effect needs. In process
activity and modal needs
the
satisfaction
is intrinsic to the activity and may be
just as Intense at the beginning or
middle as at the end.
6-Thema
A
thema is simply an interactive
behavioral unit. Thus, it deals
with the Interaction between needs
and
press.
With it one can represent
the situations that lead to the
operation of particular needs as
well as the
outcome
or resultants of the operation of these
needs.
Themas
vary from simple
formulations of a single subject-object
interaction to more general and of
longer
transactions.
They also include
formulations that represent the
combination of a number of simple
themas
(serial
themas). The thema as an
analytic unit is a natural outcome of
Murray's conviction that
interpersonal
relations
should be formulated as a dyadic
unit. That is, the theorist
not only must represent the
subject who
is
the focus of interest but also must
represent fully the nature of the person
with whom the subject is
interacting.
Consider
two of Murray's examples of
episodes. First, an individual
who is snubbed by another
might
respond
in kind. This would be coded
as rejection press, triggering
rejection need in the individual.
Second,
a
person might make renewed
efforts to succeed following
failure. This would be conceptualized
as
achievement
need following a failure outcome or
press.
7-
Need Integrate
Although
needs are not necessarily
linked to specific objects in the
environment, it often happens
that with
experience
the individual comes to associate
particular objects with certain
needs. Likewise,
particular
modes
of response, or means of approaching or
avoiding these objects, may be
acquired and associated
with
the need. When this
integration of the need and the image or
thought of the environmental object,
as
well
as instrumental acts, has
taken place, Murray speaks of a
need integrate. A need
integrate is a well
established
"thematic disposition" -a need
for a certain kind of
interaction with a certain
kind of person or
object.
Under circumstances where a need
integrate exists, the arousal of the need
will ordinarily lead
the
person
to seek in an appropriate way the
environmental object corresponding to the
image that was a part
of
the
need integrate.
8-
Vector-Value Scheme
Murray
proposed that behavioral tendencies be
represented in terms of vectors that
represent broad
"physical
or psychological directions of activity."
The values that the vectors serve
are represented by a
series
of value concepts. Although the,
scheme was not completely
worked out, Murray provided
tentative
lists
of values and vectors. The vectors consist of
rejection, reception, acquisition,
construction,
conservation,
expression, transmission, expulsion, destruction and
avoidance. The values consist of
body
(physical
well-being), property (useful objects,
wealth), authority (decision
making power),
affiliation
(interpersonal
affection), knowledge (facts and theories,
science, history), aesthetic
form (beauty, art),
and
ideology
(system of values, philosophy, religion).
In practice it is intended that these
vectors and values be
arranged
in a matrix of intersecting rows and columns so
that each cell in the matrix
will represent
behavior
that
corresponds to a particular vector in the
service of a particular value.
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Thus,
it is now possible to represent the
individual at any point in
time as a complex integrate of
needs and
press
or vectors and values, as well as
personality structures, abilities,
achievements, and sentiments.
9-
Genetic-Maturational
Determinants
In
a late formulation of his
views, Murray (1968b)
ascribed an important role to
genetic and
maturational
factors in the development of personality. He
conceived of genetic-maturational
processes
as being responsible for programming a
succession of eras throughout an
individual's life.
During
the first era- that of
childhood, adolescence, and young
adulthood- new structural
compositions
emerge
and multiply. The middle
years are marked by conservative
recompositions of the already
emerged
structures and functions. In the final
era, the capacity for
forming new compositions and
recompositions
decreases and the atrophy of existing
forms and functions increases. Within
each
period,
there are numerous smaller programs of
behavioral and experiential events
that run under the
guidance
of genetically controlled maturational
processes.
10-Learning
Learning
consists of discovering what
generates pleasure and what
generates distress for the
individual.
These
hedonic and anhedonic generators
may be classified in several ways. They
may be retrospective
(memories
of past experiences that were
delightful or distressful), spective
(current experiences), or
prospective
(anticipations of future pleasures or
pains). Current generators may be
classified according to
whether
they are located
predominantly in the person, in the
environment, or in an
interpersonal
transaction.
These generators may be
further subdivided. For
example, generators in the person
may be
located
in the body, in some emotional
center of the brain, in some
type of psychological process, or
in
the
judgments of conscience.
11-Uniqueness
In
spite of his attention to general
categories of analysis, Murray always
maintained the essential
uniqueness
of each person, and even of each
behavioral event, as a self-evident
fact. His respect
for
naturalistic
observation and his creative
and intuitive literary talents
made it easy for him to
grasp and
express
compellingly the individuality and
elusive complexity of each subject or
event.
12-Unconscious
Processes
Among
academic psychologists Murray was one of
the first to accept the pervasive
role of unconscious
determinants
of behavior (Murray,
1936).
Not
only is the individual unaware of certain
tendencies that influence
behavior but, more important,
some
of
these tendencies are
actively defended against or warded off
from consciousness. Thus, Murray
not only
accepted
the role of unconscious determinants of
behavior but also recognized the
operation of the Freudian
mechanisms
of repression and
resistance.
13-The
Socialization Process
Murray
suggested that the human personality is a
compromise between the individual's own impulses
and
the
demands and interests of other
people. These demands of
other people are represented
collectively by
the
institutions and cultural patterns to
which the individual is exposed,
and the process is
socialization.
Conflicts
between the individual and the approved
patterns of the society are
customarily solved by
means
of
the individual conforming to the group
patterns in some manner.
An
essential element in achieving the goals of
socialization is the development of an
adequate superego. An
internal
structure that serves to reward
and punish one when one is
behaving appropriately or
inappropriately
.in terms of the culture
pattern as interpreted by these
authority figures. This
implies that
the
parents, as the most important
authority figures, are the
chief agents of the socialization
process. The
effectiveness
of the parents in rewarding approved and
punishing disapproved patterns of
behavior will
largely
determine the success of this
developmental process. An important
component of the parent's role
as
socializer is the effectiveness with
which they develop a
mutually affectionate relationship
with the child
so
that mere approval or
disapproval can serve as
significantly motivating conditions in
controlling the
child's
behavior.
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14-
Characteristic Research and
Research Methods
Let
us examine very briefly several
distinctive qualities of Murray's general
approach to personality
research.
1-Intensive
Study of Small Numbers of
Normal Subjects
Murray
was convinced, that an
adequate understanding of behavior
must follow a complete and
detailed
study
of individual subjects. Just as
case study has provided
indispensable assistance in the growth
and
development
of medical science, so the future of
psychology is linked to the willingness
of investigators to
take
the time and effort to understand
thoroughly individual cases.
Group relations are
important only when
accompanied
by a careful inquiry into the
deviations within the group and
conditions that cause
or
accompany
these deviations. To report a
finding that characterizes 80 percent of
a specified group is of
little
value unless some
explanation can be provided
for the failure of the other 20 percent
to fit into this
pattern.
Murray's consistent emphasis on
this point was one of his
principal contributions to
research
methods.
A
further distinctive quality of
his research has been
its emphasis upon the study
of normal individuals in
natural
settings. In general, the intensive study
of individual cases has been
reserved for the
clinical
setting
where the pathology of the patients has
made them a subject of particular interest or
else the
demands
of diagnostic or therapeutic expediency
have necessitated extensive information.
Thus,
Murray's
choice of the normal subject as the focus of his
research provided a natural complement to
the
case
histories available from
psychiatric settings.
Murray
(1958) believed that the
ultimate concern of the personologist is
to explain and predict the
individual's
activities in everyday life.
For that reason, he or she
should not be content to limit
predictions
to
the subculture of the laboratory or try to understand
the individual merely by validating one
test against
the
other.
He
was also one of the pioneers in
interdisciplinary co-operation in
personality research. The
Harvard
Psychological
Clinic staff habitually
included representatives of psychiatry,
psychology, anthropology,
and
other
disciplines in an era when
this was anything but
commonplace.
2-The
Diagnostic Council
Murray
placed great emphasis upon the importance
of the observer or the psychologist as an instrument,
in
psychological
research. Although we may
use rating scales, category
sets, or psychological tests to
appraise
personality,
still, at the base of all
these instruments is the sensitive
observation of the investigator or
clinician.
Because of the root status of the
observer, Murray was
convinced that more attention
should be
paid
to his serious efforts
directed at improving their powers of
observation. These considerations led
him
to
refer to the psychologist as the most
important "instrument of precision" in
psychological research.
One
evident means of placing
checks upon, and improving the
quality of, observation is to have
multiple
observers
all examining the same data
from a different perspective. Thus, using
a number of investigators
to
study the same individual or
individuals offers unique
rewards in the form of canceling
out limitations
posed
by the biases of particular observers or
the limitations offered by specialized
sets of data. Not only
is
the
end result of such group
observation presumably superior to
individual observation but the
members of
the
group should sharpen and
improve their powers of observation as a
result of the corrective function
of
the
observations of others.
These
considerations led Murray to devise the
diagnostic council, which
involves many observers
all
studying
the same subjects from
different points of View
with the opportunity for a
final discussion and
synthesis
of the information secured
from these different vantage
points. After a period of
individual obser-
vation
during which each
investigator studies the subjects
through his or her own specialized
techniques,
there
is a conference for each subject. At this
time every investigator
presents his or her data
and
interpretation
with a full opportunity for
the observations and interpretations of other
observers to support
or
suggest modifications in the report. A
single investigator has
primary responsibility for
assembling and
presenting
the synthesis of each case,
but each member of the
council is given an unlimited
opportunity for
contributing
to this final
product.
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3-Instruments
of Personality Measurement
No
one has made more significant
contributions to personality assessment
than Murray. He devised a
large
number
of ingenious devices for the
measurement of personality, only a
small number of which have
been
systematically
exploited. The volumes
Explorations in personality and
Assessment of men provide
ample
illustration
of the instruments he devised or was influential in
developing.
One
of these, the Thematic Apperception
Test, has become, next to
the Rorschach Test, the most
widely
used
projective technique in current
use (Lindzey, 1961;
Murstein, 1963; Zubin, Eron,
& Schumer, 1965.
see
Kaplan & Saccuzzo, 1993,
for a recent review). In
addition, Murray's system of
needs has been the
basis
for several other widely
used personality inventories.
Most notable among these are
the Edwards
Personal
Preference Schedule (Edwards, 1954,
1959), the Personality Research
Form (Jackson, 1967),
and
the
Jackson Personality Inventory
(Jackson, 1976 a, b).
Almost
all of Murray's instruments have been
congruent with his
fundamental conviction that an
ultimate
understanding
of human behavior will derive
not from the study of lower
organisms or the study of
humans
under
highly restricted conditions but rather
from the complex study of
individual behavior. That
is,
Murray
argued for the collection of rich and
multiform data that can be
expected to reflect a Wide range
of
behavioral
tendencies and capacities. He was
convinced that one of the natural
advantages of the
psychologist
is the fact that he or she
deals with a talking organism and
that this should be
capitalized upon
fully.
In contrast to the biologist, the
zoologist, or the physicist, the
psychologist deals with a subject
who
can
tell a great deal about
internal processes that operate,
about external events that
are attended to, and
about
the major determinants of behavior. It is
true that these reports must
be assessed carefully and cannot
always
be taken at their face
value, but nevertheless they
represent a crucial beginning in the
attempt to
unravel
the secrets of human behavior.
Murray
pioneered in the development of
personality instruments that explore the
full mental content of
the
subject.
His instruments typicality do not
limit the response alternatives of the
subject by means of
predetermined
categories but rather they
permit and encourage a full and
subjective exposition on the
part
of
the subject, Imagination and fantasy are
permitted full participation by
these techniques. They
provide
the
investigator with a fullness of
data that is at the same
time richly promising and
complexly
discouraging.
4-Representative
Studies
Murray
and his collaborators at the
Psychological Clinic conducted extensive
research. Murray
began
Explorations
in personality with a commitment to
adopting "the life history
of a single man as a unit"
for
investigation
(1938, p. 3). One of
Murray's clear legacies has
been the commitment among many of
his
students
to study personality "the
long way," by attending in
depth to individual lives
(e.g., White, 1963b,
1975,
1981). His research agenda
has been carried forward by
former students, such as
Donald MacKinnon
at
the Institute for Personality
Assessment and Research
((PAR) at Berkeley. In addition, as
noted earlier in
this
chapter, Murray's research tradition is
recognized in the Henry A. Murray Lectures in
Personality, at
Michigan
State University and in the series of
volumes generated by those lectures.
-
Three
examples of Murray's research
deserve mention. First,
Explorations in personality contains
over
200
pages of research reports by Murray
and his collaborators. The
research reported there
includes
interviews
about childhood and sexual development,
questionnaires to measure needs and
special
abilities,
correlations between Murray's needs and
hypnotizability, levels of aspiration,
Rosenzweig's
experimental
studies on repression and reaction to
frustration, emotionality and galvanic
skin response,
and
Erikson's studies of college males in
dramatic, play situations. This
work deserves further study
by
the
interested student, both because of its
inherent interest and historical
significance and because it
illustrates
the breadth and creativity of Murray's approach to
personality.
In
Murray's second major book,
The assessment of men
(Office of Strategic Services Assessment
Staff,
1948),
he described assessment procedures he and
his staff had employed at the
United States Office
of
Strategic
Services during World War
II. Most of those procedures
represented attempts to understand
the
personalities
of candidates being screened
for secret, overseas
assignments. This work was
noteworthy
for
its multidimensional, pragmatic
orientation. The assessments
entailed self-report tests,
interviews,
observations,
and situational tests. For
example, applicants "leadership" skills
ostensibly were measured
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by
how effectively they
directed several helpers in a construction task.
The "helpers," however, had
been
directed
to obstruct the project in a variety of ways,
and the entire exercise
actually was designed to
measure
reactions to frustration. Like the
earlier experimental work at
Harvard, these
assessment
practices
foreshadow a number of contemporary
research and assessment
strategies.
Finally,
Murray's most interesting
research project would not
qualify as research for many
psychologists,
but
it provides a penetrating insight
into Murray's conceptualization of
personality.
5-Current
Research
Murray's
approach to personality inspired a great
deal of research. In this
respect, the heuristic value of
his
theory
has been substantial. In this section we
consider research programs that are
derivatives of Murray's
model.
6-McClelland
and Social
Motives
The
research program most
directly associated with
Murray is David McClelland's
study of the need for
achievement.
The connection with Murray
actually exists at three levels. First,
the motive to achieve
was
one
of the original needs identified by
Murray, who defined it as a
drive to overcome obstacles and
obtain
high
standards. Second, McClelland
believes that we are not
directly aware of our basic
motives. As a
consequence,
he embraced Murray's proposal
that we measure needs as
they exist in a person's
fantasies,
not
in his or her behavior or self-reports.
Third, following on this last
point, McClelland has
employed a
modified
version of Murray's Thematic
Apperception Test (TAT) to
measure achievement motivation.
The
TAT was developed (Morgan &
Murray, 1935) out of
Murray's belief that many of
the basic human
motives
exist outside of conscious
awareness. This clearly
presents a major measurement
problem. How
can
we expect a person to tell us how
much of a tendency he or she possesses if
the person is not aware
of
the
existence of that motive? This is the
classic dilemma for depth
psychology. Murray's solution
was to
develop
the TAT in accord with what
has come to be known as the
projective hypothesis. If we present
a
person
with an ambiguous picture and then
ask what is in the picture, the
response must be a reflection
of
what
is important to the person or the themes
the person uses to organize the
world.
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