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Unit 1: Personality Unit 1: Personality EQ 1: EQ 1: What is the psychodynamic approach to personality? ? ? • BR: Mind set video • Psychoanalytic tests

Unit 1: Personality EQ 1: ? Unit 1: Personality EQ 1: What is the psychodynamic approach to personality? ? BR: Mind set video Psychoanalytic tests

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Page 1: Unit 1: Personality EQ 1: ? Unit 1: Personality EQ 1: What is the psychodynamic approach to personality? ? BR: Mind set video Psychoanalytic tests

Unit 1: PersonalityUnit 1: Personality

EQ 1: EQ 1: What is the psychodynamic approach

to personality? ??• BR: Mind set video• Psychoanalytic tests

Page 2: Unit 1: Personality EQ 1: ? Unit 1: Personality EQ 1: What is the psychodynamic approach to personality? ? BR: Mind set video Psychoanalytic tests

EQ 2: EQ 2: What are the different parts of Freud’s

psychoanalytic theory?

• Bell Ringer: Did you think the results of the personality tests yesterday were accurate? Why or why not?

Page 3: Unit 1: Personality EQ 1: ? Unit 1: Personality EQ 1: What is the psychodynamic approach to personality? ? BR: Mind set video Psychoanalytic tests

What is What is Personality?Personality?The distinct patterns of behavior, thoughts, and feelings that characterize a person’s adjustment to the demands of life.

Historically, people have had different views of personality.

Page 4: Unit 1: Personality EQ 1: ? Unit 1: Personality EQ 1: What is the psychodynamic approach to personality? ? BR: Mind set video Psychoanalytic tests

Psychodynamic

Personality

Personality

Theories

Theories

Trait Trait TheoriesTheories

Humanistic Theory

Sociocultural

Biological

Learning Learning TheoriesTheories

Page 5: Unit 1: Personality EQ 1: ? Unit 1: Personality EQ 1: What is the psychodynamic approach to personality? ? BR: Mind set video Psychoanalytic tests

Psychodynamic Psychodynamic TheoriesTheories

• There are several Psychodynamic theories. Each can be traced back to Sigmund Freud.

• Personality is characterized by a dynamic struggle between elements of the personality.

Page 6: Unit 1: Personality EQ 1: ? Unit 1: Personality EQ 1: What is the psychodynamic approach to personality? ? BR: Mind set video Psychoanalytic tests

• Read and annotate psychodynamic overview

• TPS

• Read and annotate id, ego, superego

• TPS

Page 7: Unit 1: Personality EQ 1: ? Unit 1: Personality EQ 1: What is the psychodynamic approach to personality? ? BR: Mind set video Psychoanalytic tests

EQ 2: What are the different parts of freud’s

psychoanalytic theory?

• BR: Explain a time your superego and id were in conflict. What was the outcome?

Page 8: Unit 1: Personality EQ 1: ? Unit 1: Personality EQ 1: What is the psychodynamic approach to personality? ? BR: Mind set video Psychoanalytic tests

Sigmund FreudSigmund Freud’’s Theorys Theory

• Freud believed that the human mind was like an iceberg.

• In terms of the thoughts and impulses in our minds, we are only aware of the “tip of the iceberg.”

Page 9: Unit 1: Personality EQ 1: ? Unit 1: Personality EQ 1: What is the psychodynamic approach to personality? ? BR: Mind set video Psychoanalytic tests

Sigmund Freud Sigmund Freud (cont.)(cont.)

• Freud hypothesized that we have several psychic structures that make up the personality and clash with one another.

• These structures are the Id, Ego and Superego.

Page 10: Unit 1: Personality EQ 1: ? Unit 1: Personality EQ 1: What is the psychodynamic approach to personality? ? BR: Mind set video Psychoanalytic tests
Page 11: Unit 1: Personality EQ 1: ? Unit 1: Personality EQ 1: What is the psychodynamic approach to personality? ? BR: Mind set video Psychoanalytic tests

Add to Add to the the

icebericeberg in g in your your notesnotes

Page 12: Unit 1: Personality EQ 1: ? Unit 1: Personality EQ 1: What is the psychodynamic approach to personality? ? BR: Mind set video Psychoanalytic tests

The The ““IdId””

• The id is present at birth and represents our instinctual drives such as hunger, sex and aggression.

• The id is completely unconscious and operates on the “pleasure principle.”

55 miles per hour? How dull.

I want to travel at excessive speeds. I want 95 mph!

Page 13: Unit 1: Personality EQ 1: ? Unit 1: Personality EQ 1: What is the psychodynamic approach to personality? ? BR: Mind set video Psychoanalytic tests

The The ““EgoEgo””• The ego begins to develop during the first year of life and balances the id’s urges with reality. Hence, the ego is guided by the “Reality Principle”

• While doing most of its work in the conscious, a portion is working beneath the surface.

Ah…Id? Let us be realistic…

I would suggest that we only drive 5 miles above the speed limit…

Page 14: Unit 1: Personality EQ 1: ? Unit 1: Personality EQ 1: What is the psychodynamic approach to personality? ? BR: Mind set video Psychoanalytic tests

The The ““SuperegoSuperego””

• The superego is the embodiment of societal rules, ethics and morals.

• The superego sets high standards for behavior and monitors the decisions of the ego. The superego causes feelings of guilt and shame when its standards aren’t met.

The speed limit is 55. You should only travel

55. No higher!

Page 15: Unit 1: Personality EQ 1: ? Unit 1: Personality EQ 1: What is the psychodynamic approach to personality? ? BR: Mind set video Psychoanalytic tests

EX: What would each part EX: What would each part of the mind want to do in of the mind want to do in

the scenario? the scenario?

• You suddenly feel hungry while waiting to order a meal in a restaurant

Page 16: Unit 1: Personality EQ 1: ? Unit 1: Personality EQ 1: What is the psychodynamic approach to personality? ? BR: Mind set video Psychoanalytic tests

Cat in the hatCat in the hat

• Read the book in groups and fill out the chart

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AnswersAnswers

• The cat: Dominated by his id at the beginning but moves more to a balance between the superego and id at the end.

• Sally and the narrator: Fluctuate between the id and superego until the end when they allow the superego to take over.

• Mother: Represents the superego through the moral and ethical restraints placed on us by caregivers.

• Fish: Dominated by his superego throughout the story.

Page 18: Unit 1: Personality EQ 1: ? Unit 1: Personality EQ 1: What is the psychodynamic approach to personality? ? BR: Mind set video Psychoanalytic tests

Psychosexual StagesPsychosexual Stages

• Oral Stage: Sexual gratification is obtained through oral activities. Fixation may lead to gullibility, smoking, alcohol abuse, nail biting and/or excessive optimism/pessimism.

• Anal Stage: Sexual gratification is obtained through contraction and relaxation of the muscles that control elimination (Fixation may lead to anal-retentive or anal-expulsive traits).

Page 19: Unit 1: Personality EQ 1: ? Unit 1: Personality EQ 1: What is the psychodynamic approach to personality? ? BR: Mind set video Psychoanalytic tests

Psychosexual StagesPsychosexual Stages (cont.) (cont.)

• Phallic Stage: Libidinal energy is shifted to the phallic regions (penis for boys and clitoris for girls).

• Oedipus Complex: A conflict of the phallic stage in which the boy wishes to possess his mother sexually and perceives his father as a rival.

• Electra Complex: Similar to the Oedipus complex in that a young girl longs for her father and resents her mother.

Page 20: Unit 1: Personality EQ 1: ? Unit 1: Personality EQ 1: What is the psychodynamic approach to personality? ? BR: Mind set video Psychoanalytic tests

Psychosexual StagesPsychosexual Stages

• Latency Stage: The pressures of the Oedipus and Electra complexes cause children to repress their sexual urges and enter a period of latency where their urges remain unconscious.

• Genital Stage: The mature stage of psychosexual development, characterized by the preferred expression of libido via intercourse with an adult of the opposite gender.

Page 21: Unit 1: Personality EQ 1: ? Unit 1: Personality EQ 1: What is the psychodynamic approach to personality? ? BR: Mind set video Psychoanalytic tests

Defense MechanismsDefense Mechanisms• When the ego is threatened by unconscious impulses, it will employ defense mechanisms to protect the conscious self.

Page 22: Unit 1: Personality EQ 1: ? Unit 1: Personality EQ 1: What is the psychodynamic approach to personality? ? BR: Mind set video Psychoanalytic tests

Other Psychodynamic Other Psychodynamic TheoristsTheorists

• Carl Jung: Unlike Freud, Jung viewed the sexual instinct as just one of many important instincts. Jung also believed in a unifying force of personality (the “Self”) that gives direction and purpose to human behavior. Believed in a capacity for self-awareness and self-direction.

• Alfred Adler: Believed that people are motivated by an inferiority complex. This inferiority complex therefore, leads to a drive for superiority. Like Jung, Adler believed in a capacity for self-awareness.

• Karen Horney: Unlike Freud, Horney argued that little girls do not suffer penis envy. She believed that interpersonal relationships were more influential in childhood development than sexual impulses. She put forth the notion that genuine and consistent love can alleviate the effects of a traumatic childhood.

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Erik EriksonErik Erikson• Whereas Freud focused on sexual energy as a developmental force, Erikson viewed the social world as a much more important component of our development.

• Hence, Erikson’s theory is labeled Psychosocial instead of Psychosexual.

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EriksonErikson’’s Stages of s Stages of Psychosocial DevelopmentPsychosocial Development

Page 25: Unit 1: Personality EQ 1: ? Unit 1: Personality EQ 1: What is the psychodynamic approach to personality? ? BR: Mind set video Psychoanalytic tests

Learning TheoriesLearning Theories• Learning theories focus upon our ability to learn and adapt to the environments in which we find ourselves.

• Two prominent theories are Behaviorism and Social-Cognitive Theory.

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BehaviorismBehaviorism• A school of psychology that explains and predicts behavior in terms of the environmental stimuli acting upon an organism and the organism’s subsequent responses.

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Classical Classical ConditioningConditioning• A simple form of learning in which one stimulus comes to bring forth the response usually brought forth by a second stimulus as a result of being paired repeatedly with the second stimulus.

Page 28: Unit 1: Personality EQ 1: ? Unit 1: Personality EQ 1: What is the psychodynamic approach to personality? ? BR: Mind set video Psychoanalytic tests

Classical Conditioning Classical Conditioning (cont.)(cont.)• Unconditioned Stimulus (UCS): A stimulus that elicits a response from an organism without learning. (In Pavlov’s classic experiment, the meat was the UCS).

• Unconditioned Response (UCR): An unlearned response. A response to an unconditioned stimulus. (In Pavlov’s experiment, salivation was the UCR).

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• Conditioned Stimulus (CS): A previously neutral stimulus that elicits a conditioned response because it has been paired repeatedly with a stimulus that already brought forth that response. (In Pavlov’s experiment, the bell started as a Neutral Stimulus and become the CS).

• Conditioned Response (CR): A response to a conditioned stimulus. (In Pavlov’s experiment, the salivatory response began as an UCR but becomes a CR as the dog salivates to the sound of the bell.)

Classical Conditioning Classical Conditioning (cont.)(cont.)

Page 30: Unit 1: Personality EQ 1: ? Unit 1: Personality EQ 1: What is the psychodynamic approach to personality? ? BR: Mind set video Psychoanalytic tests

NSNS

UCSUCS

(Bell)

(Meat)

↕↕ PairingsPairings

↔↔ UCRUCR

↔↔

(Salivation)

AssociationAssociation

Page 31: Unit 1: Personality EQ 1: ? Unit 1: Personality EQ 1: What is the psychodynamic approach to personality? ? BR: Mind set video Psychoanalytic tests

Operant ConditioningOperant Conditioning

• A simple form of learning in which the frequency of behavior is increased (by means of reinforcement) or decreased (by means of punishment).

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ReinforcementReinforcement• Positive Reinforcer: A reinforcer that increases the frequency of behavior when it is presented (an example would be to reward behavior by giving something pleasant such as food or money).

• Negative Reinforcer: A reinforcer that increases the frequency of behavior when it is removed (an example would be to reward behavior by taking away an unpleasant task such as doing the dishes).

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PunishmentPunishment

• Punishment is an unpleasant stimulus that suppresses behavior.

• Punishment is often used because it can quickly suppress behavior. However, psychologists suggest utilizing reinforcement due to the inherent weaknesses of punishment.

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Reinforcement versus Reinforcement versus PunishmentPunishment

Page 35: Unit 1: Personality EQ 1: ? Unit 1: Personality EQ 1: What is the psychodynamic approach to personality? ? BR: Mind set video Psychoanalytic tests

Weaknesses of Weaknesses of PunishmentPunishment• Punishment does not in and of itself suggest an alternate, acceptable form of behavior.

• Punishment suppresses the behavior only so long as the delivery is guaranteed. For example, if parents are inconsistent with punishment, children learn very quickly how to “get away with murder” with one parent and not the other.

• Punishment may be imitated as a way of solving problems. Thus, a child might strike another at school as a way of dealing with their frustrations.

Page 36: Unit 1: Personality EQ 1: ? Unit 1: Personality EQ 1: What is the psychodynamic approach to personality? ? BR: Mind set video Psychoanalytic tests

Social-Cognitive Social-Cognitive TheoryTheory

• A cognitively oriented theory in which observational learning, values and expectations play major roles in determining behavior.

• Reciprocal determinism: Albert Bandura’s term for the social-cognitive view that people influence their environment just as their environment influences them.

Page 37: Unit 1: Personality EQ 1: ? Unit 1: Personality EQ 1: What is the psychodynamic approach to personality? ? BR: Mind set video Psychoanalytic tests

Social-Cognitive Social-Cognitive (cont.)(cont.)

• Observational Learning: Unlike behaviorism, social-cognitive theory holds that we can learn simply by observation. However, whether or not we engage in the behavior we have learned depends upon both situation and personal variables.

• Person Variables: Factors within the person that influence behavior (examples include: competencies, encoding strategies, expectancies, emotions, self-regulatory systems and plans).

Page 38: Unit 1: Personality EQ 1: ? Unit 1: Personality EQ 1: What is the psychodynamic approach to personality? ? BR: Mind set video Psychoanalytic tests

Person and Situation Person and Situation VariablesVariables

Page 39: Unit 1: Personality EQ 1: ? Unit 1: Personality EQ 1: What is the psychodynamic approach to personality? ? BR: Mind set video Psychoanalytic tests

Humanistic-Existential Humanistic-Existential TheoriesTheories

• Humanism: The view that people are capable of free choice, self-fulfillment, and ethical behavior.

• Existentialism: The view that people are completely free and responsible for their own behavior.

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Self-ActualizationSelf-Actualization

• An innate tendency to strive to realize one’s potential. The goal to “be all you can be”.

• Maslow believed that we progress from one level to the next, but only if the needs of the prior level are met. Thus, self-actualization is difficult if we are homeless.

Page 41: Unit 1: Personality EQ 1: ? Unit 1: Personality EQ 1: What is the psychodynamic approach to personality? ? BR: Mind set video Psychoanalytic tests

RogersRogers’’ Self Theory Self Theory

• Rogers believed that each of us is unique and views the world from a unique frame of reference. He felt that if we are given unconditional positive regard, we would develop our unique abilities and talents.

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Unconditional Positive Unconditional Positive RegardRegard

• Acceptance of others as having intrinsic merit regardless of their behavior of the moment. Consistent expression of esteem for the value of another person.

Page 43: Unit 1: Personality EQ 1: ? Unit 1: Personality EQ 1: What is the psychodynamic approach to personality? ? BR: Mind set video Psychoanalytic tests

Trait TheoriesTrait Theories• A school of psychology that attempts to understand personality by classifying, measuring and interrelating relatively stable aspects of personality known as traits.

• Hippocrates believed that traits are embedded in people’s bodily fluids and personality depends upon the balance of these fluids: Yellow bile (quick-tempered), blood (warm, cheerful), phlegm (calm, cool) and black bile (gloomy).

Page 44: Unit 1: Personality EQ 1: ? Unit 1: Personality EQ 1: What is the psychodynamic approach to personality? ? BR: Mind set video Psychoanalytic tests

What is a Trait?What is a Trait?

• A trait is a relatively stable aspect of personality that is inferred from behavior and assumed to give rise to consistent behavior. In other words, an individual will display this trait in most situations.

• Examples of traits include: Quiet, impulsive, outgoing, moody, calm, optimistic, anxious, reliable, etc.

Page 45: Unit 1: Personality EQ 1: ? Unit 1: Personality EQ 1: What is the psychodynamic approach to personality? ? BR: Mind set video Psychoanalytic tests

The Five-Factor ModelThe Five-Factor Model

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Sociocultural Sociocultural TheoriesTheories

• The view that focuses on the roles of ethnicity, gender, culture, and socioeconomic status in personality, behavior and adjustment.

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Individualism vs. Individualism vs. CollectivismCollectivism

• Individualist: A person who defines herself or himself in terms of personal traits and gives priority to her or his own goals.

• Collectivist: A person who defines herself or himself in terms of relationships to other people and groups and gives priority to group goals.

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The Self in relation to The Self in relation to othersothers

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Personality Personality AssessmentAssessment

• Psychologists assess personality for a variety of reasons: to help individuals make academic or vocational choices, to identify psychological problems or to help organizations make successful hiring decisions.

• The two most common forms of assessment are projective and objective types of tests.

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Objective Test: The Objective Test: The MMPIMMPI

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Projective Test: The Projective Test: The RorschachRorschach

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Projective Test: TATProjective Test: TAT

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CopyrightCopyright

Copyright 2004 by John Wiley & Sons, Inc., New York, NY. All rights reserved. No part of the material protected by this copyright may be reproduced or utilized in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical, including photocopying, recording, or by any information storage and retrieval system, without written permission of the copyright owner.

Page 54: Unit 1: Personality EQ 1: ? Unit 1: Personality EQ 1: What is the psychodynamic approach to personality? ? BR: Mind set video Psychoanalytic tests