SESSION 8 Personality
SESSION 8 Personality
SESSION 8 Personality
Topic 12
Topic Content
• What is Personality
• Determinants of Personality Development
• Trait Theories of Personality
- Enumerating and Measuring Personality Traits
- Cattell’s Source Traits
- Eysenck’s Three dimensions
- Big Five Personality Traits
• Cognitive and Motivational Properties of Personality
Assessment Methods
• The Psychodynamic Approach of Freud
• The Neo-Freudians
• Humanistic Approaches to Personality
- Carl Rogers and the Self
- Abraham Maslow and Self Actualization
What is Personality
• Personality can be defined as the overall organization of
psychological characteristics – feeling, thinking, and
behaving – that differentiate one person from another and
lead us to act consistently across time and situations
The central elements of personality called traits, that is
predispositions to respond consistently across times and
situations
The full richness of a person’s personality cannot be
captured by just listing his or her traits
Good personality theories must explain how the traits are
integrated. They must be able to explain how good or bad
qualities, as well as stability and change can be present in
every human being
Personality
Three Key themes
1. Uniqueness:
- Each person is a collection of unique characteristics that results in
behavior that is unique to that individual and differentiate one person from
another
2. Situational Consistency
- Difference in opinion regarding the issue of consistency and
variability
- Individual characteristics will be similar in different situations only if:
(a) the situations are similar or
(b) the characteristics have produced similar outcomes in these
situations in the past
3. Stability:
Considerable evidence suggest it is stable and enduring over time
The overall profile or combination of characteristics that capture the
unique nature of a person as that person reacts and interacts with others.
Determinants of Personality
Development
• Heredity
– Study of identical
twins
– Assessments of
newborns
– Genes
• Environment
– Social exposures
– Physiological forces
– Socioeconomic
factors
Determinants of Personality
Development
Determinants of Personality
Development
Heredity and environment.
– Heredity sets the limits on the development of
personality characteristics.
– Environment determines development within these
limits.
– About a 50-50 heredity-environment split.
– Cultural values and norms play a substantial role in
the development of personality.
– Social factors include family life, religion, and many
kinds of formal and informal groups.
– Situational factors reflect the opportunities or
constraints imposed by the operational context.
Enumerating and Measuring
Personality Traits
• Trait Taxonomies
Are systems for counting and organizing the
important dimensions on which the people differ.
As a general rule trait approaches seek to identify
stable individual differences by analyzing the
responses of large groups of people.
The assessment devices are then evaluated with
statistical indexes of measurement quality
Three modes of measurement are common in
this psychometric ( statistical) approach
Enumerating and Measuring
Personality Traits
1. Self report: people describe themselves in interviews or
questionnaires
2. Observer report: person is rated by others who have
relevant information( friends, family, trained therapists)
3. Actual behavior , a concrete behavior that can be
measured objectively ( speed of initiating conversation,
heart rate, number of parties attended in a month)
It has been estimated that comprehensive English
dictionaries contain approximately 4500 trait terms.
We need a trait taxonomy that reduces these thousand of
descriptive terms into smaller set of more basic terms
that summarizes group s of related terms
Enumerating and Measuring
Personality Traits
One approach to resolve this problem is the use of factor analysis
Factor analysis is a statistical procedure used to analyze the correlation
among large number of variables, in this case trait words
The goal is simplification; that is reduce a large set of trait word
variables to a small number of factors by clustering similar traits into
subsets
Traits are considered similar if they are highly correlated (e.g. 0.5)
Factor analysis provides a dramatic simplification
It examines all the correlation to find the subsets of trait words that are
highly correlated. Together they measure some broader personality
characteristics
The final step is to name each factor in a way that captures the meaning
of the whole factor
The logic behind factor analysis is to determine the common
Trait Theories
• Cattell’s Source Traits:
Raymond Cattell was first to conduct factor
analysis of all the traits in English dictionary
His analysis yielded 16 basic personality factors
An individual’s personality could now be
summarized by their scores on 16 summary
factors:
1. Outgoing
2. Calm
3. Dominant
Trait Theories
4. Cheerful
5. Conscientious
6. Venturesome
7. Tough minded
8. Trusting
9. Imaginative
10. Shrewd
11. self-assured
12. Conservative
13. controlled
14. self-sufficient
15. Relaxed
16. Intelligent
The sixteen factors was measured by a questionnaire called 16 Personality
Factor inventory (16PF)
All 16 factors were source traits , meaning they represent the underlying causes
of behavior
In contrast he used the term surface traits for many other consistent behavioral
tendencies typically observed in people
Trait Theories
• Eysenck’s Three dimensions
The major complaint about Cattell’s factors was that they
overlapped with each other, that is the even the factors
were inter-correlated
To solve this problem, Eysenck used a type of factor
analysis that produced non-overlapping factors; they
showed zero correlations with each other
This resulted in three dimensions;
1. Extroversion;
how outgoing and sociable you are
2. Neuroticism;
degree of anxiety, worry, or moodiness
3. Psychoticism;
Tendency to be irresponsible or nasty towards others
Trait Theories
Big Five Personality Traits
Extraversion Conscientiousness
Personality
Openness to
Agreeableness
experience
Emotional stability/
neuroticism
Adapter Challenger
Trusting Co- Agreeableness Rude, cold
operative soft- Uncaring
hearted
Flexible
Focused Conscientiousness sloppy, inefficient,
dependable, careless
efficient, organized
Stable Unstable
Emotional stability Anxious, angry
Self-confident,
depressed
relaxed,
secure Preserver,
Explorer Openness to Unimaginative,
Imaginative, Experience conventional, habit
curious, broad bound
minded
Big Five Personality Traits
• Extraversion:
- The degree to which a person is outgoing and drives
energy from being around other people
- In more specific terms it the degree to which a
person :
1. Enjoys being around other people
2. Is warm to others
3. Speaks up in group settings
4. Maintains a vigorous pace
5. Like excitement and cheerful
Big Five Personality Traits
- Research has shown that extraverts tend to have modest but
measurable performance advantage over introverts in
occupation requiring high level of interaction with other
people
- Specific occupations where extraverts have been found to
perform particularly well include sales and management
- Introverts tend to do particularly well in occupations such as
engineering, accounting, and information technology where
more solitary work is required
- For any occupation where teams are emphasized extraverts
may have slight edge, as teams require face-to-face-
interaction, group decision making, and navigation of
interpersonal dynamics
- A team with very high percentage of extraverts as members
may function poorly, more interested in talking than listening
Big Five Personality Traits
2. Conscientiousness
• The degree to which an individual focuses on goals and works
towards them
• In specific terms it is the degree to which a person:
1. Feels capable
2. Is organized
3. Is reliable
4. Possesses a drive for success
5. Focuses on completing the task
6. Thinks before acting
• Research has shown that individuals scoring high on
conscientiousness have performance edge in most
occupations and tend to perform well on teams
• Research has shown that conscientiousness has a stronger
positive effect on job performance when a person also scores
high on agreeableness
Big Five Personality Traits
• 3. Agreeableness
• The degree to which an individual is easy
going and tolerant
• Specifically it is the degree to which a person:
1.Believes in the honesty of others
2.Is straightforward
3.Is willing to help others
4.Tends to yield under conflict
5.Is sensitive to the feeling of others
Big Five Personality Traits
• Research has not shown consistent pattern of job outcomes
on individuals scoring high or low on agreeableness
• Being agreeable and disagreeable can be valuable at different
times in the same job
• Agreeable individuals seems to be consistently effective in
team work
• They are positive for interpersonal dynamics, as they are
sensitive to the feelings of others and try to ensure the
participation and success of all team members
• Having a very high percentage of of very agreeable team
members may be associated with too little debate on
important issues
• When teams must make important decisions and solve non-
routine problems, having some members with lower scores
on agreeableness may be an advantage
Big Five Personality Traits
4. Emotional Stability/neuroticism
• The degree to which an individual easily handles stressful situations and
heavy demands
• Specific traits include:
1. Is relaxed
2. Is slow to feel anger
3. Rarely becomes discouraged
4. Rarely becomes embarrassed
5. Resists unhealthy urges associated with addictions
6. Handles crisis well
• Research has shown that emotionally stable individuals tend to have an
edge in task performance across a large number of occupations
• Emotionally stable individuals have modest advantage as team members
• Emotional stability is positively linked to job satisfaction, independent of
specific conditions of the job situation
Big Five Personality Traits
5. Openness to Experience
• The degree to which a person seeks new experiences
and thinks creatively
• More specifically openness is the degree to which a
person:
1. Has vivid imagination
2. Has appreciation for art and beauty
3. Values and respects emotions in himself and others
4. Prefers variety to routine
5. Has broad intellectual curiosity
6. Is open to reexamine closely held values
Big Five Personality Traits
• Research has shown that individuals scoring both
high and low on openness can perform well in
variety of occupations and perform well on teams
• Those who score high on this dimension are more
effective at particular tasks calling for vision and
creativity, such as creative aspects of advertising, the
creative aspects of marketing and many aspects of
arts
• Individuals with low openness score may be more
effective in jobs calling for strong adherence to rules
such as piloting airplanes, and accounting
Pop- Up Quiz
1. __________ the overall organization of psychological characteristics – feeling,
thinking, and behaving – that differentiate one person from another and lead us
to act consistently across time and situations
2. Are systems for counting and organizing the important dimensions on which the
people differ
3. A method of personality assessment in which people describe themselves in
interviews or questionnaires
4. A method of personality assessment in which person is rated by others who
have relevant information
5. A method of personality assessment in which a concrete behavior can be
measured objectively
6. 16 factors identified by Cattell which represent the underlying causes of
behavior
7. In Eysenck’s Three dimensions the trait that showed how outgoing and sociable
you are is called
8. In Eysenck’s Three dimensions the trait that showed degree of anxiety, worry, or
moodiness is called
9. In Eysenck’s Three dimensions the trait that showed the tendency to be
irresponsible or nasty towards others is called
Pop- Up Quiz
10. According to big five traits The degree to which a
person is outgoing and drives energy from being
around other people is called
11. According to big five traits The degree to which an
individual focuses on goals and works towards them
is called
12. According to big five traits The degree to which an
individual is easy going and tolerant is called
13. According to big five traits The degree to which an
individual easily handles stressful situations and
heavy demands is called
14. According to big five traits The degree to which a
person seeks new experiences and thinks creatively
Cognitive and Motivational
Properties of Personality
Authoritarianism
Achievement Approval
motivation motivation
13 . you are shown an ambiguous picture and then you are asked to make-up a
story that explain what is happening in the picture.
The Psychodynamic Approach of
Freud
• The Structure of Mind
Freud believed that human mind was divided into three
levels of awareness
i. The conscious mind:
Consists of the contents of current awareness – those
things that occupy the focus of attention at the moment
ii. The preconscious:
contains inactive but accessible thoughts and memories –
those things that you could easily recall, if desired, but
simply not thinking about it
iii. Unconscious mind:
The Psychodynamic Approach of
Freud
Houses all memories, urges, and conflicts that are beyond
awareness
To Freud, the important contents of the mind are not
politics, sports but deep conflicts related to sex and
violence
These topics are at once the most alluring and most
disturbing aspects of life. Important psychological events
involve the transfer of information among different levels
of awareness
From the depths of unconscious mind, such conflicts
continue to exert powerful and enduring influences on
behavior
To Freud the phenomenon of repressed conflicts is
thought to be primary reason for mental illness
The Psychodynamic Approach of
Freud
• The structure of Personality
The two powerful instinctual drives, sex and
aggression are said to motivate behavior
Rather than revealing them themselves in fixed
traits, these two motives are played out in
conflict among mind’s three dynamic elements;
the id, ego, and superego
1. The id:
Represent the portion of personality that seeks
immediate satisfaction of innate urges, without
concern for the morals and customs of society
The Psychodynamic Approach of
Freud
id has two main urges, the pleasure principle, i.e. sex
instinct and the death and aggression instinct
ii. Super ego:
Deter us from breaking the moral standards we learn
from parents and culture
It is acquired primarily from punishing experiences, the
details of these experiences are mostly forgotten and
superego exerts its influence as a conscience – a self
inflicted punishment mechanism that makes us feel
ashamed and guilty when our behavior strays from
accepted standards
like id, superego is essentially irrational – its only goal is
to avoid sin
The Psychodynamic Approach of
Freud
Superego follows moralistic principle
iii. The ego
Serves a managerial role in Freud’s conception of
personality
It encourages you to act with reason and deliberation and
helps you to conform to the requirements of external
world
The ego obeys the reality principle in that it monitors the
real world, looking for appropriate outlets of the id
needs. To avoid punishment, such as guilt, the ego also
considers the moralistic preaching of superego
Its goal is compromise among three dynamic masters; the
external world, the id, and the superego
The Neo-Freudians
1. Alfred Adler (1870 -1937):
One of the main causes of the break with Freud was
Alder’s insistence that the will to power is as influential in
psychological development as sexual drive
The will to power is an inborn drive to become effective
and competent
If the will to power is frustrated this sets up conditions for
an inferiority complex
An inferiority complex is a group related ideas that may or
may not be realistic about the self
An inferiority complex tends to contribute to feelings of
inadequacy, incompetence, depression, anxiety, and
chronic anger
The Neo-Freudians
In order to cope with inferiority complex, the individual
often uses an ego defensive mechanism called
compensation, i.e. trying to prove he may be inadequate
in one area but he can be great in other areas.
Inferiority complex tends to be specific. One can have
inferiority complex associated with mathematical ability,
athletic capacity, social skills, musical talents, appearance
so forth
It is possible to have more than one inferiority complex
An inferiority complex does not mean that a person is
inferior. It is a component of one’s self image
Inferiority complexes are, according to Alder, an
important feature of human personality
The Neo-Freudians
• Carl Jung (1875 – 1961)
Jung was dissatisfied with Freud’s narrow reliance on
sexuality as dominant source human motivation
Jung believed instead in an idea of a “general life
force”.
The general life force was sexual in part but included
other basic sources of motivation as well, such as the
need for creativity
Among Jung more influential ideas was his concept of
“collective unconscious”
He argued that people have a shared unconscious, in
addition to personal unconscious described by Freud
The Neo-Freudians
This shared portion is filled with mystical symbols and universal images
that have accumulated over the life time of human species
These symbols are inherited and passed genetically from one generation
to another
They include enduring concepts (archetypes) such as God, Evil, Mother,
Hero, etc. these archetypes determine and direct our behavior
If an individual tends to identify his ego with the archetype Hero, then the
person will tend to be courageous, have a sprit of adventure, be
concerned for the welfare of unfortunate people, so forth
If the individual tends to identify his ego with Martyr, then that person
will be self-sacrificing and self punishing, and to seek opportunities for
others to be abusive to them
one of the important archetype is Self. If an individual tend to identify his
or her ego with the Self, then that person will take a life pathway of
personal discovery. Life will have purpose and a mission. If successful ,
towards the end of life , the individual will feel fulfilled, complete.
Jung call this process as “self realization” which is equivalent to concept of
self-actualization of Maslow
Humanistic Approaches to
Personality
Provides a more optimistic alternative to Freud’s
pessimistic view of human sprit
Humanistic psychology talks about growth and potential
It is not the animalistic urges that are stressed in explaining
personality but the human being’s unparalleled capacity of
self awareness, choice, responsibility, and growth
Each human being is unique. People are more than sum of
predictable parts. The environment influences the natural
growth process, people will grow best in fertile and
supportive environment; barren environment can not stop
the growth process, but they can prevent us from realizing
our own true potential
Humanistic Approaches to
Personality
A central theme of humanistic psychology is the validity of
subjective experience
How we act is determined is determined by our unique
view of the world – our interpretation of reality. Moreover,
our personal view of ourselves and the environment is as
genuine and valid as everyone’s else view. Nonetheless
some people’s subjective experience of reality is not very
adaptive
Emphasis is on conscious mental process. We are assumed
to be responsible for our own actions, and accepting this
responsibility is key to good adjustment
The ideas of Carl Rogers and Abraham Maslow, have been
especially influential
Carl Rogers and the Self
The essence of personality lies in the concept of the
self
Self concept is an organized set of perceptions about
our own abilities and characteristics: It amounts to that
keen sense of self, what it means to be “I” or “me”
The self concept comes primarily from social
interactions, particularly the interactions we have with
our parents, friends, and other significant role models
through out our lifetimes
The people around us shape our self image through
ongoing evaluation of our actions
Carl Rogers and the Self
Roger suggested that we have a basic need for positive regard. We
value what other think of us and constantly seek other others
approval, love and companionship
Unfortunately in real life, conditions of worth tend to be attached
to the level of approval we get from others
Suppose you come from a family that values education and
intellectual pursuit. However, you don’t care about such things,
your interest are in music and sports. To gain acceptance of your
parents you may well deny your true feelings and modify your self
concept to bring it more in line with what your parents believe
This condition is called incongruence, which he defined as
discrepancy between the image you hold of yourself - your self
concept – the sum of all your experiences
Carl Rogers and the Self
Incongruence leads to anxiety and ultimately
forms the basis for variety of psychological
problems
True psychological health comes when the self
concept is congruent with your true feelings,
experiences that is, when your opinions and
beliefs about yourself accurately reflect your
every day experiences
The larger the discrepancy is, the greater the
anxiety and lower your self esteem
Abraham Maslow and Self
Actualization
All human beings are creative individuals yearning to fulfill personal
potential
Every one has basic need for self-actualization – the need to move
forward toward the realization of potential
Personality characteristics will reflect where one is positioned in the
hierarchy of needs
All human beings are inherently good; a person may consistently
act unkind, defensive, or aggressive manner, but these personality
traits reflect a failure to satisfy basic needs – they will never
fundamental to human spirit
People who are self actualization show none of the darker
personality traits exhibited by those locked at lower levels
Self actualized people tend to be positive, creative, accepting
individuals
Pop-Up Quiz
1. According to Freud _______ Consists of the contents of current awareness – those
things that occupy the focus of attention at the moment
2. According to Freud ________contains inactive but accessible thoughts and
memories – those things that you could easily recall, if desired, but simply not
thinking about it
3. According to Freud ________ houses all memories, urges, and conflicts that are
beyond awareness
• According Freud ________, _______, are the two powerful instinctual drives
which motivate behavior
• Represent the portion of personality that seeks immediate satisfaction of innate
urges, without concern for the morals and customs of society,
• Deter us from breaking the moral standards we learn from parents and culture
• Serves a managerial role in Freud’s conception of personality
• According to Alfred Adler, if the will to power is frustrated this sets up
conditions for an
• Among Jung more influential ideas was his concept of collective unconscious
• A central theme of humanistic psychology is the validity of
• According to Carl Rogers The essence of personality lies in the concept of the