Summary and Key Terms
What Is Personality?
Personality has been studied for over 2,000 years, beginning with Hippocrates. More recent theories of personality have been proposed, including Freud’s psychodynamic perspective, which holds that personality is formed through early childhood experiences. Other perspectives then emerged in reaction to the psychodynamic perspective, including the learning, humanistic, biological, trait, and cultural perspectives.
Freud and the Psychodynamic Perspective
Sigmund Freud presented the first comprehensive theory of personality. He was also the first to recognize that much of our mental life takes place outside of our conscious awareness. Freud also proposed three components to our personality: the id, ego, and superego. The job of the ego is to balance the sexual and aggressive drives of the id with the moral ideal of the superego. Freud also said that personality develops through a series of psychosexual stages. In each stage, pleasure focuses on a specific erogenous zone. Failure to resolve a stage can lead one to become fixated in that stage, leading to unhealthy personality traits. Successful resolution of the stages leads to a healthy adult.
Neo-Freudians: Adler, Erikson, Jung, and Horney
The neo-Freudians were psychologists whose work followed from Freud’s. They generally agreed with Freud that childhood experiences matter, but they decreased the emphasis on sex and focused more on the social environment and effects of culture on personality. Some of the notable neo-Freudians are Alfred Adler, Carl Jung, Erik Erikson, and Karen Horney. The neo-Freudian approaches have been criticized, because they tend to be philosophical rather than based on sound scientific research. For example, Jung’s conclusions about the existence of the collective unconscious are based on myths, legends, dreams, and art. In addition, as with Freud’s psychoanalytic theory, the neo-Freudians based much of their theories of personality on information from their patients.
Learning Approaches
Behavioral theorists view personality as significantly shaped and impacted by the reinforcements and consequences outside of the organism. People behave in a consistent manner based on prior learning. B. F. Skinner, a prominent behaviorist, said that we demonstrate consistent behavior patterns, because we have developed certain response tendencies. Mischel focused on how personal goals play a role in the self-regulation process. Albert Bandura said that one’s environment can determine behavior, but at the same time, people can influence the environment with both their thoughts and behaviors, which is known as reciprocal determinism. Bandura also emphasized how we learn from watching others. He felt that this type of learning also plays a part in the development of our personality. Bandura discussed the concept of self-efficacy, which is our level of confidence in our own abilities. Finally, Rotter proposed the concept of locus of control, which refers to our beliefs about the power we have over our lives. He said that people fall along a continuum between a purely internal and a purely external locus of control.
Humanistic Approaches
Humanistic psychologists Abraham Maslow and Carl Rogers focused on the growth potential of healthy individuals. They believed that people strive to become self-actualized. Both Rogers’s and Maslow’s theories greatly contributed to our understanding of the self. They emphasized free will and self-determination, with each individual desiring to become the best person they can become.
Biological Approaches
Some aspects of our personalities are largely controlled by genetics; however, environmental factors (such as family interactions) and maturation can affect the ways in which children’s personalities are expressed.
Trait Theorists
Trait theorists attempt to explain our personality by identifying our stable characteristics and ways of behaving. They have identified important dimensions of personality. The Five Factor Model is the most widely accepted theory today. The five factors are openness, conscientiousness, extroversion, agreeableness, and neuroticism. These factors occur along a continuum.
Cultural Understandings of Personality
The culture in which you live is one of the most important environmental factors that shapes your personality. Western ideas about personality may not be applicable to other cultures. In fact, there is evidence that the strength of personality traits varies across cultures. Individualist cultures and collectivist cultures place emphasis on different basic values. People who live in individualist cultures tend to believe that independence, competition, and personal achievement are important. People who live in collectivist cultures value social harmony, respectfulness, and group needs over individual needs. There are three approaches that can be used to study personality in a cultural context: the cultural-comparative approach, the indigenous approach, and the combined approach, which incorporates both elements of both views.
Personality Assessment
Personality tests are techniques designed to measure one’s personality. They are used to diagnose psychological problems as well as to screen candidates for college and employment. There are two types of personality tests: self-report inventories and projective tests. The MMPI is one of the most common self-report inventories. It asks a series of true/false questions that are designed to provide a clinical profile of an individual. Projective tests use ambiguous images or other ambiguous stimuli to assess an individual’s unconscious fears, desires, and challenges. The Rorschach Inkblot Test, the TAT, the RISB, and the C-TCB are all forms of projective tests.
Key Terms
- anal stage
- psychosexual stage in which children experience pleasure in their bowel and bladder movements
- analytical psychology
- Jung’s theory focusing on the balance of opposing forces within one’s personality and the significance of the collective unconscious
- archetype
- pattern that exists in our collective unconscious across cultures and societies
- collective unconscious
- common psychological tendencies that have been passed down from one generation to the next
- congruence
- state of being in which our thoughts about our real and ideal selves are very similar
- conscious
- mental activity (thoughts, feelings, and memories) that we can access at any time
- Contemporized-Themes Concerning Blacks Test (C-TCB)
- projective test designed to be culturally relevant to African Americans, using images that relate to African-American culture
- culture
- all of the beliefs, customs, art, and traditions of a particular society
- defense mechanism
- unconscious protective behaviors designed to reduce ego anxiety
- displacement
- ego defense mechanism in which a person transfers inappropriate urges or behaviors toward a more acceptable or less threatening target
- ego
- aspect of personality that represents the self, or the part of one’s personality that is visible to others
- Five Factor Model
- theory that personality is composed of five factors, including openness, conscientiousness, extroversion, agreeableness, and neuroticism
- genital stage
- psychosexual stage in which the focus is on mature sexual interests
- heritability
- proportion of difference among people that is attributed to genetics
- id
- aspect of personality that consists of our most primitive drives or urges, including impulses for hunger, thirst, and sex
- ideal self
- person we would like to be
- incongruence
- state of being in which there is a great discrepancy between our real and ideal selves
- individual psychology
- school of psychology proposed by Adler that focuses on our drive to compensate for feelings of inferiority
- inferiority complex
- refers to a person’s feelings that they lack worth and don’t measure up to others’ or to society’s standards
- latency period
- psychosexual stage in which sexual feelings are dormant
- locus of control
- beliefs about the power we have over our lives; an external locus of control is the belief that our outcomes are outside of our control; an internal locus of control is the belief that we control our own outcomes
- Minnesota Multiphasic Personality Inventory (MMPI)
- personality test composed of a series of true/false questions in order to establish a clinical profile of an individual
- neurosis
- tendency to experience negative emotions
- oral stage
- psychosexual stage in which an infant’s pleasure is focused on the mouth
- personality
- long-standing traits and patterns that propel individuals to consistently think, feel, and behave in specific ways
- phallic stage
- psychosexual stage in which the focus is on the genitals
- projection
- ego defense mechanism in which a person confronted with anxiety disguises their unacceptable urges or behaviors by attributing them to other people
- Projective test
- personality assessment in which a person responds to ambiguous stimuli, revealing hidden feelings, impulses, and desires
- psychosexual stages of development
- stages of child development in which a child’s pleasure-seeking urges are focused on specific areas of the body called erogenous zones
- rationalization
- ego defense mechanism in which a person confronted with anxiety makes excuses to justify behavior
- reaction formation
- ego defense mechanism in which a person confronted with anxiety swaps unacceptable urges or behaviors for their opposites
- real self
- person who we actually are
- reciprocal determinism
- belief that one’s environment can determine behavior, but at the same time, people can influence the environment with both their thoughts and behaviors
- regression
- ego defense mechanism in which a person confronted with anxiety returns to a more immature behavioral state
- repression
- ego defense mechanism in which anxiety-related thoughts and memories are kept in the unconscious
- Rorschach Inkblot Test
- projective test that employs a series of symmetrical inkblot cards that are presented to a client by a psychologist in an effort to reveal the person’s unconscious desires, fears, and struggles
- Rotter Incomplete Sentence Blank (RISB)
- projective test that is similar to a word association test in which a person completes sentences in order to reveal their unconscious desires, fears, and struggles
- selective migration
- concept that people choose to move to places that are compatible with their personalities and needs
- self-concept
- our thoughts and feelings about ourselves
- self-efficacy
- someone’s level of confidence in their own abilities
- social-cognitive theory
- Bandura’s theory of personality that emphasizes both cognition and learning as sources of individual differences in personality
- sublimation
- ego defense mechanism in which unacceptable urges are channeled into more appropriate activities
- superego
- aspect of the personality that serves as one’s moral compass, or conscience
- TEMAS Multicultural Thematic Apperception Test
- projective test designed to be culturally relevant to minority groups, especially Hispanic youths, using images and storytelling that relate to minority culture
- temperament
- how a person reacts to the world, including their activity level, starting when they are very young
- Thematic Apperception Test (TAT)
- projective test in which people are presented with ambiguous images, and they then make up stories to go with the images in an effort to uncover their unconscious desires, fears, and struggles
- traits
- characteristic ways of behaving
- unconscious
- mental activity of which we are unaware and unable to access