Neo- Freudians
Neo freudians agree with freud that: personality structure of id ego and superego, importance of unconscious, importance of childhood, anxiety and defense mechanisms
Place more emphasis on the conscious mind in interpreting and coping and less of an emphasis on sex and aggression
Humanistic perspective
Abraham maslow & hierarchy of needs
Actualization is a need not a capacity
Deficiency and growth orientation
Personality develops through an actualizing tendency that unfolds with each persons unique perception of the world
Cognitive Perspective
Albert ellis - believed our personality is formed by the way we respond to situations and event, called his ABCs: Activating Event, Belief about that event, consequence of the event
Aaron beck - thought patterns lead to a feeling of learned helplessness
Focus on internal or external locus of control
Social Cognitive Theory
Suggests behavior patterns are created by the interaction of our thoughts and what we learn through observation and conditioning, emphasizes how personality interacts with environment
Assumed our traits interact with social context to produce our behavior which is predicted by behavior in past similar situations
Albert bandura (bobo doll) - reciprocal determinism, behavior personal factors and environment contribute to self efficiency and self esteem
Self concept - how we view ourselves in relation to others
Self efficiency - our sense of competence and effectiveness
Self esteem - our feelings of high or low self worth
Sociocultural Perspective
Individualist - people concerned about own well beings
Collectivist - people concerned about well being of group
Trait perspective - focused on what traits are and patterns of predictable behavior
Gordon allport - describe behavior in terms of fundamental traits which are made up of a person's characteristic behaviors and conscious motives
Cardinal traits - dominate whole life
Central traits
Isabel briggs meyers and katherine briggs wrote meyers briggs personality inventory
Major trait personality inventories - objective tests, forces answer choices based on normed and standardized data to analyze results, more reliable than projective tests
Attribution Theory & Person Perception
Attribution - the process of explaining the causes of one’s behavior
Internal - personal/dispositional
External - situational
Explanatory style - predictable patterns of how people explain good/bad events
Three steps of attribution
Antecedent - prejudge people or events on what we know or think about them
Attribution - give reasons for an individual’s behavior based on the antecedent, comes from personal experience and/or schemas
Consequence - the real reason for the behavior
Biases in Attribution
Fundamental attribution error - tendency to attribute behavior of others to internal factors
Actor/observer bias - tendency to attribute others’ behavior to internal causes while attributing our own behavior to external causes
Self serving bias - tendency to take personal credit for positive outcomes, but blame external causes for failures
Confirmation bias - we only remember information that confirms our bias, and forget information that does not
Mere exposure effect - all else being equal, attitudes toward object/person become more positive the more frequently exposed to it
Self fulfilling prophecy - behaving in ways that elicit behaviors from others that confirms their beliefs/perceptions about themself or others
Social comparison - evaluating oneself based on comparison to other members of society or social circles
Social loafing - exerting less effort when performing a group task than when performing same task alone
Group polarization - interaction and discussion of individuals in a group with similar beliefs/attitudes tends to make them more extreme
False consensus effect - tendency to overestimate how much others agree with oneself
Conformity - changing one's behavior of beliefs to match those of others generally as a result of real or imagined through unspoken group pressure
Asch’s conformity study
Factors Influencing Conformity
Ambiguity - when something is less certain, rely on others opinions
Group size unanimity - more powerful when 3+ people, if one person disagrees, conformity decreases
Social status
Prior commitment
Culture that promotes importance of social standards
Motivation and Emotions
Motivation - process that initiates, guides, or maintains behavior
Evolutionary theories
Based on instincts - common behaviors common across a species and unlearned
Biological theories
Drive reduction theory - physiological needs create a tense state called a drive that motivates the organism to find a way to satisfy the drive
Homeostasis focused
Optimal arousal theory - we are motivated to maintain a certain level of arousal, each person has a different level of sensation seeking that satisfies them
Yerkes dodson law - performance improves with optimal arousal up to a certain point then performance decreases
Cognitive and behavioral theories
Incentive theories - pulled toward what motivates us through incentives
Intrinsic motivation - driven by an interest or enjoyment in a task or internal positive feelings
Extrinsic motivation - driven by a desire for external factors
Humanistic theories
Maslow hierarchy of needs - physiological needs, safety and security, love and belonging, self esteem, self actualization
Hunger and motivation
Lateral hypothalamus motivates us to feel hungry
Ventromedial hypothalamus motivates us to feel full
Hunger is influenced by insulin, leptin, orexin, ghrelin, obestin
Theories of Emotion
Have various components
Physiological arousal
Expressive behaviors
Consciously experienced thoughts and feelings
Emotion - a temporary experience with positive, negative, or mixed qualities, experienced with varying intensity as happening to self
James lange theory - stimulus arousal physiological response and emotion comes from our awareness of this response
Physiological arousal and experience of emotion happen at the same time
Brain’s cortex and sympathetic nervous system are simultaneously activated
Schachter two factor theory - current theory, emotion comes from cognitive interpretation of our physiological arousal
Expecting arousal - little emotion, told would do nothing, similar emotions to others around them
Stress
Occurs anytime we adapt and adjust to our environment
Distress - stress that stems from acute anxiety or pressure
Eustress - positive stress which results from striving toward a challenge
Hassles - minor, day to day stressors
Uplifts - an activity or situation that makes a person feel good, protects a person from stress
Approach approach conflicts - choose between 2 attractive options
Avoidance avoidance conflicts - choose between two disagreeable options
Approach avoidance - you find yourself in a situation that has both enjoyable and disagreeable consequences
Double approach avoidance - choose between multiple alternatives, each has pleasurable and disagreeable aspects
General adaptation syndrome - hans style 3 stages
1. Alarm - prepares body to react
2. Resistance - does what it takes to get through the time or event
3. Exhaustion - stress is gone and body can relax, depletes immune system
Tend and befriend - response to stress by reaching out to seek and give support, caused by different hormones and neurotransmitters released under stress in women so they tend to do this approach more
Factors that enhance stress - unpredictability, pressure
SRRS scale - measures stress
Coping - stressful attitudes have to do with the type of person you are
Type a
Type b - easygoing
Optimistic personality type - events are temporary, it's not your fault, will not have broader effects
Pessimistic - events as a direct implication about you, events having catastrophic events
Problem focused coping - deals directly with the root of the stress and tries to fix it for the future
Emotion focused coping - helps to control your own emotions or negative feelings about the stressor
Maladaptive coping techniques - can come from any positive coping technique
Psychodynamic theory - freudian theory that tells what shaped our personalities
Ego - executive mediator conscious mind
Superego - internalized ideals preconscious mind
Id - unconscious psychic energy unconscious mind