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Personality. Unit X. Psychoanalysis. Freud & Co. Exploring the Unconscious: Techniques. Freud believed unexplained physical problems stemmed from unconscious fears/desires that were socially inappropriate - PowerPoint PPT Presentation
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Personality Unit X
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Page 1: Personality

PersonalityUnit X

Page 2: Personality

PsychoanalysisFreud & Co.

Page 3: Personality

Exploring the Unconscious: Techniques

•Freud believed unexplained physical problems stemmed from unconscious fears/desires that were socially inappropriate•He used free association – patient says whatever word comes to mind in response to a stimulus word

Page 4: Personality

Try it: Free Association (from Carl Jung, student of Freud)

• 1. head• 2. green• 3. water• 4. to sing

• 5. dead• 6. long• 7. ship• 8. to play

• 9. window• 10. friendly• 11. to cook• 12. to ask

Page 5: Personality

•Do any of these words seem to reveal hidden feelings you might have about something or someone in your life? Why or why not?•Would you want anyone to read meaning into this list of freely associated words? Why or why not?

Page 6: Personality

Freudian Slips (parapraxis)

•Freud believed nothing said or done accidentally was truly accidental – everything revealed the unconscious mind at work•Ex: “MARRIAGE = ONE MAN & ONE MAN” – TX Republican Dan Patrick on Twitter

Page 7: Personality

Projective Tests

• Thematic Apperception Test (TAT) shows people ambiguous pictures and asks them to make up a story•Rorschach inkblot test asks people to describe what

they see in inkblots•Only valid for revealing hostility and anxiety, if that

Page 8: Personality

Freud’s Personality Structures

• Id : unconscious, preoccupied with reducing basic drives like reproduction and aggression, self-centered• Infants and people focused on enjoying the present are good examples•Devil on shoulder

Page 9: Personality

Freud’s Personality Structures

• Superego: Moral conscience that focuses on how we should behave, perfectionist•Develops around age 4-5•Angel on shoulder

Page 10: Personality

Freud’s Personality Structures

•Ego: Uses reality principle to satisfy id in ways that maximize long-term pleasure while also seeking to satisfy superego, partly conscious•Person between devil and angel making the decision about what to do

Page 11: Personality

•What would a person look like who had a strong superego?•What about a person with a weak superego?

Page 12: Personality

Psychosexual Stages of Personality Development

•Freud believed adult personality forms in childhood• Id focuses on taking pleasure in different areas of

the body in stages•Unresolved conflict could cause a person to

fixate, or get stuck in a stage

Page 13: Personality

Stage 1: Oral• 0 – 18 months, pleasure centers on mouth

(biting, sucking, chewing)•Oral fixation could result from being abruptly

weaned• Person with fixation might exhibit passive

dependence (like infant), deny that dependence by acting tough, or have an oral habit such as overeating or smoking

Page 14: Personality

Stage 2: Anal

• 18-36 months, pleasure focuses on bowel/bladder elimination, desire for control• 2 possibilities for fixation:•Anal-retentive: overly neat and passive-

aggressive•Anal-expulsive: overly messy and defiant

Page 15: Personality

Stage 3: Phallic•3-6 years, pleasure focuses on genitals, struggle to deal with incestuous sexual feelings•Boys develop unconscious sexual feelings for their mothers and become jealous/fear/hate their fathers : Oedipus complex

Page 16: Personality

Phallic Stage Cont.•Boys know that girls have no penises and develop castration anxiety, which causes them to repress their desire for their mothers•Girls know that they have no penises and

develop penis envy, blaming their mothers for castrating them and becoming in love with/jealous of their fathers• Fixation: Person may become reckless,

narcissistic, and/or incapable of close relationships

Page 17: Personality

Stage 4 : Latency

•6-puberty•Children go through identification process, when they try to become like their same-sex parent•Sexual feelings are dormant

Page 18: Personality

Stage 5: Genital

•Puberty and older•Mature sexual interests expressed in heterosexual relationships

Page 19: Personality

Defense Mechanisms

•Ways to protect the ego from anxiety about losing control over id/superego•All involve unconsciously distorting reality

Page 20: Personality

Defense Mechanism Mnemonic

• Rapid Racers Run Past Really Stinky Dangerous Dogs• Repression, Regression, Reaction Formation, Projection,

Rationalization, Displacement, Denial

Page 21: Personality

Repression

•Underlies all other defense mechanisms•Removes anxiety-causing thoughts from

consciousness •Urges slip out in dreams and Freudian slips

Page 22: Personality

Regression

•Returning to a more infantile stage of development for comfort•Ex: Calling mom when something bad happens

Page 23: Personality

Reaction Formation

•Ego turns inappropriate urges into their opposites•Ex: Boys who have a crush on girls and pull their hair instead of talking to them

Page 24: Personality

Projection

• Sees threatening urges in others instead of one’s self• Ex: Aggressive person perceives everyone

else as insulting them

Page 25: Personality

Rationalization

•Attempt to justify actions with socially acceptable reasons• Ex: Buying a convertible “to teach my kids to

drive stick shift”

Page 26: Personality

Displacement

•Moves inappropriate impulses towards a more acceptable object • Ex: Someone who is mad at their parents but

takes it out on their sibling

Page 27: Personality

Sublimation

•Turning unacceptable impulses into a socially valuable product•Ex: Dentist in Little Shop of Horrors who tortured animals as a child

Page 28: Personality

Denial

•Person rejects facts or how serious those facts are•Ex: Someone ignores a growing mole (sign of skin cancer), dismissing it as “nothing”

Page 29: Personality

Neo-Freudians•Generally de-emphasized sex and aggression, believed in conscious interpretation of events, conflicts can be solved•Alfred Adler – described inferiority complex,

birth order theory of personality•Karen Horney – wrote Feminine Psychology, a

much kinder take on women’s psychological development

Page 30: Personality

Carl Jung

•Personal unconscious (similar to Freud)•Collective unconscious – collection of inherited

experiences; archetypes shared will all humans, explains cultural similarities•Archetypes include: the Hero, the Shadow, the

Quest, the Good Mother, the Soul-Mate

Page 31: Personality

The Humanistic PerspectiveThe Third Force

Page 32: Personality

The Third Force in Psychology

•Humanistic psychology focuses on healthy people (unlike Freud) and used self-reported feelings/experiences (unlike behaviorists)

Page 33: Personality

Abraham Maslow

• Studied creative, successful people•Healthy people are self-actualized: accept

themselves and others, have a mission in life

Page 34: Personality

Carl Rogers • People are naturally good• In order to grow in a healthy way, we need others

to be• 1. genuine – honest and unpretentious • 2. accepting – unconditional positive regard –

love others despite knowing the worst about them• 3. empathetic – share and reflect our feelings;

really listen

Page 35: Personality

Humanists and the Self

•Write down a few thoughts about who you are•Now write down a few thoughts about who

you would ideally like to be• If these things are similar, you probably have

a positive self-concept• This is the goal of humanists

Page 36: Personality

Criticism of Humanistic Perspective

• It’s unrealistic – people are not all good• It’s subjective – Maslow and Rogers choose traits that they liked as the most important• It promotes selfish individualism as everyone seeks their own self-fulfillment

Page 37: Personality

Social-Cognitive Perspective

Page 38: Personality

Reciprocal Determinism• Focus is on how people interact with their

environment in their thoughts and actions•Albert Bandura – We learn behaviors by

watching, but we also think about situations to decide how to act•ABC – Affect (thoughts/emotions) influences

Behavior which causes Consequences

Page 39: Personality

Locus of Control

• External – people perceive their destiny to be controlled by outside forces (luck, stars, bad parenting, poverty)• Internal – people perceive that they have control over

their own destiny (mostly through hard work)• Those with internal locus of control are healthier, more

independent, and deal better with stress

Page 40: Personality

Self-Control

• Self-control, like muscle, is weakest after use but recovers with time• Practice and discipline in one area can

improve overall self-control• Self-control positively correlates with grades

and social achievement

Page 41: Personality

Personal Control•Giving people choices and control over their activities and environment improves morale, health and motivation (“engagement”)•Having too many options can cause depression or anxiety – information overload, greater fear of regret

Page 42: Personality

Optimism•Optimists tend to be healthier and happier

than pessimists• Too much optimism is unrealistic and can

cause overconfidence•Most people fail to recognize their own

incompetence – they don’t know what they don’t know•Other people can probably be more accurate

in describing your performance than you can

Page 43: Personality

• Social-cognitive psychologists assess people’s behavior by putting them in actual or mock situations (ie, student teaching, simulation of fire for firefighters)• This is the best way to predict someone’s future job

performance: looking at their past/current prefomance

Page 44: Personality

Criticism of Social-Cognitive Perspective

• They ignore the importance of personality traits by focusing so much on situations

Page 45: Personality

Individualism Vs. Collectivism

• See pages 516-518, especially chart on page 518


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