Top Banner
1 PART III: TRAITS & TEMPERAMENT
13

1 PART III: TRAITS & TEMPERAMENT 2 INTRODUCTION TO THE STUDY OF TRAITS TRAITS, TEMPERAMENT: Definitions & examples PROPERTIES OF TRAITS TRAIT-STATE DISTINCTION.

Dec 31, 2015

Download

Documents

Welcome message from author
This document is posted to help you gain knowledge. Please leave a comment to let me know what you think about it! Share it to your friends and learn new things together.
Transcript
Page 1: 1 PART III: TRAITS & TEMPERAMENT 2 INTRODUCTION TO THE STUDY OF TRAITS TRAITS, TEMPERAMENT: Definitions & examples PROPERTIES OF TRAITS TRAIT-STATE DISTINCTION.

1

PART III:

TRAITS & TEMPERAMENT

Page 2: 1 PART III: TRAITS & TEMPERAMENT 2 INTRODUCTION TO THE STUDY OF TRAITS TRAITS, TEMPERAMENT: Definitions & examples PROPERTIES OF TRAITS TRAIT-STATE DISTINCTION.

2

INTRODUCTION TO THE STUDY OF TRAITS

• TRAITS, TEMPERAMENT: Definitions & examples• PROPERTIES OF TRAITS

• TRAIT-STATE DISTINCTION

• MAIN EMPHASIS OF TRAIT THEORY

• TWO DIFFERENT VIEWS OF TRAITS

• GORDON ALLPORT: Father of modern trait approach

Page 3: 1 PART III: TRAITS & TEMPERAMENT 2 INTRODUCTION TO THE STUDY OF TRAITS TRAITS, TEMPERAMENT: Definitions & examples PROPERTIES OF TRAITS TRAIT-STATE DISTINCTION.

3

TRAITSStable psychological dispositions to behave in a certain way (e.g., friendliness, curiosity, anxiousness) that people have to different degrees

TEMPERAMENT

• Biologically-based traits:ExcitabilitySociabilityActivity level

• Present at birth

Page 4: 1 PART III: TRAITS & TEMPERAMENT 2 INTRODUCTION TO THE STUDY OF TRAITS TRAITS, TEMPERAMENT: Definitions & examples PROPERTIES OF TRAITS TRAIT-STATE DISTINCTION.

4

Examples of traits:

Extraversion ---------------- Introversion

Page 5: 1 PART III: TRAITS & TEMPERAMENT 2 INTRODUCTION TO THE STUDY OF TRAITS TRAITS, TEMPERAMENT: Definitions & examples PROPERTIES OF TRAITS TRAIT-STATE DISTINCTION.

5

Warmth ---------------- Hostility

Page 6: 1 PART III: TRAITS & TEMPERAMENT 2 INTRODUCTION TO THE STUDY OF TRAITS TRAITS, TEMPERAMENT: Definitions & examples PROPERTIES OF TRAITS TRAIT-STATE DISTINCTION.

6

Anxiousness ---------------- Calmness

Page 7: 1 PART III: TRAITS & TEMPERAMENT 2 INTRODUCTION TO THE STUDY OF TRAITS TRAITS, TEMPERAMENT: Definitions & examples PROPERTIES OF TRAITS TRAIT-STATE DISTINCTION.

7

Reliability ---------------- Flakiness

Laziness is warm. Laziness is comfort.Laziness is the promise of sleep. The promise of rest. Laziness demands a new day. A new day to do what you didn't do today.

I will do it tomorrow !

Page 8: 1 PART III: TRAITS & TEMPERAMENT 2 INTRODUCTION TO THE STUDY OF TRAITS TRAITS, TEMPERAMENT: Definitions & examples PROPERTIES OF TRAITS TRAIT-STATE DISTINCTION.

8

Open-mindedness ------------- Conventionality

How about Vanilla ice-cream!

Page 9: 1 PART III: TRAITS & TEMPERAMENT 2 INTRODUCTION TO THE STUDY OF TRAITS TRAITS, TEMPERAMENT: Definitions & examples PROPERTIES OF TRAITS TRAIT-STATE DISTINCTION.

9

PROPERTIES OF TRAITS

-Stability over time

-Consistency across situations

-Individual differences

Examples of psychological constructs that are NOT traits:

Adolescence’s identity confusion -> not stable over timeShort-lived affect states (e.g., surprise) -> not consistent across situationsColor vision -> not meaningful individual differences

Page 10: 1 PART III: TRAITS & TEMPERAMENT 2 INTRODUCTION TO THE STUDY OF TRAITS TRAITS, TEMPERAMENT: Definitions & examples PROPERTIES OF TRAITS TRAIT-STATE DISTINCTION.

10

STATE-TRAIT DISTINCTION

State = Transient Psychological Condition.Usually related to specific environmental evente.g., low-energy, nervousness, anger

Trait = General Tendencies, Dispositions.e.g., languidness, neuroticism, hostility

Notice that frequent experience of certain affective states (e.g., anger, anxiety, tiredness) defines the core of certain traits (e.g., hostility, nervousness, apathy), which are called ‘affective’ traits (e.g., Positive and Negative Emotionality).

Page 11: 1 PART III: TRAITS & TEMPERAMENT 2 INTRODUCTION TO THE STUDY OF TRAITS TRAITS, TEMPERAMENT: Definitions & examples PROPERTIES OF TRAITS TRAIT-STATE DISTINCTION.

11

MAIN EMPHASIS OF TRAIT THEORIES

• Describing and classifying (vs. explaining) the more permanent personality characteristics that differentiate individuals

• Describing, classifying, and differentiating people’s traits involves comparison

Favored method: Nomothetic (obtaining population norms for various traits so we can compare people)

Page 12: 1 PART III: TRAITS & TEMPERAMENT 2 INTRODUCTION TO THE STUDY OF TRAITS TRAITS, TEMPERAMENT: Definitions & examples PROPERTIES OF TRAITS TRAIT-STATE DISTINCTION.

12

friendlinessfriendliness

TWO DIFFERENT USES OF TRAITS:

Embedded in the notion of TRAIT is the idea of traits as (1) underlying behavioral tendencies (explanatory), but also as (2) behavioral summaries (descriptive).

Trait (2)

(1)

Page 13: 1 PART III: TRAITS & TEMPERAMENT 2 INTRODUCTION TO THE STUDY OF TRAITS TRAITS, TEMPERAMENT: Definitions & examples PROPERTIES OF TRAITS TRAIT-STATE DISTINCTION.

13

GORDON ALLPORT (1897-1967)

Taught the first course in personality psychologyViewed traits as building blocks of personality

Cardinal traits: very pervasive and outstanding traits around which the lives of certain people seem to be organized (e.g.. manipulativeness for Machiavelli; hatred for Hitler)

Central traits: 5-10 major characteristics of a person

Secondary traits: enduring qualities of a person, but not very pervasive