5 Steps to a 5 AP Psychology, 2010-2011 Edition (56 page)

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Authors: Laura Lincoln Maitland

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Defense mechanisms
—extreme measures protect the ego from threats; operate unconsciously and deny, falsify, or distort reality.

Some defense mechanisms:


Repression
—the most frequently used and powerful defense mechanism; the pushing away of threatening thoughts, feelings, and memories into the unconscious mind; unconscious forgetting.


Regression
—retreat to an earlier level of development characterized by more immature, pleasurable behavior.


Rationalization
—offering socially acceptable reasons for our inappropriate behavior; making unconscious excuses.


Projection
—attributing our own undesirable thoughts, feelings, or actions to others.


Displacement
—shifting unacceptable thoughts, feelings, or actions from a more threatening person or object to another less threatening person or object.


Reaction formation
—acting in a manner exactly opposite to our true feelings.


Sublimation
—the redirection of unacceptable sexual or aggressive impulses into more socially acceptable behaviors.

Freud’s Psychosexual Theory of Development
—sequential and discontinuous stages with changing erogenous zone and conflict in each stage; if conflict is not successfully resolved, result is fixation.


Oral stage
—pleasure from sucking; conflict is weaning from bottle or breast; oral fixation; oral-dependent personalities are gullible, overeaters, and passive, while oral-aggressive personalities are sarcastic and argumentative.


Anal stage
—pleasure from holding in or letting go of feces; conflict is toilet training; anal fixation; anal-retentive personalities are orderly, obsessively neat, stingy, and stubborn; or anal-expulsive personalities are messy, disorganized, and lose their temper.


Phallic stage
—pleasure from self-stimulation of genitals; conflict is castration anxiety or penis envy. Healthy resolution of Oedipal/Electra complex results in identification with same sex parent; fixation; homosexuality or relationship problems.


Latency stage
—suppressed sexuality; pleasure in accomplishments; if accomplishments fall short of expectations, development of feelings of inferiority.


Genital stage
—adolescent to adulthood; pleasure from intercourse and intimacy with another person.

Carl Jung’s analytic theory emphasized the influence of our evolutionary past on our personality with the
collective unconscious
—the powerful and influential system that contains universal memories and ideas that all people have inherited from ancestors over the course of evolution.


Archetypes
—inherited memories or common themes found in all cultures, religions, and literature, both ancient and modern.


Individuation
—psychological process by which we become an individual; a unified whole, including conscious and unconscious processes.

Alfred Adler’s individual or ego theory emphasized social interest as the primary determinant of personality. We strive for superiority and try to compensate for inferiority complexes.

Karen Horney attacked Freud’s male bias and suggested the male counterpart for penis envy is womb envy. She thought females were more envious of the male’s social status.

Humanistic approach
—Humans are born good and strive for positive personal growth.

• Abraham Maslow emphasized the goal of
self-actualization
—reaching toward the best person we can be.

• Carl Rogers’s self-theory or the view that the individual’s self-concept is formed by society’s conditions of worth and the need for
unconditional positive regard
—acceptance and love from others independent of how we behave.

Behavioral approach
—According to Skinner, our history of reinforcement shapes our behavior, which is our personality.

Cognitive and social cognitive/social-learning approach
—Cognitive theories say human nature is basically neutral and we are shaped by our perceptions of the world.

• George Kelly’s personal construct theory looks at how we develop bipolar mental constructs to judge and predict others’ behavior.

• Social cognitive/social-learning theories stress the interaction of thinking with learning experiences in a social environment.

• Albert Bandura’s
reciprocal determinism
states that three types of factors all affect one another in explaining our behavior: personality characteristics and cognitive processes; the nature, frequency, and intensity of actions; stimuli from the social or physical environment, and reinforcement contingencies.


Self-efficacy
is our belief that we can perform behaviors that are necessary to accomplish tasks and that we are competent.


Collective efficacy
is our perception that with collaborative effort our group will obtain its desired outcome. Research studies indicate high self-efficacy is more beneficial in individualistic societies and high collective efficacy in collectivistic societies for achievement of group goals.

• Julian Rotter’s
locus of control
is the degree to which we expect that a reinforcement or outcome of our behavior is contingent on our own behavior or personal characteristics (internal locus of control), as opposed to the degree to which we expect that a reinforcement or outcome of our behavior is a function of luck or fate, is under the control of others, or is unpredictable (external locus of control).

• Walter Mischel developed a cognitive-affective personality system (CAPS). Interaction among five factors (our encoding strategies, our expectancies and beliefs, our goals and values, our feelings, and our personal competencies and self-regulatory processes) and characteristics of the situation account for our individual differences.

Trait theory
—A
trait
is a relatively permanent characteristic of our personality that can be used to predict our behavior.

Gordon Allport’s trait theory proposed three levels of traits:


Cardinal trait
—defining characteristic, in a small number of us, that dominates and shapes all of our behavior.


Central trait
—general characteristic; between 5 and 10 of these shape much of our behavior.


Secondary trait
—a characteristic apparent in only certain situations. Our unique pattern of traits determines our behavior.

Hans Eysenck—three genetically influenced dimensions describe personality; used
factor analysis
, a statistical procedure that identifies common factors among groups of items, to determine his three dimensions:


Extroversion
(also
extraversion
)—measures our sociability and tendency to pay attention to the external environment, as opposed to our private mental experiences.


Neuroticism
—measures our level of instability—how moody, anxious, and unreliable we are—as opposed to stability—how calm, even-tempered, and reliable we are.


Psychoticism
—measures our level of tough-mindedness—how hostile, ruthless, and insensitive we are—as opposed to tender-mindedness—how friendly, empathetic, and cooperative we are.

Raymond Cattell studies
surface traits
—hundreds of visible areas of personality.

• Sixteen basic traits,
source traits
, underlie personality characteristics.


Sixteen Personality Factor Questionnaire
, 16 PF, yields trait profiles of personality.

Paul Costa and Robert McCrae used factor analysis to identify five broad dimensions of personality. Five-factor model of personality, nicknamed “The Big Five,” includes the traits of
o
penness,
c
onscientiousness,
e
xtraversion,
a
greeableness, and
n
euroticism.

Assessment techniques to measure personality:

Unstructured interviews
involve informal conversation centered on the individual.

Structured interviews
involve the interviewer posing a series of planned questions that the interviewee answers.

Halo effect
—tendency to generalize a favorable impression to unrelated dimensions of the subject’s personality.

Behavioral assessments
—record the frequency of specific behaviors in an observation.

Hawthorn effect
—when people know that they are being observed, they change their behavior to what they think the observer expects or to make themselves look good.

Psychoanalysts use
projective personality tests
—presenting ambiguous stimuli, such as inkblots or pictures, with the assumption that test takers will project their unconscious thoughts or feelings onto the stimuli. Examples are Rorschach inkblot test and Thematic Apperception Test (TAT).

Self-report methods
, the most common personality assessment techniques, involve answering a series of questions, such as a personality questionnaire, or supplying information about himself or herself.

• Jung’s personality types are measured by the Myers-Briggs Type Indicator.

• Cattell’s personality traits are measured by the 16 PF.

• Rotter’s locus of control is measured by the Internal-External Locus of Control Scale.

• Maslow’s self-actualization is measured by the Personal Orientation Inventory.

• Rogers’s congruence between the actual self and ideal self is measured by the Q-sort.

• MMPI-2 (Minnesota Multiphasic Personality Inventory-2)—567 true-false items.

• Patterns of responses reveal personality dimensions.

• NEO Personality Inventory (NEO-PI) and the Big Five Questionnaire (BFQ)—assess personality based on the five-factor model in healthy people; used in cross-cultural research.

Self-concept and Self-esteem:

Self-concept
—our overall view of our abilities, behavior, and personality.

Self-esteem
—one part of our self-concept or how we
evaluate
ourselves.

CHAPTER 15
Testing and Individual Differences

IN THIS CHAPTER

Summary:
Are you taking the AP Psychology exam in May? Have you taken the SAT or ACT? These are all standardized tests. You’ve already taken lots of tests in your lifetime, and will likely take many more, but all tests are not created equal. Some tests are better than others at predicting or evaluating your potential, or measuring your achievement. Tests are so important to you because they are used to make decisions that affect your life

This chapter focuses on test quality and qualities of tests, ethics in testing, intelligence and intelligence testing, and the interactions of heredity and environment on intelligence.

Key Ideas

Standardization and Norms

Reliability and Validity

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