Personality: Lecturer Saima Azad Air University Islamabad
Personality: Lecturer Saima Azad Air University Islamabad
Lecturer
Saima Azad
Air University Islamabad
Topics
– Definition of Personality
– The Psychoanalytic perspective
– The Humanistic perspective
– The Social-Cognitive Perspective
– Exploring The Self
Personality
A set of behavioral, emotional, and
cognitive tendencies that people
display over time and across
situations and that distinguish
individuals from one another
Psychodynamic Approaches
to Personality
Preconscious
Unconscious
STRUCTURING PERSONALITY: ID, EGO, AND SUPEREGO
• Superego
• Id
• The id is the raw, unorganized, inborn part of
personality.
• The superego helps us control impulses coming from the id, making
our behavior less selfish and more virtuous.
• Both the superego and the id are unrealistic in that they do
not consider the practical realities imposed by society.
• Psychosexual stages (def) : developmental periods that children pass through during which
they encounter conflicts between the demands of society and their own sexual urges.
• According to Freud, failure to resolve the conflicts at a particular stage can result in fixations.
• Fixations (def) : conflicts or concerns that persist beyond the developmental period in which
they first occur.
• Such conflicts may be due to having needs ignored or being overindulged during the earlier
period.
• It explains how experiences and difficulties during a particular childhood stage may predict
specific characteristics in the adult personality.
• Oral stage: (12-18 months)
• mouth is the primary site of a kind of sexual pleasure and that weaning represents
the main conflict during the oral stage.
• If infants are either overindulged (perhaps by being fed every time they cry) or
frustrated in their search for oral gratification, they may become fixated at this stage.
• Fixation at the oral stage might produce an adult who was unusually interested in oral
activities—eating, talking, smoking—or who showed oral interests such as
(“swallowing” anything).
• Anal stage: (12 to 18 months until 3 years )
• Oedipal conflict A child’s sexual interest in his or her opposite-sex parent, typically resolved through identification with
the same-sex parent.
• male unconsciously begins to develop a sexual interest in his mother, starts to see his father as a rival. female
unconsciously begins to develop a sexual interest in her father, starts to see her mother as a rival.
• Identification: The process of wanting to be like another person as much as possible, imitating that person’s behavior
and adopting similar beliefs and values.
• At this point, the Oedipal conflict is said to be resolved, and Freudian theory assumes that both males and females move
on to the next stage of development.
• Latency period (6 – 12 years)
According to Freud, the period between the phallic
stage and puberty during which children’s sexual
concerns are temporarily put aside.
• Defense mechanisms
In Freudian theory, unconscious strategies that
people use to reduce anxiety by
distorting reality and concealing the
source of the anxiety from themselves.
Repression
• Motivational
forgetting
• Thought or events
are kept away from
conscious awareness
• E.g., forgetting an
appointment with a
person you dislike.
Regression
• When faced with
anxiety the person
retreats to a more
infantile stage.
• Thumb sucking on the
first day of school.
• Dropping one’s mature
behavior and acting in
immature childish
ways.
Reaction Formation
• Ego switches
unacceptable impulses
into their opposites.
• e.g., Being mean to
someone you have a
crush on.
• e.g., you dislike someone
but instead ‘’smothering’’
him with love
Projection
• Disguise your own
threatening impulses
by attributing them to
others.
• Thinking that your
spouse wants to cheat
on you when it is you
that really want to
cheat.
Rationalization
• Offers self-
adjusting • e.g., forgetting that
explanations in he/she had
place of real, more
threatening performed poorly on
reasons for your an examination
actions. because he did not
• e.g., You don’t get study and blaming
into a college and
say, “I really did
the wording of test
not want to go questions.
there it was too
far away!!”
Displacement
• Shifts the
unacceptable
impulses towards a
safer outlet.
• Instead of yelling at
a teacher, you will
take anger out on a
friend.
Sublimation
• Re-channel their
unacceptable impulses
towards more
acceptable or socially
approved activities.
SOCIAL COGNITIVE APPROACHES TO PERSONALITY
Albert Bandura
SELF-ESTEEM
• Self-esteem: the component of personality that encompasses our positive and negative self-evaluations.
• We may see ourselves positively in one domain but negatively in others. For example, a good student
may have high self-esteem in academic domains but lower self-esteem in sports.
• Self-esteem is strongly affected by culture. For example, in Asian cultures, having high relationship
harmony —a sense of success in forming close bonds with other people—is more important to self-esteem
than it is in more individualistic Western societies .
• Although almost everyone goes through periods of low self-esteem (for instance, after an undeniable
failure), but some people are chronically low in self-esteem. For them, failure seems to be an inevitable
part of life. In fact, low self-esteem may lead to a cycle of failure in which past failure causes future
failure.
Personal Control
Social-cognitive psychologists emphasize our
sense of personal control, whether we control
the environment or the environment controls
us.
External locus of control refers to the perception
that chance or outside forces beyond our personal
control determine our fate.
• The evolutionary perspective assumes that personality traits that led to our
ancestors’ survival and reproductive success are more likely to be preserved and
passed on to subsequent generations.
• Twin studies illustrate the importance of genetic factors in
personality. For instance, researchers examined the personality
traits of pairs of twins who were genetically identical but were
raised apart from each other.
• Rogers maintains that all people have a fundamental need for self-
actualization (a state of self-fulfillment in which people realize their
highest potential, each in a unique way).
• He further suggests that people develop a
need for positive regard that reflects the
desire to be loved and respected.