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Flashcards in Intro to Personality Psych Deck (58)
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1
Q

what are the 3 levels of personality?

A
  1. dispositional traits
  2. characteristic adaptions
  3. life narratives
2
Q

what is the defining feature of level 1 (dispositional traits) to describe personality? what does this mean?

A

it is relatively decontextualised… this means that when we say someone is X, it is not necessarily in a specific context

3
Q

what are some examples of dispositional traits?

A

shy, bold, warm, aloof, impulsive etc

4
Q

T or F? Dispositional traits are narrow descriptions of patterns of behaviour

A

F

5
Q

what does the term characteristic adaptions refer to? what “level” is it?

A

how we might adapt in a characteristic way to a specific context, particular stage of life, situation, or role we may have.

6
Q

Characteristic adaptions are highly contextualised, give an example of this

A

while someone may not be an anxious person, they may have a fear of heights

7
Q

what are characteristic adaptions concerned with?

A

an individual’s particular life circumstances

8
Q

what examples demonstrate characteristic adaptions?

A

specific goals, social roles, educational aspirations

9
Q

what is level 3 of personality?

A

life narratives

10
Q

what do some think life narratives provide?

A

the most detailed understanding of what an individual is like

11
Q

what is the definition of personality traits?

A

probabilistic descriptions of regularities in behaviour and experience, arising in response to broad classes of stimuli and situations

12
Q

what did theophrastus do?

A

write a book in ancient Greece about the different types of people he saw

13
Q

what is the lexical hypothesis? who introduced it? when?

A

that if something is important to us, we will have developed a lexical way to describe it… allport and odbert (1936)

14
Q

what did allport and odbert do? what is the flaw of it?

A

collected a list of 18,000 terms that were personality descriptors
it’s a list not a system

15
Q

what was used to determine domains out of Allports 18,000 terms?

A

Factor analysis

16
Q

what is factor analysis?

A

a statistical method that reduces many correlated variables to much fewer composite variables or factors

17
Q

who developed Factor analysis to study mental abilities?

A

spearman and thurstone

18
Q

what did Cattell do? When?

A

in 1943, reduced allport’s list down to a 16 factor solution using factor analysis

19
Q

what were the steps of Cattell’s method?

A
  1. take 18,000 descriptors into 160 clusters of synonyms and antonyms
  2. discard near identical descriptors
  3. reduced to final list of 171 descriptors
  4. then asked some people to rate their friends on these 171 descriptors
  5. used factor analysis to settle on 16 factors
20
Q

what are problems with Cattell’s 16 traits

A
  1. subjectivity before getting to factor analysis
  2. had poor replicability - people found different factors even when starting from his 171 traits
  3. redundancy - many factors correlated too highly to be different traits
21
Q

from broad to narrow, what is the hierarchical structure of traits?

A
  1. meta traits (stability/plasticity)
  2. domains (Big 5)
  3. aspects (eg assertiveness, enthusiasm)
  4. facets (eg energy levels, talkativeness)
  5. nuances (discrete behaviours eg, liking parties)
22
Q

how can one distinguish between an extraverted person and an agreeable person?

A

E person will be bold, assertive and sociable, but not necessarily nice or kind, while an A person will be kind, caring, cooperative and trusting but not necessarily a people person

23
Q

what are the characteristics of a conscientious person?

A
  • concerned with finishing things
  • doing them properly
  • being thorough, precise and careful
24
Q

what are the characteristics of a neurotic person?

A
  • concerns reflect anxiety, worry about getting things wrong
25
Q

what are the 3 discussed “themes” of the big 5?

A
  • interpersonal responses
  • responses to achievement settings
  • emotional responses
26
Q

what is the reliability of a measure?

A

the repeatability, or the consistency of your measure

27
Q

what is the general model of reliability? what increase this reliability?

A

observed score = true score + measurement error… if the measurement error gets smaller

28
Q

what is validity?

give example

A

whether or not trait questionnaires measure what they intend do. you may use your feet to measure a room and this may be unreliable, but is still a valid measure

29
Q

what a the three ways to estimate reliability?

A
  1. test - retest
  2. split half reliability
  3. cronbach’s alpha
30
Q

what is the test-retest reliability measure?

A

the test is administered to the same participant twice, with enough time between that they forget their answers on the first time, and analyse how strongly the score is correlated at time 1 and time 2 and if there is TEMPORAL STABILITY

31
Q

what is the caveat to the test-rest reliability

A

not applicable to all psychological phenomena as there are some we only expect to see in the moment.

32
Q

what is the rationale behind test-retest reliability measure?

A

reliable is repeatable, you should be able to verify the score

33
Q

what are the split half reliability measure?

what sort of reliability does this specifically refer to?

A

you administer a trait questionnaire, and take half of the extraversion items (for eg) and correlate them with the other half of the extraversion items… internal consistency

34
Q

what does cronbach’s alpha measure?

A
  • average of all possible split halves
35
Q

T or F? Cronbach’s alpha measure is measure of internal consistency

A

True

36
Q

what does a high cronbach’s alpha score show?

A

people are responding to the items on a questionnaire in a fairly consistent way

37
Q

what cronbach’s alpha score and below is not considered reliable? what is normally achieved in psych?

A

less than .60…

.70 and above

38
Q

what is the difference between face validity and content validity?

A

face value is any person judging if the questionnaire is relevant, while content validity is this process conducted by experts on the matter

39
Q

what is the most relied upon measure of validity?

A

criterion related validity

40
Q

how does criterion related validity work?

A

it measures whether there are sensible correlations with other established measures of the same phenomena

41
Q

what are the two major forms of criterion related validity

A

concurrent validity and predictive validity

42
Q

what does concurrent validity ask?

A

does the questionnaire correlate with other things we think it should? other related measures…

43
Q

what are the two types of concurrent validity? and define

A

convergent - does it correlate significantly with related measures?
divergent - does it show weak or zero correlations with unrelated measures?

44
Q

what does predictive validity ask? give example…

A

if the thing that you’re measuring predicts something that it should?
- does a measure of extraversion predict going to parties?

45
Q

the big 5 were empirically derived… what does this mean?

A

they were derived without a guiding theory

46
Q

regarding validity… what could the big 5 initially not asses? and why?

A

content, convergent and discriminant validity because the scale was not intended to measure any particular construct

47
Q

T or F, initially, the big 5 placed stronger emphasis on predictive validity?

A

true

48
Q

what is the main limitation of using traits to define personality?

A

these are somewhat generic descriptors and are relatively decontextualised, which is problematic given that so much of what we do is highly contextualised

49
Q

how does McAdams and Pals define characteristic adaptations?

A

motivational, social-cognitive, and developmental adaptations, contextualised in time, place, and or social role

50
Q

regarding characteristic adaptations for mcadams, define and give example of time, place, and role

A

time - stage of life (extraverted toddler, v teenager v retiree
place - specific situation (at work, with friends, etc)
role - function or duty (mother, buddhist, cyclist)

51
Q

what are some examples of characteristic adaptations

A

motives, goals, values, virtues, schemas etc

52
Q

how does de young conceptualise characteristic adaptations?

A

relatively stable goals, interpretations and strategies, specified in relation to an individual’s particular life circumstances

53
Q

regarding characteristic adaptations for deyoung, define and give example of goals, interpretations and strategies

A

goals - desired future states (job aspirations)
interpretations - appraised current states (perceived statistical ability)
strategies - plans and actions to move between states (study routines, degree choice)

54
Q

what is a personal myth?

A

it is a coherent life story about ourselves, which serves as the richest level of personality description

55
Q

what is the method commonly used to examine/study life narratives?

A

extended, structured interviews as opposed to questionnaires

56
Q

what 6 things do interviews concerning life narratives focus on?

A
  1. 8 key events in your life
  2. significant people
  3. the future script
  4. stresses and problems
  5. personal ideology
  6. life theme
57
Q

when studying life narratives, what 3 things does content analyses focus on?
what does content analyses provide?

A

tones, themes, form

a process to try and draw out inferences about the person’s personality based on their responses

58
Q

what are two common life narratives? define them

A
  1. redemption sequences - overcoming adversity/undergoing transformation
  2. growth story - personal development as a central theme, steady trajectory