Personality Traits

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207 Individual Differences FlashCards sobre Personality Traits, criado por Dooney em 17-05-2013.
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FlashCards por Dooney, atualizado more than 1 year ago
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Resumo de Recurso

Questão Responda
How is factor analysis used to test the lexical hypothesis? Get a large set of terms to describe participants personalities and have people, their partner, rate them on those dimensions, seeing if they correlate with each other
Who was the first to use factor analysis? Cattell
What exactly did Cattell (1957) do? Started with Allport's words, and factor analysed it finding 16 factors, creating the 16PF (which has been since revised and is still used today)
How many items does Cattell's original 16PF have? 187
What are four second order factors of Cattell's 16PF? Extraversion, anxiety, sensitivity, dependence
What are the problems with the 16PF? Cattell was unable regenerate the 16 factors when reanalysising the test. Kline and Barret (1983) unable to replicate it. Big five underlies test
What are Eysenck's three personality factors? Extraversion, neruoticism and psychoticism
What are the characteristics of Eysenck's extroversion and introversion? Extroversion; sociable, takes risks, loves change. Introversion; quiet, thoughtful, reserved.
What are characteristics of Eysenck's neuroticism and stable? Neuroticism; moody, anxious, touchy, restless. Stable; calm, even tempered, relax
What are the characteristics of Eysenck's psychoticism? Cruelty, hostility, oddness, reject social customs.
What is Buger (1977) definition of a trait? It is a dimension of personality used to catergorise people according to the degree to which they manifest the characterisitc
What are the two assumptions of trait theories? Traits are relatively stable over time, and traits show stability across situations (may vary but some internal consistency, inferring traits influence behaviours)
What are the two assumptions of trait theories? Traits are relatively stable over time, and traits show stability across situations (may vary but some internal consistency, inferring traits influence behaviours)
What are Cattell's two types of traits? Constitutional traits, genetically determined, and enviromental-mod traits, enviromental influenced
What are ability traits? Traits influencing how you deal with a situation
What are temperment traits ? Individual differences to how people approach goals
What are dynamic traits? Motivate us and energize behaviour
What are surface traits? Collection of trait descriptors which tend to go together
What are source traits? Responsible for variations in surface traits
The 90 items of Eysenck's personality questionnaire are what types of questions, and also what type of scale does it feature? Yes or no questions, and a lie scale.
How did Eysenck (1970) define personality? Personality is the way an individual's character, temperament, intelligence, physique and nervous system are organised
What is a supertrait in Eysenck's theory? Collection of traits, his 3 dimensions
Eysenck (1972) said personality mostly from, what factors? Biological, and environment has some input
What is good about Eysenck Personality Questionnaire? Good internal reliability, Kline (2000) factor analytic structure is impeccable, and it works despite question force you make an extreme decision.
Who added traits to Eysenck's three personality characteristics? Eysenck and Eysenck (1985)
What did Campbell and Hawley (1982) find about introverts and extroverts? Introverts prefer quiet study areas, less breaks. Extroverts, places with more people, opportunity to socialize more, breaks.
What are the traits associated withe extroversion? Sensation-seeking, sociable, carefree, lively, dominant, active, bubbly, assertive, venturesome
Who found extroverts tire more easily on tasks of vigilance? Davies and Parasuraman (1992)
What are the traits associated with Neuroticism? Tense, anxious, irrational, depressant, shy, guilt feelings, moody, low self-esteem, emotional
What's the problem with Eysenck's psychoticism? Low internal reliability, despite being refined
What did Eysenck (1990) say about genes and personality? Genes provide a strong tendency to become a certain type of person, some modification possible, with how children are socalised is important
What are the traits associated with psychoticism? Impulsive, aggressive, unempathic, cold, creative, egocentric, tough minded, impersonal, anti-social
Along the lines of Eysenck theory, what is treatment for disorders? Behavioural therapy
What is the emic approach? Researchers use personality terms which are in the native language
What are the biological factors related to extroversion and introbersion? Ex; Low on arousal, have stimulus hunger, craves noise and exictment, low threshold for boredom. In; highly aroused, likes to be quiet, almost any stimulation/over-stimulation painful
What is the etitc approach? Personality questionnaires translated from another language into English
What are the biological factors of Neuroticism? Liable nervous system, rapid mood swings, physiological symptoms.
According to Saucier and Golberg (2001), what approach tends to be more reliable? Etitc tends to be more reliable.
What theory can Eysenck's theory be combined with, and what is the problem with it? Galen's humors, but it's not much use for anything
Who said we should be looking for contradictory evidence of trait models? Saucier (1995)
Who found measures in questionnaire crucially affect which factors come out? Peabody and Goldberg (1989)
What is Briggs (1989) criticism of trait theories? All based on data, no theory
What is Mischel (1968; 1996) criticism of trait theories? Measures are descriptive not predictive, yet used to make important decisions by non-psychologists, 69 found traits only explain 10% of variance
What are the five dimensions of Costa and McCrae (1992)? Neuroticism, extroversion, openness to experience, agreeableness, conscientiousness
Costa and McCrae (1992)'s neuroticism, extroversion and openess inventory revised, itemms have... 5 point scale answers
What are the six lower level traits of Costa and McCrae (1992)'s neuroticism? Anxiety, angry hostility, depression, self-consciousness, impulsiveness, vulnerability
What are the six lower level traits of Costa and McCrae (1992)'s extroversion? Warmth, graciousness, assertiveness, activity, excitment-seeking, positive emotions
What are the six lower level traits of Costa and McCrae (1992)'s openness to change? Fantasy, aesthetics, feelings, actions, ideas, value
What were the two dimensions of Wudnt's model and what was the problem with it? Emotional and changeability, but it doesn't explain much.
What are the six lower level traits of Costa and McCrae (1992)'s agreeable? Trust, straight forwardness, altruism, compliance, modesty, tender mindedness
What are the six lower level traits of Costa and McCrae (1992)'s conscientiousness? Competence, order, dutifulness, achievement striving, self-discipline, deliberation
What is the lexical hypothesis? Get all words used to describe personality, removing similar ones, you will have a language suited to describing language
What analysis technique does the lexical hypothesis use? Factor Anaylsis
What gives evidence for Costa and McCrae's (1992) model? Lexical approach, factor analysis, broadly compatible with 16pf and myers-briggs, found in different languages, stable over time, neurological evidence
What is Eysenck's psychotism in Costa and McCrae's (1992) big five? Openness, and agreeableness
Who found neuropsychological evidence of Costa and McCrae's (1992) big five? Adelstein et al. (2011)
What areas did Adelstein et al. (2011) find related with neuroticism? Areas of self-evaluation and and fear
What areas did Adelstein et al. (2011) find related with extroversion? Areas in reward and motivation
What areas did Adelstein et al. (2011) find related with openness? Areas in cognitive flexibility and imagination.
What areas did Adelstein et al. (2011) find related with agreeableness? Empathy and social information processing
What areas did Adelstein et al. (2011) find related with conscientiousness? Planning and self-discpline
What did Allport argue, and what is the significance of his research? Argued there are central traits and secondary, secondary merely built on central. It is foundation of current trait theories
Why did Kline (2000) suggest it might be a gigantic three over big five? Conscientiousness, openness and agreeableness often correlate on same factor as psychoticism, suggesting it is one factor
What is the general evidence for the lexical hypothesis? Many words have lots of synonyms, the more synonyms, more central the trait
What are criticisms of big five? No reason for six-lower traits per factor. So narrow in content bound to form scales, abandoned in theory, intercorrelations between lower traits across and between factors
What does HEXACO stand for in Ashton and Lee's (2007; 2008) model? Honestly-Humility, Emotionality, eXtroversion, Agreeableness, Conscientiousness, Openness to experience
What did Ashton et al. (2000) find in a number of lexical studies? A sixth factor emerging, honesty-humility
Lee and Ashton (2008) HEXACO model has been identified in how many languages? 12
What are the two contexts of the HEXACO model? Honesty, agreeableness and emotionality, biological theory of reciprocal and kin altruism. Extroversion, conscientioussness and openness; biologically driven concepts
What is Saucier (2002) criticism of HEXACO? Factors of a personality model should be independent, five factor is, honesty has been found to correlate with agreeableness multiple times
What is McDonald (2000) criticism of HEXACO? Better sixth factors, such as spritality, and reigiousity
How do the results of Musek (2007) suggest there may be one personality factor? Results were found high on one factor were likely to be high on another. Factor of personality aspects roughly valued, with no evidence of theory.

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