Personality
8 examples of defense mechanisms
Repression Regression Reaction formation Projection Rationalization Displacement Sublimation Denial
Why do psychologists criticize Freud's theory for its scientific shortcomings
Rests on few objective observations Parts of it offer few testable hypotheses
Enables the split-brain patient's left hand to carry out an instruction the patient cannot verbalize
Right-hemisphere activity
____ is often incomplete, with repressed urges seeping out in dream symbols and slips of the tongue
Repression
Sigmund Freud's psychoanalytic theory proposed that ____ influence personality
Childhood sexuality and unconscious motivations
Today's researchers view on repression
Acknowledge that we sometimes spare our egos by neglecting information that is threatening Repression, if it ever occurs, is a rare mental response to terrible trauma
In psychoanalysis, a method of exploring the unconscious in which the person relaxes and says whatever comes to mind, no matter how trivial or embarrassing
Free association
Analysis of his patients' histories convinced Freud that personality forms during life's
1st few years
In Freud's view, human personality arises from
A conflict between impulse and restraint—between our aggressive, pleasure-seeking biological urges and our internalized social controls over these urges
Maslow proposed that we are motivated by
A hierarchy of needs
Envision of an id-dominated person
A newborn infant crying out for satisfaction, caring nothing for the outside world's conditions and demand People with a present rather than future time perspective—those who often use tobacco, alcohol, and other drugs, and would sooner party now than sacrifice today's pleasure for future success and happiness
Who is Karen Horney
Agreed with Freud that childhood is important Childhood social, not sexual, tensions are crucial for personality formation Childhood anxiety, caused by the dependent child's sense of helplessness, triggers our desire for love and security Attempted to balance the bias she detected in this masculine view of psychology (he said women envy men)
Who is Alfred Adler
Agreed with Freud that childhood is important Childhood social, not sexual, tensions are crucial for personality formation Proposed idea of the inferiority complex
Result of ego fearing losing control of inner war between the id and superego
Anxiety
Explain the phallic stage
Boys seek genital stimulation Oedipus Girls experienced a parallel Electra complex
A person's characteristic pattern of thinking, feeling, and acting
Personality
Freud believed the remembered content of dreams (their manifest content) to be a
Censored expression of the dreamer's unconscious wishes (the dream's latent content)
Carl Jung's concept of a shared, inherited reservoir of memory traces from our species' history
Collective unconscious
What values of Freud did his followers accept
Personality structures of id, ego, and superego Ideas of unconscious Ideas of childhood Dynamics of anxiety Defense mechanisms
In psychoanalytic theory, the ego's protective methods of reducing anxiety by unconsciously distorting reality
Defense mechanisms
Psychoanalytic defense mechanism by which people refuse to believe or even to perceive painful realities
Denial
Dying patients may ____ the gravity of their illness
Deny
Children who fear expressing anger against their parents may ____ it by kicking the family pet
Displace
Psychoanalytic defense mechanism that shifts sexual or aggressive impulses toward a more acceptable or less threatening object or person, as when redirecting anger toward a safer outlet
Displacement
Students upset over a test may snap at a friend (form of)
Displacement
The largely conscious, "executive" part of personality that, according to Freud, mediates among the demands of the id, superego, and reality. The ego operates on the reality principle, satisfying the id's desires in ways that will realistically bring pleasure rather than pain
Ego
Activate instantly, before conscious analysis
Emotions that activate instantly, before conscious analysis
Freud viewed jokes as
Expressions of repressed sexual and aggressive tendencies, and dreams as the "royal road to the unconscious
Freud believed some things are accidental
Fa;se
True or False: Defense mechanisms are conscious self-presentation tactics
False: They function indirectly and unconsciously, reducing anxiety by disguising some threatening impulse
Criticism of inkblot test
Few are valid Not reliable
1) The inability to see a problem from a new perspective, by employing a different mental set 2) According to Freud, a lingering focus of pleasure-seeking energies at an earlier psychosexual stage, in which conflicts were unresolved
Fixation
Who is Carl Jung
Freud's disciple-turned-dissenter Less emphasis on social factors and agreed with Freud that the unconscious exerts a powerful influence Unconscious contains more than our repressed thoughts and feelings Collective unconscious
What are neo-Freudians
Freud's followers
Support of inkblot test
Helpful diagnostic tool Source of suggestive leads Icebreaker Revealing interview technique
Freud's theory was his belief that the mind is mostly
Hidden (Conscious awareness visible, beneath our awareness is the larger unconscious mind with its thoughts, wishes, feelings, and memories)
More common reality of stress
High stress and associated stress hormones enhance memory
Some researchers believe that extreme, prolonged stress, such as the stress some severely abused children experience, might disrupt memory by damaging the
Hippocampus
A reservoir of unconscious psychic energy that, according to Freud, strives to satisfy basic sexual and aggressive drives. The id operates on the pleasure principle, demanding immediate gratification
Id
The process by which, according to Freud, children incorporate their parents' values into their developing superegos
Identification
Operate without conscious recall, even among those with amnesia
Implicit memories
The humanistic approach of personality focused on our
Inner capacities for growth and self-fulfillment
In his dream analyses, Freud searched for patients'
Inner conflicts
What is the most serious problem with Freud's theory
It offers after-the-fact explanations of any characteristic (of one person's smoking, another's fear of horses, another's sexual orientation) yet fails to predict such behaviors and traits.
____ underlies all the other defense mechanisms, each of which disguises threatening impulses and keeps them from reaching consciousness
Repression
In Freud's view, conflicts unresolved during earlier psychosexual stages could surface as ____ in the adult years
Maladaptive behavior
Complex according to Freud, a boy's sexual desires toward his mother and feelings of jealousy and hatred for the rival father
Oedipus
A person who had been either orally overindulged or deprived (perhaps by abrupt, early weaning) might fixate at the
Oral stage
Freud believed personality is the result of
Our efforts to resolve this basic conflict—to express these impulses in ways that bring satisfaction without also bringing guilt or punishment
Of different aspects of vision and thinking
Parallel processing
Orally fixated adult could exhibit
Passive dependence (like that of a nursing infant) or an exaggerated denial of this dependence (by acting tough or uttering biting sarcasm) Might continue to seek oral gratification by smoking or excessive eating
Explain Freud's theory
Patient's free associations, resistances, dreams, and transferences—and the therapist's interpretations of them—released previously repressed feelings, allowing the patient to gain self-insight
The ego contains our partly conscious
Perceptions, thoughts, judgments, and memories
Some unconscious thoughts we store temporarily in a ____ area, from which we can retrieve them into conscious awareness
Preconscious
By stimuli to which we have not consciously attended
Priming
"He doesn't trust me" may be a ____ of the actual feeling "I don't trust him" or "I don't trust myself."
Projection
Psychoanalytic defense mechanism by which people disguise their own threatening impulses by attributing them to others
Projection
A personality test, such as the Rorschach or TAT, that provides ambiguous stimuli designed to trigger projection of one's inner dynamics
Projective test
____ aim to provide this "psychological X-ray," by asking test-takers to describe an ambiguous stimulus or tell a story about it
Projective tests
Defense mechanisms are motivated less by the seething impulses that Freud presumed than by our need to
Protect our self-image
Freud's theory of personality and therapeutic technique that attributes thoughts and actions to unconscious motives and conflicts
Psychoanalysis
The childhood stages of development (oral, anal, phallic, latency, genital) during which, according to Freud, the id's pleasure-seeking energies focus on distinct erogenous zones
Psychosexual stages
Habitual drinkers may say they drink with their friends just to be sociable (form of)
Rationalization
Psychoanalytic defense mechanism that offers self-justifying explanations in place of the real, more threatening, unconscious reasons for one's actions
Rationalization
Students who fail to study may _____, All work and no play makes Jack a dull person
Rationalize
En route to consciousness, the unacceptable proposition "I hate Dad" becomes "I love him." (form of)
Reaction formation
Psychoanalytic defense mechanism by which the ego unconsciously switches unacceptable impulses into their opposites. Thus, people may express feelings that are the opposite of their anxiety-arousing unconscious feelings
Reaction formation
Facing the anxious first days of school, a child may ____ to the oral comfort of thumb-sucking
Regress
Homesick new college students may long for the security and comfort of home (form of)
Regression
Juvenile monkeys, when anxious, retreat to infantile clinging to their mothers or to one another (form of)
Regression
Psychoanalytic defense mechanism in which an individual faced with anxiety retreats to a more infantile psychosexual stage, where some psychic energy remains fixated
Regression
Freud believed that ____ explains why we do not remember our childhood lust for our parent of the other sex
Repression
In psychoanalytic theory, the basic defense mechanism that banishes anxiety-arousing thoughts, feelings, and memories from consciousness
Repression
1st requirement clinicians working in the Freudian tradition attempt to assess personality characteristics should have
Road into the unconscious
Most widely used projective test, a set of 10 inkblots, designed by Hermann Rorschach; seeks to identify people's inner feelings by analyzing their interpretations of the blots
Rorschach inkblot test
Automatically control our perceptions and interpretations
Schemas
The unconscious involves
Schemas Priming Right-hemisphere activity Parallel processing Implicit memories Emotions Self-concept and stereotypes
Today's developmental psychologists view on childhood
See our development as lifelong, not fixed in childhood Doubt that infants' neural networks are mature enough to sustain as much emotional trauma as Freud assumed
Automatically and unconsciously influence how we process information about ourselves and others
Self-concept and stereotypes
Example of storytelling being used to assess achievement motivation
Shown a daydreaming boy, those who imagine he is fantasizing about an achievement are presumed to be projecting their own goals
Leonardo da Vinci's paintings of Madonnas were a ____ of his longing for intimacy with his mother, who was separated from him at an early age
Sublimation
Psychoanalytic defense mechanism by which people re-channel their unacceptable impulses into socially approved activities, socially adaptive and may even be a wellspring for great cultural and artistic achievements
Sublimation
Around age 4 or 5, Freud theorized, a child's ego recognizes the demands of the newly emerging
Superego
The part of personality that, according to Freud, represents internalized ideals and provides standards for judgment (the conscience) and for future aspirations, focuses on how we ought to behave, strives for perfection, judging actions and producing positive feelings of pride or negative feelings of guilt.
Superego
How does personality use the 3 systems
Superego's demands often oppose the id's, the ego struggles to reconcile the 2 Personality executive, mediating the impulsive demands of the id, the restraining demands of the superego, and the real-life demands of the external world
Who is Hermann Rorschach
Swiss psychiatrist Creator of Rorschach inkblot test Based it on a childhood game in which he and his friends dripped ink on a paper, folded it, and then said what they saw in the resulting blot
A theory of death-related anxiety; explores people's emotional and behavioral responses to reminders of their impending death
Terror-management theory
Today's personality researchers study
The basic dimensions of personality, the biological roots of these basic dimensions, the interaction of persons and environments, self-esteem, self-serving bias, cultural influences on one's sense of self, and the unconscious mind
To understand the mind's dynamics during the personality conflict, Freud proposed 3 interacting systems:
The id, ego, and superego
A projective test in which people express their inner feelings and interests through the stories they make up about ambiguous scenes
Thematic Apperception Test (TAT)
Humanistic psychologists focused on
The ways "healthy" people strive for self-determination and self-realization, studied people through their own self-reported experiences and feelings
What ideas did Freud's followers not share
They placed more emphasis on the conscious mind's role in interpreting experience and in coping with the environment Doubted that sex and aggression were all-consuming motivations (emphasized loftier motives and social interactions)
What did Freud believe about the troublesome feelings and ideas we repress, although we are not consciously aware of them
They powerfully influence us, sometimes gaining expression in disguised forms—the work we choose, the beliefs we hold, our daily habits, our troubling symptoms
Objective assessment tools, such as agree-disagree or true-false questionnaires, would be inadequate into getting into the unconscious because
They would merely tap the conscious surface
According to Freud, a reservoir of mostly unacceptable thoughts, wishes, feelings, and memories. According to contemporary psychologists, information processing of which we are unaware
Unconscious
Thinking about one's mortality provokes
Various terror-management defenses
Someone with an exceptionally strong superego may be
Virtuous yet guilt-ridden
Someone with a weak superego may be
Wantonly self-indulgent and remorseless
Is Freud's theory, "We indeed have limited access to all that goes on in our minds," right
Yes
Who were Freud's followers on his controversial writings
Young, ambitious physicians