Personality Theories Exam 1

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funder's first law

Great strengths are usually great weaknesses, and surprisingly often the opposite is true as well

correlation coefficient

A numerical index of the degree of relationship between two variables.

research

A scientific process that involves the systematic and careful collection of data.

trait

A characteristic that an organism can pass on to its offspring through its genes.

scatter plot

A graph with points plotted to show a possible relationship between two sets of data.

basic approach

A theoretical view of personality that focuses on some phenomena and ignores others.

reliability

Ability of a test to yield very similar scores for the same individual over repeated testings

person-situation debate

a controversial debate centering on whether people really do behave consistently across situations

spearman-brown formula

a mathematical formula that predicts the degree to which the reliability of a test can be improved by adding more items.

case method

a procedure for gathering scientific information by studying a single individual

correlational method

a research procedure used to determine how much events or characteristics vary along with each other

california Q-set

a set of 100 descriptive items that comprehensively cover the personality domain

measurement error

an error that occurs when there is a difference between the information desired by the researcher and the information provided by the measurement process

conscientiousness

being careful and vigilant (organized, planning, dependable)

constructs

categories people develop to help them organize information

learning and cognitive processes approach

classic behaviorism and how it can be affected by rewards and punishments

Self data

comes from the person/self

face validity

extent to which respondents can tell what the items are measuring

life data

facts about someone

phenomenological approach

focus on people's conscious experience of the world

psychoanalytic approach

focus on the unconscious mind and internal mental conflict

aggregation

group; gathering

learning

how behavior changes as a result of rewards, punishments, and other life experiences

trait approach

how people differ psychologically

psychological triad

how people feel, think, and behave

neuroticism

how we strongly react to positive/negative events (emotions are extreme, worrying, reactive)

openness to experience

intelligence (seeks new culture, food, experience)

judgements

mental assessments of the presence of attributes and the benefits associated with those attributes

behavioral data

observational reports about the behavior and the conditions under which the behavior occurs or changes

big 5 (OCEAN)

openness, conscientiousness, extraversion, agreeableness, neuroticism

construct validation

the strategy of establishing the validity of a measure by comparing it with a wide range of other measures

self-verfication

the tendency to seek evidence to confirm the self-concept

biological approach

understand the mind in terms of the body

agreeableness

warmth, kindness how well you get along with others (friendly, help others, unassertive)

behavioral confirmation

when we act in a way that makes our expectations about a group come true

informant data

Data supplied from people who know the participants

many-trait approach

Examine correlations between one behavior and many traits

experimental method

The approach that the proper way to explore the workings of the universe was through repeatable experiments rather than speculation.

essential-trait approach

The research strategy that attempts to narrow the list of thousands of trait terms into a shorter list of the ones that really matter.

expectancy effect

The tendency for someone to become the kind of person others expect him or her to be

funder's second law

There are no perfect indicators of personality; there are only clues, and clues are always ambiguous

funder's third law

something beats nothing, two times out of three

psychometrics

study of the measurement of human abilities, attitudes, and traits

extraversion

surgency (large groups, social bug, energetic)

validity

the extent to which a test measures or predicts what it is supposed to

generalizability

the extent to which we can claim our findings inform us about a group larger than the one we studied

interactionism

the idea that situations and personality interact to determine behavior


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