Theories of Personality
trait
an aspect of personality that is considered to be reasonably table
learning approach
broad school of psychology that believes that personality is a learned characteristic
collectivists
define themselves in terms of the groups to which they belong and give priority to the goals of their group
introversion
people with this personality characteristic have high cortical arousal, leading them to avoid stimulation according to Allport
extroversion
people with this personality dimension tend to be active and self-expressive and gain energy from interacting with other people
ego
psychoanalystic appraoch; develops because a child's demands for instant gratification cannot be met or beacuse meeting these demands may be harmful
superego
psychoanalytic approach; develops throughout early childhood. It functions according to the moral principle; like our conscience
id
psychoanalytic approach; represents the basic drives, such as hunger, and demands pleasure through instant gratification and pays no attention to laws, social customs, or the needs of others
humanistic approach
psychological approach; individuals seek to learn aboue their environment and have a certain degree of control over reinforcement
Erik Erikson
psychologist who placed great emphasis on the mother-infant relationship in terms of personality development
collective unconscious
storage of human concepts shared by all people across all cultures
physiological
the most important need in Maslow's hierarchy of needs triangle
socialization
the process by which peeople learn the socially desirable behaviors of their particular culture and adopt them as a part of their personalities
genital stage
Freudian stage of development; sexual urges are awakened and adolescents direct their sexual urges onto opposite sex peers