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Part 1 – Examining Personality Chapter 1 – What is Personality? Part 1, Chapter 1 - Vocabulary These flashcards have been designed as a study tool to.

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Presentation on theme: "Part 1 – Examining Personality Chapter 1 – What is Personality? Part 1, Chapter 1 - Vocabulary These flashcards have been designed as a study tool to."— Presentation transcript:

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2 Part 1 – Examining Personality Chapter 1 – What is Personality? Part 1, Chapter 1 - Vocabulary These flashcards have been designed as a study tool to assist in your mastery of each chapter’s vocabulary and accompanying concepts. Instructions: This is an animated PowerPoint slide show, best viewed in MS Powerpoint (Office 2003 or above). To use it as intended, open Powerpoint and begin the slide show by clicking on "slide show" on the menu bar above and then "view show," or by clicking on the slide show icon below. For use in conjunction with: Personality: A Systems Approach, By John D. Mayer Copyright © 2007 Allyn & Bacon Mayer’s Personality: A Systems Approach Flashcards by Rebecca Disbrow

3 Psychology A scientific discipline that studies how the mind works

4 Personality Psychology A scientific discipline that addresses the questions, “Who am I?” and “Who are others?” Personality psychology involves the study of a person’s mental system, with a focus on its largest, most important parts, how those parts are organized, and how they develop over time.

5 Implicit Personality Theory The informal, often unnoticed or unconscious system of beliefs an individual holds about how his or her own personality operates, and how the personalities of other people operate

6 Characterology A literary tradition in which an author writes a series of short descriptions about the different character types he or she has recognized. Each description of a type is designed to bring forth a definite feeling of recognition in the reader that he or she has seen an example of that type of person as well.

7 Temperament The study of different, largely innate, motivational and emotional styles that are repeated across people

8 Choleric One of the four ancient personality types; is quick to action, has a short temper, and is lean

9 Melancholic One of four ancient personality types; is slow to move, self- preoccupied, unhappy and depressed

10 Sanguine One of four ancient personality types; is cheerful, lively, and easy- going

11 Phlegmatic One of four ancient personality types; has little energy, is prone to eating too much, and is somewhat indifferent in disposition.

12 Psychological Mindedness A person’s trait or predisposition to analyze one’s own and others mental characteristics and how they lead to a person’s behaviors.

13 Molecular-Molar Continuum (or Dimension) A dimension or continuum along which various scientific systems of study can be located, from those that are smallest to those that are largest

14 Molecular System Systems that are relatively small, such as atoms and molecules

15 Molar System Systems that are relatively large, such as the economy or the ecosphere

16 Individual Differences A topic of scientific study that addresses the questions or how one person differs from another. Some people use this as an alternative definition of personality psychology

17 Personality The organized, developing, psychological system within the individual that represents the collective action of that individual’s major psychological subsystems.

18 Internal-External Continuum (or Dimension) As applied to personality psychology, a dimension or continuum that separates the internal parts of personality (“beneath the skin”) from the external aspects of personality (behavior, environment).

19 Systems Framework An outline of the field of personality psychology that divides it into the study of: (a) the definition and location of personality, (b) personality parts, (c) personality organization, and (d) personality development.

20 (Speaking in) Probabilistic Terms Speaking in terms of events that are most likely (i.e., probable) to occur, typically using statistical techniques to enhance the accuracy of those accounts.

21 Personality Components (or Parts) Individual instances of personality function, content, or processes are known as personality’s parts or components. These components or parts may be biological mechanisms such as a need for thirst, or learned contents such as the multiplication tables, or thematic ways of feeling, thinking, and acting, such as shyness, among others.

22 Structural Organization This aspect of personality organization refers to the relatively long-term, stable positioning of one part of personality in relationship to another.

23 Dynamic Organization Personality dynamics involve trends of causality across multiple parts of personality, in other words, how the parts of personality influence one another. For example, dynamics of action describe how a person’s urges end up being expressed in the individual’s actions.

24 Personality Development Concerns how the personality system develops over the individual’s life span

25 Part 1 – Examining Personality Chapter 1 – What is Personality?


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