Introduction to personality toward an integrative science of the person

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Hauptverfasser: Mischel, Walter 1930-2018 (VerfasserIn), Shoda, Yuichi (VerfasserIn), Ayduk, Ozlem (VerfasserIn)
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Veröffentlicht: Hoboken, NJ Wiley 2008
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Datensatz im Suchindex

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adam_text BRIEF CONTENTS PREFACE AND TEXT ORGANIZATION v ACKNOWLEDGMENTS ix CHAPTER 1 ORIENTATION TO PERSONALITY I CHAPTER 2 DATA, METHODS, AND TOOLS 19 PART I THE TRAIT-DISPOSITIONAL LEVEL CHAPTER 3 TYPES AND TRAITS 45 CHAPTER 4 THE EXPRESSIONS OF DISPOSITIONS 72 PART II THE BIOLOGICAL LEVEL CHAPTER 5 HEREDITY AND PERSONALITY 95 CHAPTER 6 BRAIN, EVOLUTION, AND PERSONALITY 124 PART III THEPSYCHODYNAMIC- MOTIVATIONAL LEVEL CHAPTER 7 PSYCHODYNAMIC THEORIES: FREUD S CONCEPTIONS 155 CHAPTER 8 PSYCHODYNAMIC APPLICATIONS AND PROCESSES 177 CHAPTER 9 POST-FREUDIAN PSYCHODYNAMICS 209 PART IV THE BEHAVIORAL-CONDITIONING LEVEL CHAPTER 10 BEHAVIORAL CONCEPTIONS 245 CHAPTER 11 ANALYZING AND MODIFYING BEHAVIOR 270 PART V THE PHENOMENOLOGICAL- HUMANISTIC LEVEL CHAPTER 12 PHENOMENOLOGICAL-HUMANISTIC CONCEPTIONS 297 CHAPTER 13 THE INTERNAL VIEW 323 PART VI THE SOCIAL COGNITIVE LEVEL CHAPTER 14 SOCIAL COGNITIVE CONCEPTIONS 349 CHAPTER 15 SOCIAL COGNITIVE PROCESSES 379 PART VII INTEGRATION OF LEVELS: THE PERSON AS A WHOLE CHAPTER 16 THE PERSONALITY SYSTEM: INTEGRATING THE LEVELS 409 CHAPTER 17 SELF-REGULATION: FROM GOAL PURSUIT TO GOAL ATTAINMENT 437 CHAPTER 18 PERSONALITY IN ITS SOCIAL CONTEXT AND CULTURE 466 nu CONTENTS PREFACE AND TEXT ORGANIZATION v ACKNOWLEDGMENTS ix CHAPTER 1 ORIENTATION TO PERSONALITY 1 What is Personality Psychology? 1 Stable, Coherent Individual Differences 1 Predicting and Understanding 3 Defining Personality 3 Theory and Levels of Analysis in Personality Psychology 4 Early Big Picture Theory 4 From Grand Theories to Levels of Analysis 5 Levels of Analysis: Organization of this Book 6 The Trait-Dispositional Level 7 In Focus 1.1 The Personal Side of the Science 8 The Biological Level 9 The Psychodynamic-Motivational Level 9 The Behavioral-Conditioning Level 10 The Phenomenological-Humanistic Level 11 The Social Cognitive Level 12 Levels of Analysis Applied to Understand Unexpected Aggression: The Texas Tower Killer 12 Integration of Levels: The Person as a Whole 16 Practical Applications: Coping and Personal Adaptation 17 Summary 18 Key Terms 18 CHAPTER 2 DATA, METHODS, AND TOOLS 19 Why a Science of Personality?: Beyond Hindsight Understanding 19 In Focus 2.1 Gary W., The Text s Case—Gary s Self-Description 20 The Range of Personality-Relevant Measures 21 Interviews 22 In Focus 2.2 Early Personality Measurement 22 Tests and Self-Reports 23 Projective Measures 23 Naturalistic Observation and Behavior Sampling 24 Remote Behavior Sampling: Daily Life Experiences 26 Physiological Functioning and Brain Imaging 26 Laboratory Methods of Social Cognition 29 Conceptual and Methodological Tools 30 Constructs and Operational Definitions 30 An Example: Defining the Construct of Aggression 31 Establishing Relationships Among Observations 32 Correlation: What Goes with What? 32 Interpreting Correlations 33 Reliability and Validity of Observations and Measures 35 Reliability: Are the Measurements Consistent? 35 Validity: What Is Being Measured? 36 Content Validity 36 Criterion Validity 36 Construct Validity: Validity of the Construct Itself 36 In Focus 2.3 Sometimes Direct Self-Report Measures Work Best 37 The Experimental Approach 37 Independent and Dependent Variables 38 Experimental and Control Groups 38 Double-Blind Designs 38 Ethics in Personality Research 39 Summary 41 Key Terms 41 PART I THE TRAIT-DISPOSITIONAL LEVEL Prelude to Part I: The Trait-Dispositional Level 43 CHAPTER 3 TYPES AND TRAITS 45 46 Types and Traits 46 Types 46 Traits: Individual Differences on Dimensions Traits Defined 46 In Focus 3.1 An Example: Type a Personality 47 Describing and Explaining 48 Trait Attributions 49 Trait Theorists 49 Gordon Allport 49 Raymond B. Cattell 51 Hans J. Eysenck 53 Common Features of Trait Theories 56 Generality and Stability of Traits 56 Traits and States Distinguished 56 Contents ■* xv Search for Basic Traits 56 Quantification 57 Aggregating across Situations to Increase Reliability 57 Taxonomy of Human Attributes 57 Psycholexical Approach 58 The Big Five Trait Dimensions 59 Factor Analysis to Find Trait Dimensions: The NEO-PI-R and Big Five 59 Evidence and Issues 61 Overview of Usefulness of the Big Five 61 Stability of Traits over Time 62 In Focus 3.2 Prototypes: Typical People 63 Big Five Differences Predicting Life Outcomes 65 Limitations, Concerns, Contributions 66 Limitations of Factor Analysis 67 Are Traits Causal Explanations or Descriptive Summaries? 67 Links between Perceiver and Perceived: Valid Ratings 68 Summary 68 Interaction of Traits and Situations 69 Summary 70 Key Terms 71 Key Terms 88 Taking Stock Part I: The Trait-Dispositional Level 89 Overview: Focus, Concepts, Methods 89 Enduring Contributions of the Trait-Dispositional Level 90 PART II THE BIOLOGICAL LEVEL Prelude to Part II: The Biological Level 93 î-CHAPTER 5 HEREDITY AND PERSONALITY 95 »-CHAPTER 4 THE EXPRESSIONS OF DISPOSITIONS 72 Traits, Situations, and the Personality Paradox 73 Individual Differences in Behavior Tendencies 73 The Intuitive Assumption of Consistency 73 The 1968 Challenge 74 The Paradox Defined 74 The Person versus Situation Debate 74 Situationism 74 Revival of the Traditional Paradigm 75 The Role of the Situation 75 Incorporating Situations into Traits 75 If ■ ■ ■ Then ... Situation-Behavior Signatures 76 In Focus 4.1 Looking Under the Hood 77 Evidence for Signatures Indicative of Personality Types 77 Gary W. s Behavioral Signatures 79 Two Types of Consistency 80 Uses of the Two Types of Consistency 81 Interactionism in Personality Psychology 82 The Meaning of Person-Situation Interaction 82 An Example: Uncertainty Orientation 83 Definition of Triple Typology 83 Interaction as a Rule in Science 84 In Focus 4.2 A Triple Typology for Hostility 85 Resolution of the Personality Paradox 85 Summary: Expressions of Consistency in Traits-Dispositions 87 Summary 88 Genetic Bases of Personality 96 The Human Genome: The Genetic Heritage 96 Inside DNA: The Basic Information 96 Not Really a Blueprint 97 DNA -Environment Interactions 97 Individual Differences in DNA 98 Biological Switches 98 In Focus 5.1 Even the Bees Do It: Gene-Environment Interactions in Social Behavior 99 Twin Studies 100 The Twin Method 100 Results of Twin Studies 100 The Big Five 100 Temperaments 101 In Focus 5.2 Inhibited Children: Kagan s Shyness Research 104 Attitudes and Beliefs 104 Aggressive and Altruistic Tendencies 105 Romantic Love and Marriage 105 Twins Reared Apart 106 Beyond Self-Report Measures 107 In Focus 5.3 Understanding Heritability and the Heritability Index 108 Heredity versus Environment: Another False Dichotomy 110 Summary 110 Gene - Environment Interaction 110 The Unique (Nonshared) Psychological Environment of Each Family Member 111 Nonshared Environmental Influences within the Family 111 Nonshared Environmental Influences Outside the Family 112 Interactions among Nature-Nurture Influences 113 In Focus 5.4 Nature and (Not Versus) Nurture: Both Matter 114 Genes Also Influence Environments 115 Search for Specific Gene-Behavior Connections 117 Causal Mechanisms: The Role of Neurotransmitter Systems 118 Genetic and Environmental Influences on Person χ Situation Interactions 119 xvi ř Contents In Focus 5.5 Interaction of Biology and Environmental Stress in the Development of Depression 120 Social Environments Change the Expression of Genes, the Brain, and Personality 121 Stress Is Bad for Your Brain 121 Summary 122 Key Terms 123 CHAPTER 6 BRAIN, EVOLUTION, AND PERSONALITY 124 Brain-Personality Links 124 Biological Bases of Extraversion-Introversion (H. J. Eysenck) 125 In Focus 6.1 An Early Effort: Physique and Personality? 125 Brain Asymmetry and Personality Differences 128 Brain Asymmetry 128 The Behavioral Inhibition and Activation Systems 128 Brain Asymmetry and Emotional Reactivity 128 BIS, BAS, and Personality Traits 129 In Focus 6.2 BIS/BAS and Everyday Emotional Experiences 130 Summary and Implications 131 Probing the Biology of Neuroticism 132 Sensation Seeking: A Trait with a Specific Biological Basis? 132 In Focus 6.3 Testosterone and the Antisocial Personality 134 Biological Assessment and Change 135 New Windows on the Brain 135 The Amygdala and Personality 136 Linking Inhibition to Amygdala Activation 137 Biological Therapies 137 Antidepressants 138 Antipsychotics 138 Tranquilizers 139 Other Common Drugs 139 Evolutionary Theory and Personality 139 The Evolutionary Approach 140 In Focus 6.4 There is Grandeur in this View of Life. .. 141 Implications of Evolution for Personality 142 Mate Selection 142 Sexual Jealousy 142 Sex Differences in Romantic and Sexual Regrets 142 Explanations Are Not Justifications 143 Altruism 143 Evolutionary Theory and Inborn Constraints on Learning 144 Biological Preparedness 145 Specificity of Psychological Mechanisms 145 The Value of Discriminativeness in Coping with Stress 146 Summary 147 Key Terms 147 Taking Stock Part II: The Biological Level of Analysis 148 Overview: Focus, Concepts, Methods 148 Enduring Contributions of the Biological Level 148 PART III THE PSYCHODYNAMIC-MOTIVATIONAL LEVEL Prelude to Part III: the Psychodynamic-Motivational Level 151 CHAPTER 7 PSYCHODYNAMIC THEORIES: FREUD S CONCEPTIONS 155 Basic Assumptions: Unconscious Mental Determinism 157 The Unconscious 157 The Roads to the Unconscious 157 Dreams 158 Free Association 158 In Focus 7.1 Encouraging Free Association 159 Psychic Structure: Anatomy of the Mind 159 The Id: The Passions at the Core 159 Life Instincts (Eros) 160 Libido 160 Death Instincts (Thanatos) 160 The Pleasure Principle 161 Primary Process Thinking 161 The Ego: In the Service of Reality, Reason, Order 161 The Reality Principle 161 The Superego: High Court in Pursuit of Perfection, Ideals, Transcendence 162 Looking Back at Freud s Theory of Mental Structures and Their Biological Bases 163 Conflict, Anxiety, and Psychodynamics 164 Conflict 164 In Focus 7.2 The Traumatic Freud- Allport Meeting 165 Defense: Denial and Repression 166 Neurosis 167 When Defenses Fail: Neurotic Anxiety and Conflict 167 Development of Neurotic Anxiety 167 The Meaning of Neurotic Acts 167 Origins of Neuroses 168 The Psychopathology of Everyday Life: Mistakes That Betray 169 Motivational Determinism: Unconscious Causes 170 Contents xvii Personality Development 170 Repression versus Suppression 196 Stages of Development 170 Studying Repression 196 Oral 170 Perceptual Defense 197 In Focus 7.3 How Oral is the Infant? 170 The Long History of Perceptual Defense 197 Anal 171 Limitations of Early Laboratory Studies 198 Phallic 172 Current View of Unconscious Processes: the Adaptive Latency 172 Unconscious 199 Genital 172 The Repressed Memory Debate: False Memories Fixation and Regression 172 of Abuse? 200 Freud s Theory of Identification 173 Return of the Repressed 200 Impact of Freud s Theories 174 Did It Really Happen? 201 Image of the Person 174 The Power of Suggestion 201 The Healthy Personality 174 The Value of Self-Disclosure 201 Behaviors as Symptoms 175 Patterns of Defense: Individual Differences in Cognitive Summary 175 Avoidance 202 Key Terms 176 Repression-Sensitization 202 Selective Attention 202 CHAPTER 8 Blunting versus Monitoring Styles 204 PSYCHODYNAMIC APPLICATIONS AND The RoIe of Control: When Don t You Want PROCESSES 177 to Know? 205 Matching the Medical Information to the Patient s Applications to Personality Assessment 178 Style 206 The Core Beneath the Mask 178 Summary 207 Relying on the Clinician 178 Key Terms 207 Projective Methods 179 TheRorschach 179 CHAPTER 9 The Thematic Apperception Test (TAT) 181 POST-FREUDIAN PSYCHODYNAMICS 209 Applying Psychodynamic Clinical Inferences to Gary W.: A Freudian View 181 Toward Ego Psychology and the Self 210 In Focus 8.1 Gary s Tat Stories 182 Anna Freud and the Ego Defense Murray, the Harvard Personologists, and Higher Mechanisms 210 Motives 184 Transformation of Motives 211 Studying Lives in Depth 184 In Focus 9.1 Little Anna and Sigmund: a Freudian Assessment Strategy: Diagnostic Council 185 Slip? 212 Higher-Order Motives 185 Projection 213 In Focus 8.2 Selecting U.S. Spies: the OSS Assessment Reaction Formation 213 Project 187 In Focus 9.2 Testing Reaction Formation in the Competence Motivation 188 Lab 214 Need for Achievement 188 Rationalization 215 Need for Power 190 Sublimation 215 Need for Intimacy 190 Carl Jung 215 Implicit and Explicit Motives 190 Alfred Adler 218 Treatment and Change 191 Erich Fromm 220 The Beginnings: Free Association and Dream Erik Erikson s Psychosocial Theory of Personality Interpretation 191 Development 221 Today s View of Freud s Theory of Stages of Psychosocial Development 222 Trauma 192 Trust versus Mistrust 222 The Transference Relationship and Working Autonomy versus Shame and Doubt 223 Through 193 Initiative versus Guilt 223 Alternative Psychodynamic Interpretations Industry versus Inferiority 224 of Gary W. 194 Adolescence and the Struggle for Identity versus Role Psychodynamic Processes: Anxiety and the Confusion 224 Unconscious 195 Intimacy versus Isolation 225 The Psychoanalytic Concept of Unconscious Generativity versus Repression 195 Self-Absorption/Stagnation 225 XVIII Contents Integrity versus Despair 225 Erikson s Contributions 226 Object Relations Theory and the Self 226 Good-Bad Splitting 227 The Development of Self 228 Attachment: The Roots of Object Relations 228 Attachment Theory 229 Early Attachment Relations: Secure/Insecure Attachment Patterns 229 Attachment in Adult Relationships 230 In Focus 9.3 Secure-Insecure Attachment and Perceived Social Support in Close Adult Relationships 231 Kohut s Theory 233 Relational Therapy and Restoration of the Self 235 Summary 236 Key Terms 237 Taking Stock Part III: The Psychodynamic Level 238 Overview. Focus, Concepts, Methods 238 Enduring Contributions of the Psychodynamic Level 239 PART IV THE BEHAVIORAL-CONDITIONING LEVEL Prelude to Part IV: The Behavioral-Conditioning Level 241 CHAPTER 10 BEHAVIORAL CONCEPTIONS 245 The Behavioral Approach to Psychodynamics: Dollard and Miller 246 Neurotic Conflict: The Core 246 Recasting Conflict in Learning Terms 247 Primary Needs and Learning 248 Drive 249 Cue 250 Response 250 Reinforcement 250 Conflict 251 Anxiety and Repression 252 Reactions to Psychodynamic Behavior Theory 252 Classical Conditioning: Learning Emotional Associations 253 How Classical Conditioning Works 254 Higher-Order Conditioning 254 In Focus 10.1 A Behavioral Challenge to the Psychodynamic Theory of Neurosis 257 From Trauma to Anxiety 257 Operant (Instrumental) Conditioning: B.F. Skinner s Contributions 259 How Operant (Instrumental) Conditioning Works: Learning from Response Consequences 259 Skinner s Basic Approach 259 Importance of the Situation: The Role of Stimuli 260 Rejection of Inferred Motives 261 Conditioned Generalized Reinforcers 263 Discrimination and Generalization in Everyday Life 263 Shaping Behavior by Successive Approximations 264 The Patterning of Outcomes: Schedules of Reinforcement 264 Superstitions: Getting Reinforced into Irrationality 265 Punishment 266 Skinner s Own Behavior 267 Summary of Two Types of Learning 267 In Focus 10.2 Skinner Analyzes Himself 267 Summary 268 Key Terms 269 CHAPTER 11 ANALYZING AND MODIFYING BEHAVIOR 270 Characteristics of Behavioral Assessments 271 Case Example: Conditions Controlling Gary W. s Anxiety 271 Direct Behavior Measurement 272 Situational Behavior Sampling 272 Finding Effective Rewards 274 Assessing Conditions Controlling Behavior 275 Functional Analyses: Basic Method 276 Functional Analyses: Case Example 278 Changing Emotional Reactions 279 Desensitization: Overcoming Anxiety 279 Conditioned Aversion: Making Stimuli Unattractive 283 An Example: Treating Cocaine Dependency 283 Changing Behavior 284 Case Example: Hyperactivity 284 In Focus 11.1 Rewards May Backfire 285 Contingency Management: Contracting to Control Drug Abuse 286 In Focus 11.2 Depression as Insufficient Reinforcement 287 Symptom Substitution? 288 Evaluating the Consequences of Behavior, Not the Person 289 Does Changing Behavior Change Personality? 289 Summary 290 Key Terms 291 Taking Stock Part IV: The Behavioral-Conditoning Level 292 Overview: Focus, Concepts, Methods 292 Enduring Contributions of the Behavioral-Conditioning Level 292 Contents XIX PART V THE PHENOMENOLOGICAL- HUMANISTIC LEVEL Prelude to Part V: The Phenomenological-Humanistic Level 295 CHAPTER 12 PHENOMENOLOGICAL-HUMANISTIC CONCEPTIONS 297 Sources of Phenomenological-Humanistic Perspectives 298 Defining Humanistic Psychology, Phenomenology, Existentialism 298 In Focus 12.1 Pioneers at Different Levels of Analysis at Work and War in the Same Place 299 Airport s Functional Autonomy 300 Lewin s Life Space 300 Phenomenology and Existentialism: The Here and Now 303 Carl Rogers s Self Theory 304 Unique Experience: The Subjective World 304 Self-Actualization 304 The Self 305 In Focus 12.2 S elf-Actualization as a Need (Maslow) 306 Consistency and Positive Regard 307 Self-Determination 308 Client-Centered Therapy 309 Rogers Reflects on His Own Work 311 George Kelly s Psychology of Personal Constructs 312 The Person s Constructs and Personality 312 Characteristics of Personal Constructs 313 Exploring Personal Constructs 314 A Personal Construct Conceptualization of GaryW. 314 Rationality-Emotionality 314 Power and Control versus Dependence and Weakness 315 Security-Liberty 315 Behavioral Referents for Personal Constructs 316 Exploring the Meaning Underlying Puzzling Behavior Patterns 317 People as Scientists 317 Constructive Alternativism: Many Ways to See 318 Roles: Many Ways to Be 319 People Are What They Make of Themselves: Self-Determination 319 Common Themes and Issues 320 The World as Perceived 320 Potential for Growth, Change, and Freedom 320 In Focus 12.3 Unexpected Similarities: Behavior Theory and Existentialism 321 Summary 322 Key Terms 322 CHAPTER 13 THE INTERNAL VIEW 323 Exploring Internal Experience 323 Why Self Matters: Consequences of Self-Discrepancies 324 The View Through the Person s Eyes 326 In Focus 13.1 Effects of Self-Discrepancy: Anorexia 327 Uses of Self-Assessments 328 The Q-Sort Technique 329 Interviews 330 The Semantic Differential 330 Nonverbal Communication 331 Studying Lives from the Inside: Psychobiography 332 Narrative Identity: Stories that Give Lives Meaning 332 Enhancing Self-Awareness: Accessing One s Experiences 333 Group Experiences 334 Meditation 335 The Person s Experience and the Unconscious 336 Accessing Painful Emotions: Hypnotic Probing 337 Peering into Consciousness: Brain Images of Subjective Experiences 338 The Value of Self-Disclosure about Subjective Experiences 338 In Focus 13.2 Caution: Rumination Can Increase Depression 339 Change and Well-Being 339 The Meaningful Life, the Healthy Personality 339 Positive Psychology: Finding Human Strengths 340 Summary 343 Key Terms 343 Taking Stock Part V: The Phenomenological-Humanistic Level 344 Overview: Focus, Concepts, Methods 344 Enduring Contributions of the Phenomenological-Humanistic Level 345 PART VI THE SOCIAL COGNITIVE LEVEL Prelude to Part VI: the Social Cognitive Level 347 CHAPTER 14 SOCIAL COGNITIVE CONCEPTIONS 349 Development of the Social Cognitive Level 349 Historical Roots 349 Linking Cognition and Social Behavior 350 In Focus 14.1 George Kelly: A Bridge to the Social Cognitive Level 351 The Cognitive Revolution 352 Albert Bandura: Social Learning Theory 352 Learning Through Observation (Modeling) 352 xx Contents Observing Other People s Outcomes: What Happens, to Them Might Happen to You 354 Importance of Rules and Symbolic Processes 355 The Agenţie, Proactive Person 356 Self-Efficacy 356 The Role of Self-Efficacy in Personality and Behavior Change 357 Social Cognitive Reconceptualization of Personality: Walter Mischel 357 Understanding Consistency in Personality: People as Meaning Makers 358 Social Cognitive Person Variables 359 Encodings (Construais): How Do You See It? 360 Expectancies and Beliefs: What Will Happen? 361 Affects: Feelings and Hot Reactions 362 Goals and Values: What Do You Want? What Is It Worth? 362 What Can You Do?: Overcoming Stimulus Control through Self-Regulation 363 Contributors to Person Variables: A Quick Look at a Long History 364 In Focus 14.2 Mischel s View of His Mentors, Julian Rotter and George Kelly 365 Personality Assessment 366 Measuring Self-Efficacy Expectancies 367 Individual Differences in If ... Then ... Signatures 367 The Implicit Association Test (IAT) 369 Incorporating the Psychological Situation into Personality Assessment 370 In Focus 14.3 Identifying Psychological Situations 371 Personality Change and Therapy 371 Overview of Approach 371 Behavior Therapies Become Cognitive 372 Beck s Cognitive Therapy 374 Common Themes 375 Summary 377 Key Terms 378 CHAPTER 15 SOCIAL COGNITIVE PROCESSES 379 Principles of Social Cognition Applied to Personality 379 Social Cognition and Personality 380 Schemas 380 Effects of Schemas 381 Directing Attention and Influencing Memory 381 Making Inferences 382 Self-Fulfilling Prophecies 382 Activation of Schemas 382 The Self 383 Self-Schemas 384 The Relational Self and Transference 384 The Relational Self 384 Transference Reconsidered 385 Perceived Stability of Self and Potential for Change 386 Multiple Self-Concepts: Possible Selves 387 Self-Esteem and Self-Evaluation 389 Costs of Self-Esteem Pursuit 390 Essential Features and Functions of the Self 390 Perceived Efficacy, Helplessness, and Mastery 391 Self-Efficacy Expectancies 391 Learned Helplessness and Apathy 391 Causal Attributions Influence Emotions and Outcomes 392 Pride and Shame 393 In Focus 15.1 The Perception of Control and Meaningfulness 394 Perceived Control and Predictability 394 Reinterpreting Helplessness and Depression: Pessimistic Explanatory Styles 394 Learned Optimism 395 In Focus 15.2 The Illusory Warm Glow of Optimism 396 Helpless versus Mastery-Oriented Children 397 Tuning in to the Wrong Thoughts: Anxiety 398 Enhancing Self-Efficacy When Expecting Failure 398 Incremental versus Entity Theories: Your Own Personality Theory Matters 398 Summary 400 Key Terms 401 Taking Stock Part VI: The Social Cognitive Level 402 Overview: Focus, Concepts, Methods 402 Enduring Contributions of the Social Cognitive Level 403 PART VII INTEGRATION OF LEVELS: THE PERSON ASAWHOLE Prelude to Part VII: Integration of Levels 405 CHAPTER 16 THE PERSONALITY SYSTEM: INTEGRATING THE LEVELS 409 What has to be Integrated?: Contributions from Each Level 410 Trait-Dispositional Level: Two Types of Consistency 410 Overall Average Differences in Types of Behavior (Broad Traits) 411 If ... Then ... Situation-Behavior Signatures of Personality 411 Biological Level 412 Psychodynamic-Motivational Level 412 Behavioral-Conditioning Level 413 Phenomenological-Humanistic Level 413 Contents *< xxi Social Cognitive Level 414 The Trait-Dispositional Level 444 Toward Integration: Characteristics of the Personality Ego Control and Ego Resilience 445 System 414 The Social Cognitive and Application of Neural Network Information-Processing Phenomenological-Humanistic Levels 446 Models to Personality 414 Self-Regulation in Approach (Appetitive) Dilemmas 447 An Application: The Cognitive-Affective Personality Delay of Gratification Ability 447 System (CAPS) 415 The Goal-Directed Delay Situation: The Two Basic Assumptions: Chronic Accessibility and Marshmallow Test 447 Stable Organization 416 Cooling Strategies: It s How You Think That Expressions of Personality Structure:/^ ... Then ... Counts 448 Personality Signatures in CAPS 417 Strategic Self-Distraction 448 Personality Dispositions (Processing Dynamics) 418 Hot and Cool Construal 449 The Rejection Sensitivity (RS) Signature: Finding Both Flexible Attention 450 If ... Then ... and Trait Components 418 Summary 451 RS and Aggression 418 Life-Span Implications of Self-Regulatory RS and Depression 419 Competence 451 The Narcissistic Signature 419 Stable Self-Regulatory Competence 451 Personality Development and Change 420 hong-Term Protective Effects 451 Features and Findings Integrated from Each Multiple Interacting Influences in Level 421 Self-Regulation 453 The Personality System in Action 423 Self-Regulation in Avoidance (Aversive) Dilemmas 454 External and Internal Sources of Activation 424 Cognitive Appraisal of Stress: Dealing with Negative Expressions of the System — and Their Emotions 454 Consequences 424 Cognitive Appraisal versus Hiding Negative Shaping One s Own Future Situations: Selecting Dating Feelings 454 Partners 425 In Focus 17.1 Overcoming the Stress of Dissecting a Applying CAPS to Real-Life Problems: Breast Cadaver in Medicai Training 454 Self-Examination 426 Cognitive Transformations to Deal with In Focus 16.1 When the Situation is Another Person: Stress 455 The Personality of Close Relationships 427 In Focus 17.2 Working Through, and Getting Getting Under the Hood : What is the Person Over, Emotional Hassles in Close Relationships Thinking, Feeling, Doing in the Situation? 428 456 Putting It Together: Integrating the Levels 434 Interaction of Hot and Cool Systems in Self-Regulation for Purposeful Change 434 Self-Regulation 457 Summary 435 The Emotional (Hot) Brain/The Rational (Cool) Key Terms 436 Brain 457 Bodily Changes: Emotion in Stress 458 s* CHAPTER 17 Fight or Flight Reactions 458 SELF-REGULATION: FROM GOAL PURSUIT TO GOAL Th% Hot ^ygdala 459 ATTAINMENT 437 The Rational Cool Brain 459 Overview of Contributions to Self-Regulation from Each Hot System/Cool System Interaction in Level 438 Self-Regulation 459 Self-Regulatory Processes in Goal Pursuit 441 * ^ocus 17.3 Neural Mechanisms in Impulsive Personal Goals and Projects 441 Violence 460 Life Tasks 441 Attention Control 460 Goal Hierarchies 441 Making Willpower Automatic: From Intentions to Standards and Self-Evaluation 442 If ■ ■ ■ Then ... Implementation 461 Why Self-Regulate? 442 Social Emotions Enable Self-Regulation: Links to Automaticity 442 Evolution 461 Beyond Automaticity to Willpower? 443 The Downside of Self-Regulation 462 Self-Regulation Requires Both Motivation and Conclusions 462 Competence 443 Potential for Self-Directed Change? 463 The Biological Level: Effortful Control 444 Summary 464 Brain Mechanisms in Effortful Control 444 Key Terms 465 xxii ί*· Contents і С Η Α Ρ Τ Ε R 18 Interactions of Biology, Sex, and Culture in Response to PERSONALITY IN ITS SOCIAL CONTEXT AND Threat 478 CU LTU RE 466 Men Fight or Flee: Women Tend and Culture and Personality 467 Befriend 479 Mapping Cultural Differences with the Big Interactions in the Genesis of Gender Roles 480 p. 4«7 Interacting Influences on Personality Development 481 Crosľcultural and Intracultural Differences 467 Biology-Trait-Socialization Interactions: Individualism versus Collectivism 468 , Shyness 482 Culture as a Shared Meaning System 469 What Develops?: the Evolving Self 483 In Focus 18.1 Cultural Differences in Emotional Taking CharSe: Human А&псУ 483 Meanings: Appraising the Situation 470 The Self-Construction Process 483 Cultural Differences in the Organization of The ^If as an Active ASent 484 Personality?: If... then ... Cultural Self-Direction/Agency 484 Signatures 471 The Relational Self 485 An Integrated System View of Culture and Person What Do People Need to Thrive?: The View from Dynamics 472 Multiple Levels 485 In Focus 18.2 Using the Game of Chicken to Study the Potential for Change 487 Culture of Honor 473 The Role of Genetics 487 Summary: The Link between the Cultural and the The Role of the Brain 487 Personal Meaning Systems 474 Summary 489 Culturally Specific Personality Dispositions 474 КеУ Terms 489 Ѕитгшгу: Interacting Influences in Takin¿ St°ck Part VII: Integration of Levels: The Person Culture-Personality Links 474 as a Whole 490 In Focus 18.3 Studying Race-Based Rejection Prospects for Personality Psychology 490 Sensitivity 475 Personology Revisited 490 Gender and Sex Differences 476 GLOSSARY 492 Overview and Issues 476 Neonatal Sex Differences 476 Gender Concepts 476 REFERENCES 508 Expression of Gender-Relevant Behavior 476 In Focus 18.4 Adult Sex Differences and their NAME INDEX 549 Implications 477 If ... then ... Patterns in Sex Differences 478 SUBJECT INDEX 559
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indexdate 2025-02-14T17:50:01Z
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language English
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physical XXII, 570 S. Ill., graph. Darst.
publishDate 2008
publishDateSearch 2008
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publisher Wiley
record_format marc
spellingShingle Mischel, Walter 1930-2018
Shoda, Yuichi
Ayduk, Ozlem
Introduction to personality toward an integrative science of the person
Personality
Persönlichkeitspsychologie (DE-588)4075996-9 gnd
subject_GND (DE-588)4075996-9
(DE-588)4123623-3
title Introduction to personality toward an integrative science of the person
title_auth Introduction to personality toward an integrative science of the person
title_exact_search Introduction to personality toward an integrative science of the person
title_full Introduction to personality toward an integrative science of the person Walter Mischel ; Yuichi Shoda ; Ozlem Ayduk
title_fullStr Introduction to personality toward an integrative science of the person Walter Mischel ; Yuichi Shoda ; Ozlem Ayduk
title_full_unstemmed Introduction to personality toward an integrative science of the person Walter Mischel ; Yuichi Shoda ; Ozlem Ayduk
title_short Introduction to personality
title_sort introduction to personality toward an integrative science of the person
title_sub toward an integrative science of the person
topic Personality
Persönlichkeitspsychologie (DE-588)4075996-9 gnd
topic_facet Personality
Persönlichkeitspsychologie
Lehrbuch
url http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=016219296&sequence=000002&line_number=0001&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA
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