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Summary 1.2C Personality Psychology notes

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For International Psychology Bachelor students in the first year. A comprehensive bullet point summary with the necessary keywords and learning goals from tutors focusing on the relevant learning materials. Everything is included and easy to understand! Helps you prepare as best as possible for t...

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  • March 28, 2023
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  • 2021/2022
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1.2.C Differences between People

1.2.1 Inner Drives


Sigmund Freud:

Psychoanalysis→ father of psychology

 pressure within personality→ conflict
 experience thre


How does our unconsciousness affect our behaviour?

Topographical Model of Mind: regions/areas of mind

conscious: part of mind holding what you are now aware of

preconscious: ordinary memory→ easily brought to awareness (memories, dreams)

not presently thinking but easily retrieved and made conscious

unconscious: not directly accessible to awareness

 source of desires, urges, feelings and tied to anxiety, conflict, pain

unacceptable information hidden from conscious view

troubling and distasteful → aware→ anxious

control urges→ keep from entering conscious awareness

motivated unconscious: life on own→ other parts unaware

o dynamic→ produce behavior, thoughts, feelings

→ Anna O → client with hysteria

o traumatic experiences caused physical symptoms
o trauma, desires and urges from the unconscious affect our conscious behaviour




conscious and preconscious: Material can easily pass back and forth

conscious and preconscious to unconscious: Move to unconscious, once in unconscious →
person prevented from having conscious access

, Mental gate prevents retrieval
o mental gate blocks the unconscious memories, urges, desires from moving to
the preconscious/conscious

Delay of Gratification:

o impulses and urges at a later time→ mature personality and socialization

→ experiment children and reward

factors:

o objet in front of sight→ harder
o transform object mentally ( image in head)
o distraction→ ego tricks by getting involved in something else
o Personality: higher value achievement and social responsibility→ better delay
o boys: ability to control emotional impulses, concentrate→ ego-function
(control ID expression)
o girls: intelligence, resourcefulness, competence→ recognize delay as sit.
appropriate response

What 3 factors are shaping our identity? (ego, superego, ID)

The Structural Model:

**ID:**original component of personality ( present at birth)

o instinctive, primitive aspects, original
o part that wants
o psychological nature of infant
o needs pleasure and gratification
o impulses, instinct, desires
o entirely unconscious → engine of personality→ source energy

pleasure principle: all needs satisfied immediately

o release tension immediately
o unsatisfied→ aversive tensions state

primary process:

o forming an unconscious mental image of desired object/event necessary to
release tension

wish fulfillment: creation of unconscious image of desired object

o mental image if it contains an object

EGO: express IDs impulses effectively → exectuive role personality

, o functions unconscious
o rational part fo personality
o dealing pragmatically with reality
o restraints we learn (danger to grab too fast)
 wants to satisfy the Id, in a safe manner
 rationalized
o ego considers the reality
o ego develops strategies to release tension
o mediated desires and constraint extrenal
o developed in first 2-3 years of life
o level: unconscious, pre-conscious, conscious

reality principle: external reality with internal needs and urges

o delay discharge until appropriate object found
o actions must take into account constraints of external reality

secondary process: match image to real object→ seek to satisfy desire ID

o matching the object of the primary process and comparing it to the reality
object

reality testing: test mentally and realistic

o reality testing: delays the tension release through calculation of the possible
outcomes (whether it is viable)

egos checking to see whether the plan will work before it is put into action

Ego strength: deal effectively with competing demands

o superego too strong→ guilt
o ID too strong-Y obsessed with self-gratification and uninterested in others

:

SUPEREGO:

o parental and societal values
o abstract rules to be part of society
o seek moral perfection
o morals
o rules
 goes against the Id
o developed around the 5th year of life
 developed through following parent’s morals and values
o level: unconscious, pre-conscious, conscious

introjection: avoid pain→ avoid parents wrong and do their right

, o absorbing values of parents into superego

ego ideal: rules for good behavior → strive for

represents perfection and rewards for good behavior

o strong superego = ego is unable to balance Id and superego

conscience: disapprove/punish for behavior→ avoid→ feelings of guilt

punishes violation of moral standards

o tries to prevent any ID impulses disapproved by parents
o force ego to act morally and not rationally
o guide to perfection ( removed reality→ civilizing)




The Drives of Personality:

psychic energy: motivate all human activity

amount of psychic energy individual possessed and remains constant over lifetime

drive: biological need and psychological representation

hydraulic model: drive state built until action causes their tension to be released

Eros: survival, reproduction, pleasure (life/sexual instincts)

Libido: collective energy life instincts ( hunger, pain, avoidance, sex)

o energy arising physiological process
o self-preservation instincts → need to reproduce
o self-preservation (eros) & sexual instinct (libido)
o need-satisfying, life sustaining, pleasure oriented urge
o sexual instinct → pleasure, basic needs, finite energy

Thanatos: death instincts:

apoptosis: death is the ultimate goal for parts of body→ biologically programmed
cell death

o agression→ self-destructive urges
o destroy, harm
o can be released through aggression

Catharsis:

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