Deck 7: Gordon Allport: Motivation and Personality

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Question
Allport viewed personality as

A) a purely mental process.
B) randomly changing and growing.
C) an interaction of mind and body.
D) controlled entirely by instincts.
Use Space or
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Question
Allport believed that the best way to study personality was through

A) the life histories of disturbed people.
B) comparisons of normal and neurotic adults.
C) normal and healthy adults.
D) laboratory experiments on animals and humans.
Question
For Allport,heredity provides the personality with

A) raw materials (such as physique, intelligence, and temperament).
B) social success.
C) nothing.
D) environmental success.
Question
According to Allport,our uniqueness is determined by

A) childhood experiences.
B) aspirations for the future.
C) conflict between the id and the superego.
D) genetics and learning.
Question
Allport emphasized the importance of the

A) present and the future.
B) future alone.
C) present alone.
D) past childhood conflicts alone.
Question
Allport was the first psychologist to

A) study emotionally disturbed patients.
B) exclusively use case studies for a theory of personality.
C) study personality by observing emotionally healthy people in a laboratory setting.
D) accept ego dysfunction as in the study of psychoanalytic theory.
Question
Allport's view of personality emphasized

A) that a person has predispositions to respond to the same or different stimuli.
B) both heredity and environment.
C) traits.
D) all the answers.
Question
With regard to historical determinism,Allport believed a person is

A) motivated by the power of the unconscious.
B) not in control of the many forces that motivate them.
C) pathological by nature and genetics.
D) not a prisoner of childhood conflicts and past experiences.
Question
Allport disagreed with Freud about

A) the dominance of unconscious forces.
B) the role of the past in controlling the present.
C) the continuity between normal and abnormal behavior.
D) all of the above.
Question
As Allport grew into adulthood,he attempted to identify with

A) Sigmund Freud, whom he met in Vienna.
B) Karen Horney, with whom he studied in New York.
C) his older brother Floyd, a social psychologist.
D) his uncle Steven, a famous artist.
Question
As a child,Allport was

A) plagued by feelings of inferiority.
B) an example of a disturbed person.
C) popular outside his family.
D) affected by an early life of smoking and drinking.
Question
Allport's approach to personality is characterized by the

A) conscious rather than the unconscious.
B) past rather than present and future.
C) abnormal rather than normal.
D) generalities in the person rather than their uniqueness.
Question
Allport believed his famous meeting with Freud illustrated

A) how childhood feelings of inferiority persist into adulthood.
B) the error of placing too much importance on the unconscious.
C) the power of Freud's psychoanalytic method.
D) how a guilty conscience inevitably will reveal itself.
Question
Allport's own childhood was characterized by

A) a rejecting mother.
B) feelings of isolation and rejection.
C) his punitive and demanding father.
D) many playmates and friends.
Question
What did Allport believe was the biggest difference between normal and abnormal people?

A) The abnormal person functions at an infantile level.
B) The study of the abnormal person is more important.
C) Personality, in general, is not specific or particular to the individual.
D) There are no differences between normal and abnormal people.
Question
Allport believed the unconscious is actually

A) a need.
B) a trait.
C) the dominant force in personality.
D) important only in neurotic or disturbed behavior.
Question
The building blocks of Allport's theory are

A) anxieties.
B) unconscious motivations.
C) personality traits.
D) complexes.
Question
Allport saw adulthood as

A) functionally similar to childhood.
B) ruled by different reflexes than childhood.
C) characterized by a stronger ego than childhood.
D) unconstrained by childhood experiences.
Question
Allport believed that the existence of personality traits can be

A) demonstrated empirically.
B) inferred at best.
C) proven by brain scans.
D) taken on faith.
Question
According to Allport,personality traits are

A) useful fictions we create to understand ourselves.
B) real and exist within each of us.
C) essentially just a theoretical concept.
D) inborn instincts.
Question
Central traits are

A) 5 to 10 themes that best describe our behavior.
B) exhibited only by mature adults.
C) more pervasive than cardinal traits.
D) possessed by only a few superior persons.
Question
Allport relabeled common traits to avoid confusion in terminology.Common traits are also called

A) individual traits.
B) ego perception.
C) learned responses.
D) habits.
Question
Addictions and repetitive actions are examples of what Allport calls

A) propriate functional autonomy.
B) perseverative functional autonomy.
C) perseverative striving.
D) propriate patterning.
Question
In Allport's theory,central traits

A) best describe a person's behavior.
B) are very broad and touch every aspect of a person's life.
C) are powerful forces that dominate a person's behavior.
D) are not very evident or observable by others.
Question
The only examples of functionally autonomous behavior below are

A) reflexes.
B) fixations.
C) neuroses.
D) learned skills.
Question
Propriate motives are

A) too simple to be considered part of the human personality.
B) genetically determined.
C) general for all individuals.
D) necessary to the ego.
Question
The key to understanding present behavior is our

A) conscious plans and intentions.
B) order of birth.
C) perseverative functional autonomy.
D) childhood experience.
Question
Allport cited the example of a well-fed rat continuing to run a maze for food as evidence for

A) propriate functional autonomy.
B) habit.
C) propriate striving.
D) perseverative functional autonomy.
Question
Traits are

A) shared and mostly the same for each person in a family.
B) the same as ego dispositions.
C) the same as personal dispositions.
D) of the same intensity and significance throughout the life span.
Question
Allport's concept of functional autonomy proposes that

A) the motives of healthy adults owe more to the present or future than the past.
B) healthy adults are independent of psychological forces.
C) the goal of adulthood is to become free from traits.
D) every person will be conflicted with the past in their present and future.
Question
Allport chose the term proprium for the

A) master trait that guides life.
B) unconscious forces that motivate behavior.
C) ego or self.
D) superego or conscience.
Question
According to Allport,secondary traits

A) are minor preferences, such as preferring a particular type of food.
B) are so minor that a close friend would not notice them.
C) are much less consistent than other traits.
D) all of the answers
Question
All of the following are principles of propriate functional autonomy except

A) organizing the energy level.
B) mastery and competence.
C) expressive behavior.
D) propriate patterning.
Question
The most pervasive and influential trait,operating like a ruling passion,is the

A) personal disposition.
B) cardinal trait.
C) central trait.
D) secondary trait.
Question
According to Allport,we acquire new motives through

A) organizing the energy level.
B) resolving an underlying conflict.
C) helping the ego control the id.
D) examining our undesirable motives.
Question
The type of trait that influences every aspect of life is called a ____ trait.

A) central
B) cardinal
C) primary
D) dominant
Question
Allport believed that to understand adult motives we must study

A) childhood behavior.
B) parent/child relationships.
C) why people behave as they do at present.
D) childhood needs and frustrations.
Question
Functional autonomy is concerned with

A) adult motivation.
B) motives that derive from instincts.
C) the impact of childhood motives.
D) the free functioning of the self.
Question
Allport believed that present and future behavior can best be explained in terms of

A) functional autonomy.
B) psychosexual conflicts.
C) past behavior.
D) instinctual drives.
Question
In Allport's theory,past events are

A) important, because they continue to dominate behavior.
B) unimportant, because they are no longer active.
C) at the core of motivation.
D) second in importance to instincts.
Question
Allport took a __________ stance on the question of free will versus determinism.

A) extreme.
B) fatalistic.
C) moderate.
D) radical.
Question
One unusual assessment technique used by Allport was

A) self-appraisal.
B) conduct sampling.
C) the personal-document approach.
D) dream analysis.
Question
The word that best captures Allport's image of human nature is

A) becoming.
B) striving.
C) failing.
D) irrational.
Question
The development of the proprium is completed in

A) infancy.
B) adolescence.
C) middle age.
D) old age.
Question
The parts of personality included in the proprium are

A) developed gradually over four stages.
B) unique to the individual.
C) determined by instinctual forces.
D) restricted to unconscious factors.
Question
Allport's personal-document approach involves the use of

A) dream analysis.
B) a person's written or spoken records to determine the number and kinds of personality traits.
C) free association.
D) intelligence tests.
Question
All of the following are criteria for a mature,emotionally healthy personality except

A) traits.
B) extension of the sense of self.
C) self-objectification.
D) a unifying philosophy of life.
Question
Computer analysis of the letters from Jenny

A) failed to verify Allport's subjective assessment of traits.
B) yielded valid and comparable results to indicate Allport's eight prominent traits.
C) yielded more than 200 traits, not just eight traits.
D) proved irrelevant to Allport's initial assessment for his list of traits.
Question
When the needs for affection and security are met in infancy,

A) the proprium develops.
B) motives become functionally autonomous.
C) unique traits develop.
D) all of the answers
Question
Allport's image of human nature

A) has much in common with Fromm's.
B) is that a necessary goal of life is a need to increase tension.
C) is deterministic, allowing little free will.
D) denies that heredity affects personality.
Question
Allport believed that infants

A) develop in a series of definite steps.
B) do not have the capacity to reduce tension.
C) have little "personality."
D) have functionally autonomous motives.
Question
Allport and two colleagues developed an objective self-report assessment test called the

A) Study of Values.
B) Study of Traits.
C) Thematic Apperception Test.
D) Rorschach Inkblot Test.
Question
The final stage in the development of the proprium is

A) reached in adulthood.
B) accomplished when young people begin to formulate long-range goals and plans.
C) reached before the age of five.
D) coping with parental expectations.
Question
Allport's seven stages of propriate development are

A) similar to Freud's five psychosexual stages.
B) similar to Erikson's eight psychosocial stages.
C) similar to Horney's theories.
D) unique in their emphasis on the development of the rational individual.
Question
Allport believed that the emotionally healthy adult is

A) no longer dominated or determined by childhood drives.
B) guided primarily by unconscious forces.
C) functionally related to childhood experiences.
D) functionally autonomous of common traits.
Question
Allport believed the best way to obtain reliable information on adult personality is through

A) correlational approaches.
B) laboratory experiments.
C) asking people to describe themselves.
D) projective techniques.
Question
In the developmental stage called extension of self,the child

A) becomes aware and distinguishes their bodies from objects in their environment.
B) comes to recognize the objects and people that are part of their world.
C) realizes he or she is the same person despite rapid growth.
D) learns to take pride in their accomplishments.
Question
In the developmental stage Allport called ____,children realize their identity remains intact despite the many changes that are taking place.

A) self-esteem
B) extension of self
C) self-identity
D) self-image
Question
Allport's concept of adulthood differed from previous views in picturing us as

A) doomed to struggle endlessly with unconscious conflicts.
B) not prisoners of childhood.
C) locked into the traits we developed in childhood.
D) more irrational than rational in most of our behavior.
Question
According to Allport,life's ultimate and necessary goal is to

A) reduce tension.
B) fuse unique and common traits into personal dispositions.
C) maintain an optimal level of tension.
D) resolve childhood conflicts.
Question
Allport formulated a theory of personality development in which

A) reflecting on childhood trauma is crucial for the functioning of the normal, emotionally healthy adult.
B) generalizing from one person to another is critical in the study of the normal, emotionally healthy adult.
C) considerable knowledge has been gained about the functioning of the normal, emotionally healthy adult.
D) studying habits in childhood are crucial in the development of the normal, emotionally healthy adult.
Question
To Allport,our genetic inheritance,which is the basis of our eventual personality,does exist in infancy,but there is little of what could be called "personality."
Question
Allport's conception of functional autonomy and independence holds that emotionally healthy adults are not tied or driven by childhood motives or conflicts.
Question
Central traits are so pervasive and influential that they touch almost every aspect of a person's life.
Question
Allport's approach is reflected in the work of the humanistic psychologists

A) Sigmund Freud and Carl Jung.
B) Carl Rogers and Abraham Maslow.
C) John B. Watson and B. F. Skinner.
D) Karen Horney and Erik Erikson.
Question
Allport believed psychoanalysis probed too deeply into the unconscious and more attention needs to be focused to conscious or visible motivations.
Question
Secondary traits are Allport's concepts in which he gave examples of behaviors,such as aggression,self-pity and cynicism.
Question
In Allport's view,the healthy personality changes from being a biologically dominated organism in infancy,to a mature psychological organism in adulthood.
Question
The word propriate derives from proprium,which is Allport's term for the ego or self.
Question
Allport's research methods focused on

A) emotionally disturbed persons.
B) the normal healthy individual.
C) childhood events.
D) the average performance of small groups.
Question
Common traits are shared by a number of people,such as the members of a culture.
Question
Our instincts,according to Allport,include those aspects of our personality that are distinctive and which unite our attitudes,perceptions,and intentions.
Question
Compared to coping behavior,expressive behavior is

A) more oriented toward a specific purpose.
B) easier to change.
C) a better reflection of the personality.
D) more directed toward environmental change.
Question
Allport's theory has become more popular today because

A) expressive behaviors have been linked to specific traits.
B) this theory focuses on healthy adults rather than abnormal functioning.
C) facial expressions, vocal inflections, and mannerisms reveal personality traits to the trained observer.
D) all of the answers
Question
Allport believed that personality is often revealed indirectly through

A) dreams.
B) slips of the tongue.
C) coping behavior.
D) expressive behavior.
Question
According to Allport,some behaviors such as reflexes,fixations,neuroses,and behaviors arising from biological drives can be explained by the principles of functional autonomy.
Question
Not everyone has a ruling passion,which Allport describes as a cardinal trait.
Question
According to Allport,traits are inconsistent and transient ways of reacting to our genetic heritage.
Question
Allport's idiographic approach was the study of

A) the past.
B) the unconscious forces that shape personality as adults.
C) childhood influences as they relate to adulthood.
D) the individual case.
Question
Perseverative functional autonomy is concerned with behaviors such as addictions,as well as repetitive physical actions (like habitual ways of performing some everyday task).
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Deck 7: Gordon Allport: Motivation and Personality
1
Allport viewed personality as

A) a purely mental process.
B) randomly changing and growing.
C) an interaction of mind and body.
D) controlled entirely by instincts.
C
2
Allport believed that the best way to study personality was through

A) the life histories of disturbed people.
B) comparisons of normal and neurotic adults.
C) normal and healthy adults.
D) laboratory experiments on animals and humans.
C
3
For Allport,heredity provides the personality with

A) raw materials (such as physique, intelligence, and temperament).
B) social success.
C) nothing.
D) environmental success.
A
4
According to Allport,our uniqueness is determined by

A) childhood experiences.
B) aspirations for the future.
C) conflict between the id and the superego.
D) genetics and learning.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 87 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
5
Allport emphasized the importance of the

A) present and the future.
B) future alone.
C) present alone.
D) past childhood conflicts alone.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 87 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
6
Allport was the first psychologist to

A) study emotionally disturbed patients.
B) exclusively use case studies for a theory of personality.
C) study personality by observing emotionally healthy people in a laboratory setting.
D) accept ego dysfunction as in the study of psychoanalytic theory.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 87 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
7
Allport's view of personality emphasized

A) that a person has predispositions to respond to the same or different stimuli.
B) both heredity and environment.
C) traits.
D) all the answers.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 87 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
8
With regard to historical determinism,Allport believed a person is

A) motivated by the power of the unconscious.
B) not in control of the many forces that motivate them.
C) pathological by nature and genetics.
D) not a prisoner of childhood conflicts and past experiences.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 87 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
9
Allport disagreed with Freud about

A) the dominance of unconscious forces.
B) the role of the past in controlling the present.
C) the continuity between normal and abnormal behavior.
D) all of the above.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 87 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
10
As Allport grew into adulthood,he attempted to identify with

A) Sigmund Freud, whom he met in Vienna.
B) Karen Horney, with whom he studied in New York.
C) his older brother Floyd, a social psychologist.
D) his uncle Steven, a famous artist.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 87 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
11
As a child,Allport was

A) plagued by feelings of inferiority.
B) an example of a disturbed person.
C) popular outside his family.
D) affected by an early life of smoking and drinking.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 87 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
12
Allport's approach to personality is characterized by the

A) conscious rather than the unconscious.
B) past rather than present and future.
C) abnormal rather than normal.
D) generalities in the person rather than their uniqueness.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 87 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
13
Allport believed his famous meeting with Freud illustrated

A) how childhood feelings of inferiority persist into adulthood.
B) the error of placing too much importance on the unconscious.
C) the power of Freud's psychoanalytic method.
D) how a guilty conscience inevitably will reveal itself.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 87 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
14
Allport's own childhood was characterized by

A) a rejecting mother.
B) feelings of isolation and rejection.
C) his punitive and demanding father.
D) many playmates and friends.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 87 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
15
What did Allport believe was the biggest difference between normal and abnormal people?

A) The abnormal person functions at an infantile level.
B) The study of the abnormal person is more important.
C) Personality, in general, is not specific or particular to the individual.
D) There are no differences between normal and abnormal people.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 87 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
16
Allport believed the unconscious is actually

A) a need.
B) a trait.
C) the dominant force in personality.
D) important only in neurotic or disturbed behavior.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 87 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
17
The building blocks of Allport's theory are

A) anxieties.
B) unconscious motivations.
C) personality traits.
D) complexes.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 87 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
18
Allport saw adulthood as

A) functionally similar to childhood.
B) ruled by different reflexes than childhood.
C) characterized by a stronger ego than childhood.
D) unconstrained by childhood experiences.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 87 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
19
Allport believed that the existence of personality traits can be

A) demonstrated empirically.
B) inferred at best.
C) proven by brain scans.
D) taken on faith.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 87 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
20
According to Allport,personality traits are

A) useful fictions we create to understand ourselves.
B) real and exist within each of us.
C) essentially just a theoretical concept.
D) inborn instincts.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 87 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
21
Central traits are

A) 5 to 10 themes that best describe our behavior.
B) exhibited only by mature adults.
C) more pervasive than cardinal traits.
D) possessed by only a few superior persons.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 87 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
22
Allport relabeled common traits to avoid confusion in terminology.Common traits are also called

A) individual traits.
B) ego perception.
C) learned responses.
D) habits.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 87 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
23
Addictions and repetitive actions are examples of what Allport calls

A) propriate functional autonomy.
B) perseverative functional autonomy.
C) perseverative striving.
D) propriate patterning.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 87 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
24
In Allport's theory,central traits

A) best describe a person's behavior.
B) are very broad and touch every aspect of a person's life.
C) are powerful forces that dominate a person's behavior.
D) are not very evident or observable by others.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 87 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
25
The only examples of functionally autonomous behavior below are

A) reflexes.
B) fixations.
C) neuroses.
D) learned skills.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 87 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
26
Propriate motives are

A) too simple to be considered part of the human personality.
B) genetically determined.
C) general for all individuals.
D) necessary to the ego.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 87 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
27
The key to understanding present behavior is our

A) conscious plans and intentions.
B) order of birth.
C) perseverative functional autonomy.
D) childhood experience.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 87 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
28
Allport cited the example of a well-fed rat continuing to run a maze for food as evidence for

A) propriate functional autonomy.
B) habit.
C) propriate striving.
D) perseverative functional autonomy.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 87 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
29
Traits are

A) shared and mostly the same for each person in a family.
B) the same as ego dispositions.
C) the same as personal dispositions.
D) of the same intensity and significance throughout the life span.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 87 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
30
Allport's concept of functional autonomy proposes that

A) the motives of healthy adults owe more to the present or future than the past.
B) healthy adults are independent of psychological forces.
C) the goal of adulthood is to become free from traits.
D) every person will be conflicted with the past in their present and future.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 87 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
31
Allport chose the term proprium for the

A) master trait that guides life.
B) unconscious forces that motivate behavior.
C) ego or self.
D) superego or conscience.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 87 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
32
According to Allport,secondary traits

A) are minor preferences, such as preferring a particular type of food.
B) are so minor that a close friend would not notice them.
C) are much less consistent than other traits.
D) all of the answers
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 87 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
33
All of the following are principles of propriate functional autonomy except

A) organizing the energy level.
B) mastery and competence.
C) expressive behavior.
D) propriate patterning.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 87 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
34
The most pervasive and influential trait,operating like a ruling passion,is the

A) personal disposition.
B) cardinal trait.
C) central trait.
D) secondary trait.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 87 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
35
According to Allport,we acquire new motives through

A) organizing the energy level.
B) resolving an underlying conflict.
C) helping the ego control the id.
D) examining our undesirable motives.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 87 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
36
The type of trait that influences every aspect of life is called a ____ trait.

A) central
B) cardinal
C) primary
D) dominant
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 87 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
37
Allport believed that to understand adult motives we must study

A) childhood behavior.
B) parent/child relationships.
C) why people behave as they do at present.
D) childhood needs and frustrations.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 87 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
38
Functional autonomy is concerned with

A) adult motivation.
B) motives that derive from instincts.
C) the impact of childhood motives.
D) the free functioning of the self.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 87 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
39
Allport believed that present and future behavior can best be explained in terms of

A) functional autonomy.
B) psychosexual conflicts.
C) past behavior.
D) instinctual drives.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 87 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
40
In Allport's theory,past events are

A) important, because they continue to dominate behavior.
B) unimportant, because they are no longer active.
C) at the core of motivation.
D) second in importance to instincts.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 87 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
41
Allport took a __________ stance on the question of free will versus determinism.

A) extreme.
B) fatalistic.
C) moderate.
D) radical.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 87 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
42
One unusual assessment technique used by Allport was

A) self-appraisal.
B) conduct sampling.
C) the personal-document approach.
D) dream analysis.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 87 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
43
The word that best captures Allport's image of human nature is

A) becoming.
B) striving.
C) failing.
D) irrational.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 87 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
44
The development of the proprium is completed in

A) infancy.
B) adolescence.
C) middle age.
D) old age.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 87 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
45
The parts of personality included in the proprium are

A) developed gradually over four stages.
B) unique to the individual.
C) determined by instinctual forces.
D) restricted to unconscious factors.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 87 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
46
Allport's personal-document approach involves the use of

A) dream analysis.
B) a person's written or spoken records to determine the number and kinds of personality traits.
C) free association.
D) intelligence tests.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 87 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
47
All of the following are criteria for a mature,emotionally healthy personality except

A) traits.
B) extension of the sense of self.
C) self-objectification.
D) a unifying philosophy of life.
Unlock Deck
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48
Computer analysis of the letters from Jenny

A) failed to verify Allport's subjective assessment of traits.
B) yielded valid and comparable results to indicate Allport's eight prominent traits.
C) yielded more than 200 traits, not just eight traits.
D) proved irrelevant to Allport's initial assessment for his list of traits.
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49
When the needs for affection and security are met in infancy,

A) the proprium develops.
B) motives become functionally autonomous.
C) unique traits develop.
D) all of the answers
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50
Allport's image of human nature

A) has much in common with Fromm's.
B) is that a necessary goal of life is a need to increase tension.
C) is deterministic, allowing little free will.
D) denies that heredity affects personality.
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51
Allport believed that infants

A) develop in a series of definite steps.
B) do not have the capacity to reduce tension.
C) have little "personality."
D) have functionally autonomous motives.
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52
Allport and two colleagues developed an objective self-report assessment test called the

A) Study of Values.
B) Study of Traits.
C) Thematic Apperception Test.
D) Rorschach Inkblot Test.
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53
The final stage in the development of the proprium is

A) reached in adulthood.
B) accomplished when young people begin to formulate long-range goals and plans.
C) reached before the age of five.
D) coping with parental expectations.
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54
Allport's seven stages of propriate development are

A) similar to Freud's five psychosexual stages.
B) similar to Erikson's eight psychosocial stages.
C) similar to Horney's theories.
D) unique in their emphasis on the development of the rational individual.
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55
Allport believed that the emotionally healthy adult is

A) no longer dominated or determined by childhood drives.
B) guided primarily by unconscious forces.
C) functionally related to childhood experiences.
D) functionally autonomous of common traits.
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56
Allport believed the best way to obtain reliable information on adult personality is through

A) correlational approaches.
B) laboratory experiments.
C) asking people to describe themselves.
D) projective techniques.
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57
In the developmental stage called extension of self,the child

A) becomes aware and distinguishes their bodies from objects in their environment.
B) comes to recognize the objects and people that are part of their world.
C) realizes he or she is the same person despite rapid growth.
D) learns to take pride in their accomplishments.
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58
In the developmental stage Allport called ____,children realize their identity remains intact despite the many changes that are taking place.

A) self-esteem
B) extension of self
C) self-identity
D) self-image
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59
Allport's concept of adulthood differed from previous views in picturing us as

A) doomed to struggle endlessly with unconscious conflicts.
B) not prisoners of childhood.
C) locked into the traits we developed in childhood.
D) more irrational than rational in most of our behavior.
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60
According to Allport,life's ultimate and necessary goal is to

A) reduce tension.
B) fuse unique and common traits into personal dispositions.
C) maintain an optimal level of tension.
D) resolve childhood conflicts.
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61
Allport formulated a theory of personality development in which

A) reflecting on childhood trauma is crucial for the functioning of the normal, emotionally healthy adult.
B) generalizing from one person to another is critical in the study of the normal, emotionally healthy adult.
C) considerable knowledge has been gained about the functioning of the normal, emotionally healthy adult.
D) studying habits in childhood are crucial in the development of the normal, emotionally healthy adult.
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62
To Allport,our genetic inheritance,which is the basis of our eventual personality,does exist in infancy,but there is little of what could be called "personality."
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63
Allport's conception of functional autonomy and independence holds that emotionally healthy adults are not tied or driven by childhood motives or conflicts.
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64
Central traits are so pervasive and influential that they touch almost every aspect of a person's life.
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65
Allport's approach is reflected in the work of the humanistic psychologists

A) Sigmund Freud and Carl Jung.
B) Carl Rogers and Abraham Maslow.
C) John B. Watson and B. F. Skinner.
D) Karen Horney and Erik Erikson.
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66
Allport believed psychoanalysis probed too deeply into the unconscious and more attention needs to be focused to conscious or visible motivations.
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67
Secondary traits are Allport's concepts in which he gave examples of behaviors,such as aggression,self-pity and cynicism.
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68
In Allport's view,the healthy personality changes from being a biologically dominated organism in infancy,to a mature psychological organism in adulthood.
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69
The word propriate derives from proprium,which is Allport's term for the ego or self.
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70
Allport's research methods focused on

A) emotionally disturbed persons.
B) the normal healthy individual.
C) childhood events.
D) the average performance of small groups.
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71
Common traits are shared by a number of people,such as the members of a culture.
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72
Our instincts,according to Allport,include those aspects of our personality that are distinctive and which unite our attitudes,perceptions,and intentions.
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73
Compared to coping behavior,expressive behavior is

A) more oriented toward a specific purpose.
B) easier to change.
C) a better reflection of the personality.
D) more directed toward environmental change.
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74
Allport's theory has become more popular today because

A) expressive behaviors have been linked to specific traits.
B) this theory focuses on healthy adults rather than abnormal functioning.
C) facial expressions, vocal inflections, and mannerisms reveal personality traits to the trained observer.
D) all of the answers
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75
Allport believed that personality is often revealed indirectly through

A) dreams.
B) slips of the tongue.
C) coping behavior.
D) expressive behavior.
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76
According to Allport,some behaviors such as reflexes,fixations,neuroses,and behaviors arising from biological drives can be explained by the principles of functional autonomy.
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77
Not everyone has a ruling passion,which Allport describes as a cardinal trait.
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78
According to Allport,traits are inconsistent and transient ways of reacting to our genetic heritage.
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79
Allport's idiographic approach was the study of

A) the past.
B) the unconscious forces that shape personality as adults.
C) childhood influences as they relate to adulthood.
D) the individual case.
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80
Perseverative functional autonomy is concerned with behaviors such as addictions,as well as repetitive physical actions (like habitual ways of performing some everyday task).
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