Summary of Chapter 13 of the The Individual Book (de Bruin, E., 1st Edition)

This is the Chapter 13 of the book The Individual (de Bruin, E., 1st Edition). Which is content for the exam of the Theory component of Module 4 (The Individual) of the University of Twente, in the Netherlands

 

Chapter 13:

Approaches to the Self

  • Components of the self: important in our day-to-day lives  --> helps understand how we perceive and act on the world surrounding us (influences our goals/methods to reach those goals)
  • Self-concept: cognitive-descriptive knowledge we have of ourselves --> whole of cognitive schemas/knowledge structures used as personal resource
  • Includes:
  • Perceptions/evaluations of persona qualities/abilities
  • Is a psychological need, cornerstone of personality
  • High levels of self-concept predicts subjective well-being, less social anxiety and engagement at school
  • Development:
  • Awareness one’s body: distinction own body/everything else
  • Mirror test: determines self-awareness (great apes/elephants/bottlenose dolphins/orcas/…)
  • Self-recognition important development --> achievement that allows child to go on to more complex manifestations of self-awareness (pretend play/representation self in language)
  • [2-3 years] Self first seen sex/age --> include reference to family
  • [3-12] Self-concept based developing talents/skills
  • Social comparison: evaluation oneself/one’s performance in terms of comparison with reference group
  • Private self-concept: “Mummy doesn’t know everything about me”
  1. Imaginary friend: attempt to communicate parents that they know there is secret part/inner part to their understanding of the self
  • [childhood – adolescence] self-concept based concrete characteristics (physical appearance/possessions) --> based more abstract psychological terms
  • Perspective taking: ability to take perspectives others/step outside oneself and imagine how one appears to other people (extreme self-consciousness during this time)
  • Objective self-awareness: seeing yourself as object of others attention
  • Self-esteem: how you feel about who you are
  • Development:
  • Sense of themselves relative to standards: good/bad behaviour evaluated against standards
  • Social identity: as you present yourself to others
  • Self-schema: cognitive representation of self-concept --> framework understanding past/present and guiding future behaviour
  • Self-schemata: network of associated building blocks of self-concept --> guide processing of info about self, particularly in social interaction
  • Possible selves: ideas influence person’s behaviour, to stay on schedule, to work towards self-improvement
  • Self-guides: standards used to organize info and motivate appropriate behaviour
  • Ought self: understanding of what others want them to be
  • Ideal self: what person wants to be --> built upon own desires/goals
  • Self-discrepancy: actual self doesn’t fir one’s ideal self
  • Bodily self: experience oneself as embodied agent with a first-person perspective --> product of permanently ongoing interaction bodily stimuli
  • Vestibular stimuli: originating inner ear, related to balance/spatial orientation
  • Proprioceptive stimuli: info about body position/velocity movement limbs
  • Visceral stimuli: originating from organs
  • Rubber Hand Illusion (RHI): rubber hand “feel” touch that eyes see --> shows self-concept/bodily self are related
  • Components bodily self:
  • Body ownership: experiencing owing body
  • Self-location: experience being body given location
  • Perspective: first-person experience environment

Evaluative component of the self:

  • Self-esteem development:
  1. Identify standards/expectations for behaviours, live up to them
  2. Self-esteem result of social comparison
  3. Develop internal standards
  • Rosenberg’s global self-esteem questionnaire: assesses person’s overall self-esteem --> evaluate how people react to criticism and negative feedback
  • How high/low self-esteem persons affected by criticism/personal failure?
  • Low self-esteem: perform poorly, give up earlier on subsequent tasks
  • Brain: ventral anterior cingulate cortex/medial prefrontal cortex, increased activity in response to positive social feedback
  • High self-esteem: failure feedback spurs them into action on subsequent tasks, less likely to give up
  • Accept feedback consistent with their self-concept
  • Coping with negative events:
  • Tough love: parents pushed children to socialize --> children less shy
  • Social anxiety: discomfort related to social interactions or anticipation social interactions
  • Genetics
  • Evaluation apprehension: learned, put too much value in other’s judgments of them
  • Amygdala: section limbic/emotional system brain, responsible for fear (more reactive in shy people)
  • Cortisol: stress hormone (shyness associated higher level of cortisol)
  • Protective/enhancing self:
  • Favourable construals: cognitive strategies construe world in positive/self-flattering ways
  • Self-affirming reflections: recall one’s own strength/growth in order to self-affirm
  • Positive embracement: seeking out positive feedback
  • Defensiveness: avoidance negative feedback
  • Mnemic neglect: selective forgetting of self-threatening info compared to the recall of self-affirming info
  • Defensive pessimism: when facing a challenge, expect to do poorly --> lessened impact of failure
  • Self-handicapping: process person deliberately does things to increase probability of failure
  • Self-esteem variability: magnitude of short-term fluctuations in ongoing self-esteem
  • Level of self-esteem: developmental changes over lifespan
  • Variability self-esteem: changes across relatively short period of time --> susceptibility to depression
  1. Stational factors
  2. Individual differences in self-esteem

Social identity:

  • Continuity: social identity remain relatively stable
  • Contrast: differentiates you from others
  • Personality coherence: perceived self as similar in various life domains (work/education/family/…)
  • Identity by Erik Erikson: result from efforts to separate oneself from one’s parents --> achieving identity takes effort and experimenting various identities
  • Role confusion: when identity achieved is undone
  • Identity crisis: feelings of anxiety that accompany efforts to define/redefine one’s own individuality and social reputation
  • Types:
  • Identity deficit: adequate identity not formed, thus trouble making major decisions, particularly vulnerable to propaganda of various groups (recruiters for cults, terroristic actions)
  • Identity conflict: incompatibility two/more aspects of identity
  • Approach-approach conflicts: person wants to reach two mutually contradicting goals --> put aside a part of one’s identity to strike balance
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