Summary of Chapter 14 of the The Individual Book (de Bruin, E., 1st Edition)

This is the Chapter 14 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 14:

Motives and Personality

Basic concepts:

  • Motive: internal state arouse direct behaviour towards specific object/goal
  • Needs: states of tension within a person
  • Deficit (not having eten today) --> need (for food) --> Motive (hunger) -->
  • Thoughts and fantasies
  • Behaviours intended to satisfy need
  • Intrapsychic domain: internal psychological needs/urges propel people to think, perceive and act in certain predictable ways, can be unconscious --> rely on projective techniques (fantasies, free associations, and responses to projective techniques that reveal unconscious motivation/feelings/behaviours)
  • Modern theory of motivation: Henry Murrey
  • Need: similar to drive, potentiality/readiness to respond in a certain way under given circumstances --> organize perception/action
  • Associated with:
  • Specific desire/intention
  • Particular set emotions
  • Specific action tendency
  • Need for affiliation: desire win/maintain associations with people
  • Hierarchy of needs: needs can be thought as existing at different levels/strengths --> interact with each other
  • Dynamic: mutual influence of forces within person
  • State levels: momentary amount of specific need, which can fluctuate among circumstances
  • Trait level: measuring person’s average tendency on specific trait --> determine differences between individuals in their average tendencies towards needs
  • Press: need-relevant aspects of environment
  • Alpha press: objective reality
  • Beta press: reality-as-it-is-perceived
  • Thematic apperception Test (TAT): black-white ambiguous images --> asked to describe and interpret what is going on
  • Apperception: act interpreting environment and perceiving meaning of what is going on in the situation
  • Multi-motive grid: form of assessing motives combines features of TAT with features of self-report questionnaires, assessed based 3 motives (achievement/power/intimacy)

Self-Determination theory:

  • Self-determination theory (SDT): framework aims combine results of all kinds motivation studies, focus internal/external motivational factors, how they affect social-cognitive development and personality
  • Humans natural tendency towards growth and making sense world/oneself, tendency fuelled by social interaction and support
  • Need to belong: evolutionary mechanism propels us towards meaningful social relations/affiliations
  • Basic need theory: mini theory within SDT, innate/universal needs make adequate developmental progress possible, leading to better performance, well-being and social adjustment
  • Autonomy: initiate actions by yourself, at free will, being able to regulate those actions
  • Competence: feeling effective/competent in interacting with environment and that you are able to optimally meet challenging situations. Capable produce desired outcomes
  • Relatedness: resembles need to belong. Feeling valued/connected to others, enabling you to receive/give support

The 3 big motives:

  • Need for achievement: desire to do better, to be successful and to feel competent
  • Independence training: parents behave in ways to promote autonomy/independence children --> children sense of mastery/confidence, promote need for achievement
  • Need for power: desire have impact on others --> energize/direct behaviour when person opportunity exert power
  • Power stress: when power is challenged, likely to show strong stress responses
  • Need for intimacy: preference/readiness for warm/close and communicative interaction with others, high in nInt:
  • Spent more time thinking about relationships
  • Report pleasant emotions when around people
  • Smile/laugh/make more eye contact
  • Start conversations frequently
  • When frustrated, associated with enhanced levels of envy/indirect aggression
  • Affects neural processing of emotional images/influences attention processes

Humanistic Tradition:

  • Humanistic tradition: emphasis conscious awareness needs/choice/personal responsibility
  • Motivation: based on need to grow (other traditions say it’s based on specific deficit/lack)
  • Maslow’s Hierarchy of Needs: needs defined by goals, basic needs found towards bottom hierarchy, self-actualization at the top
  1. Physiological needs: prime importance to immediate/long-term survival
  2. Safety needs: shelter/security --> being free from threat/danger
  • Lower needs must be satisfied before proceed higher needs
  1. Belongingness needs: need to belong to group (being accepted/welcomed by others) --> based theory of evolution
  2. Esteem needs: esteem from others/self-esteem
  3. Self-actualization: develop one’s potential, become person meant to be
  • Evaluation:
  • Theory based ideas/thoughts about motivation, not empirical research
  • Prove lower-level needs stronger than higher-level needs
  • Research shows no relationship between level of need and overall happiness
  • Flow: subjective state when completely involved in something to the point of forgetting time/fatigue and everything else but activity itself --> powerful motivation force, indication experiencing self-actualization
  • Carl Rogers: focused wats foster/attain self-actualization --> How does someone become fully functioning?
  • Fully functioning person: on the way towards self-actualization
  • Open to new experiences
  • Centred in present
  • Trust themselves/their judgments/feelings
  • Desire Positive regard: children inborn need to be loved/accepted by parents/others
  • Conditions of worth: requirements set by parents/significant others for earning their positive regard
  • Conditional positive regard: when positive regard must be earned by meeting certain conditions
  • When many conditions of worth --> live life effort to please others --> loose self-direction and no longer motivated towards self-actualization
  • Unconditional positive regard: positive regard with no strings attached
  • Children don’t engage in effort distort themselves for others --> able to become full functioning person
  • Anxiety (Rogers): result of having an experience that doesn’t fit one’s self-conception --> new experiences threat self-image, self-image associated with positive regard of parents/significant others in the past
  • Distortion: defence mechanism --> modify experience rather that their self-image in order to reduce the threat
  • Emotional intelligence: ability know one’s own emotions/regulate those emotions/motivate oneself/know how others feel/influence other’s feelings
  • Self-actualization tendency correlated with emotional intelligence (people get off path toward self-actualization because they are out of touch with their emotions)
  • Client-centred therapy: never give interpretation/direction action client’s problem, only offer right conditions enable client to change themselves
  • Core conditions for client-centred therapy
  • Genuine acceptance from therapist
  • Unconditional positive regard from therapist
  • Empathic understanding client
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