knowt logo

Theories of Personality: Cognitive/Social Learning Theories

Julian Rotter

Biography

  • Born in Brooklyn in 1916

  • In high school, he became familiar with the writings of Freud and Adler

  • In 1941, he received a PhD in Clinical Psychology from Indiana University

  • Published Social Learning and Clinical Psychology in 1954

  • Moved to the University of Connecticut in 1963 and has remained there since his retirement

Introduction to Rotter’s Social Learning Theory

  • Rests on 5 Hypotheses

    • Humans interact with their meaningful environments

    • Human personality is learned

    • Personality has a basic unity

    • Motivation is goal directed

    • People are capable of anticipating events

Predicting Specific Behavior

  • Behavior Potential

  • Expectancy

  • Reinforcement Value

    • Internal and external reinforcement

    • Reinforcement - reinforcement sequences

  • Psychological Situation

  • Basic Predicting Formula

BP = f (Ev + Rv)

Option

Possible Outcome

Expectancy

Value

Behavior Potential

Ask for an apology

apology

high

high

high

Insult back

laughter

low

high

average

Yell at insulter

Ugly scene

high

low

average

Leave the part

Feel foolish

average

low

low

Julian Rotter

  • Rotter is known for the concept of locus of control. Being inclined towards an internal locus of control is seen as more desirable than having a strong locus of external control

    • Result of their own behaviors and attributes (internal control)

    • Results of luck, fate, chance, or powerful others (external control)

  • Categories of Need: recognition-status, dominance, independence, protection-dependency, love and affection, and physical comfort

  • In studying behavior, Rotter considered reinforcement, the psychological situation, expectancies, need potential, freedom of movement, and need value

  • Rotter also studies interpersonal trust

  • Psychotherapy involves modifying goals and increasing expectancies

Walter Mischel

Biography

  • Born in Vienna in 1930

  • Second son of upper-middle-class parents

  • When the Nzis invaded Austria in 1938, his family left for the US

  • Received his PhD from Ohio State University in 1956, where he worked under Rotter

  • Published Personality and Assessment in 1968

  • Has taught at Colorado, Harvard, Stanford, and Columbia, where he remains as an active researcher

  • Mischel realized that the person and the situation interact with one another and that there is a consistency paradox

    • The observation that a human being’s personality tends to remain the same over time, while their behavior can change in different situations

Background of the Cognitive-Affective Personality System

  • The Cognitive-Affective Personality System recognizes people have a behavioral signature of personality

  • Person-Situation Interaction

    • Mischel believes that behavior is best predicted form an understanding of the person, the situation, and the interaction between person and situation

Cognitive Personality Variables

  • Elements between the stimulus and response

    • Constitute to individual differences in people

    • Referred as cognitive-affective units

  • Part of a complex system that links situations people encounter with their behavior

  • Individual differences in cognitive framework is due to difference in mental representation of people

  • Individuals differ in the manner they access stored information

    • People react to the same situation differently

Cognitive-Affective Personality System

  • Behavior Prediction

    • Individuals should behave differently as situations vary

  • Situation Variables

    • All those stimuli that people attend to in a given situation

  • Cognitive - Affective Units

    • Encoding strategies

    • Competencies and self-regulatory strategies

    • Expectancies and beliefs

    • Goals and values

    • Affective responses

Cognitive-Affective Units

  • Encoding: categories (constructs) for encoding information about one’s self, other people, events, and situations

  • Expectations and Beliefs: expectations for what will happen in certain situations, for outcomes for certain behaviors, and for one’s personal efficacy

  • Affects: feelings, emotions, and emotional responses

  • Goals and Values: individual goals and values, and life projects

  • Competencies and Self-Regulatory Plans: perceived abilities, plans, and strategies for changing and maintaining one’s behavior and internal states

S

Theories of Personality: Cognitive/Social Learning Theories

Julian Rotter

Biography

  • Born in Brooklyn in 1916

  • In high school, he became familiar with the writings of Freud and Adler

  • In 1941, he received a PhD in Clinical Psychology from Indiana University

  • Published Social Learning and Clinical Psychology in 1954

  • Moved to the University of Connecticut in 1963 and has remained there since his retirement

Introduction to Rotter’s Social Learning Theory

  • Rests on 5 Hypotheses

    • Humans interact with their meaningful environments

    • Human personality is learned

    • Personality has a basic unity

    • Motivation is goal directed

    • People are capable of anticipating events

Predicting Specific Behavior

  • Behavior Potential

  • Expectancy

  • Reinforcement Value

    • Internal and external reinforcement

    • Reinforcement - reinforcement sequences

  • Psychological Situation

  • Basic Predicting Formula

BP = f (Ev + Rv)

Option

Possible Outcome

Expectancy

Value

Behavior Potential

Ask for an apology

apology

high

high

high

Insult back

laughter

low

high

average

Yell at insulter

Ugly scene

high

low

average

Leave the part

Feel foolish

average

low

low

Julian Rotter

  • Rotter is known for the concept of locus of control. Being inclined towards an internal locus of control is seen as more desirable than having a strong locus of external control

    • Result of their own behaviors and attributes (internal control)

    • Results of luck, fate, chance, or powerful others (external control)

  • Categories of Need: recognition-status, dominance, independence, protection-dependency, love and affection, and physical comfort

  • In studying behavior, Rotter considered reinforcement, the psychological situation, expectancies, need potential, freedom of movement, and need value

  • Rotter also studies interpersonal trust

  • Psychotherapy involves modifying goals and increasing expectancies

Walter Mischel

Biography

  • Born in Vienna in 1930

  • Second son of upper-middle-class parents

  • When the Nzis invaded Austria in 1938, his family left for the US

  • Received his PhD from Ohio State University in 1956, where he worked under Rotter

  • Published Personality and Assessment in 1968

  • Has taught at Colorado, Harvard, Stanford, and Columbia, where he remains as an active researcher

  • Mischel realized that the person and the situation interact with one another and that there is a consistency paradox

    • The observation that a human being’s personality tends to remain the same over time, while their behavior can change in different situations

Background of the Cognitive-Affective Personality System

  • The Cognitive-Affective Personality System recognizes people have a behavioral signature of personality

  • Person-Situation Interaction

    • Mischel believes that behavior is best predicted form an understanding of the person, the situation, and the interaction between person and situation

Cognitive Personality Variables

  • Elements between the stimulus and response

    • Constitute to individual differences in people

    • Referred as cognitive-affective units

  • Part of a complex system that links situations people encounter with their behavior

  • Individual differences in cognitive framework is due to difference in mental representation of people

  • Individuals differ in the manner they access stored information

    • People react to the same situation differently

Cognitive-Affective Personality System

  • Behavior Prediction

    • Individuals should behave differently as situations vary

  • Situation Variables

    • All those stimuli that people attend to in a given situation

  • Cognitive - Affective Units

    • Encoding strategies

    • Competencies and self-regulatory strategies

    • Expectancies and beliefs

    • Goals and values

    • Affective responses

Cognitive-Affective Units

  • Encoding: categories (constructs) for encoding information about one’s self, other people, events, and situations

  • Expectations and Beliefs: expectations for what will happen in certain situations, for outcomes for certain behaviors, and for one’s personal efficacy

  • Affects: feelings, emotions, and emotional responses

  • Goals and Values: individual goals and values, and life projects

  • Competencies and Self-Regulatory Plans: perceived abilities, plans, and strategies for changing and maintaining one’s behavior and internal states