Chapter 7 - Personality Development and Change
Chapter 7 - Personality Development and Change
Chapter 7 - Personality Development and Change
Personality Stability
Rank Order Consistency – Someone who is high In a particular trait relative to others is
likely to maintain this distinction from others consistently across the lifespan despite
fluctuations.
!0 years apart personality trait scores r = .60 and r = .90 (Hopwood et al, 2013)
“Adaptive” and “impulsive” elementary school children maintained these traits into
adulthood (Nave, Sherman &Funder, 2010)
Survivors of disasters maintain core personality traits (Milojev, Osbourn & Sibley, 2004)
More “inhibited” children slower to find love and job (Asendorpf, Denissen & Van Akker et
al, 2013) Reverse true for high in mastery, agreeableness (Shiner, Masten & Roberts, 2003)
Personality Disorders are stable (less than traits), therapy no difference (Ferguson, 2010;
Hopwood, 2013)
Causes of stability
Temperament – The personality one begins with – determined in some part by genes – can
direct later behavioural and emotional tendencies.
Heterotypic Continuity – Effects of tendancies change with age (Aggressive child no longer
kicks as adult but gets into shouting matches (Caspi & Roberts, 1999)
Biological factors beyond your control coupled with social environmental and contextual
factors will influence personality, bio factors and reactions to them stay constant (height,
attractiveness etc)
Birth Order
Firstborn – more attention – identifies with parents values – becomes “assistant parent”
(Sulloway, 2000) – Establishment, ambitious traditional
Lateborn – Search for untaken role/ niche in family - independent, open minded, rebellious
Firstborn more conscientious than second born, second born higher in openness (healy &
ellis, 2007) Lateborn higher in extroversion, openness and agreeableness (Sulloway, 2010)
Small correlations
Early Experience
Childhood rejection by parents -> adult relationship difficulties (Khaleque & Rohner, 2012)
Childhood stress -> lifelong chronic inflammation -> frailty, fatigue, ill health (Fagundes
&Way, 2014) -> long tern tendancy -> stronger emotional reactions to ordinary daily stress
(glaser et al, 2006)
Too little stress also an issue -> Unprepared for life (Ellis & Thomas, 2008)
Person-Environment transactions
People respond to, seek out and create environments compatible with and magnifying of
their personality traits.
Active – Person seeks compatible & avoids incompatible (aggressive bar fighter, goes to
aggressive bars)
Reactive – Different people reacti differently to same env (Extrovert -> party good, Introvert
-> party Bad)
Most people think they won’t change, research says we develop through the lifespan.
Personality Development
Mean Level Change – Change in a trait cross the lifespan (eg increasing in agreeableness
with age) = personality development
People at different ages surveyed simultaneously. Different mean levels of Big Five
throughout life.
Old = less impulsive, active, antagonistic, and open (Chan et al, 2012)
Cohort Effects
Longitudinal Studies
People become more social dominant, agreeable, conscientious and emotionally stable over
time (Roberts et al , 2006)
Ego development – Deal well with social/physical world – think for ones self moraly,
increased notable between 43 -61.
Maturity Principle – The traits needed to perform adult roles increase with age (Caspi et al,
2005) However, can decline later in life. But not always – highly motivated & conscientious
retirees keep working and keep living as a result.
Social roles at different life stages – Freud & Erikson “life-span development” Childhood –
skills, Adulthood – relationships, old age – overview and assessment of life.
Cultural differences in life stage timing - Some cultures have first job earlier = earlier
increase in conscientiousness.
Leads to feeling of approval and being ‘in sync’ with society and vice versa.
Agent: Goals and Values – Plan for future outcome that are important to you (career,
partner values)
Personality Change
1. Psychotherapy – leads to long term behaviour change. Combined with drugs like
Fluoxetine can increase extraversion and reduce anxiety/neuroticism.
2. General Interventions – Aimed at outcomes like completing education, lessening
criminal behaviour, and improving employment prospects. Expensive but
dramatically effective on life outcomes
3. Targeted Interventions -Specific traits targeted. Old men increased in openness
when this trait was intervened on. “self-affirmations” lead to lasting personality
changes. Anxiety reduction workshops in children reduced later neuroticism.
Narcissists can be taught empathy but don’t want to learn it. Self-control can be
taught and increase later conscientiousness,
4. Behaviours and life experiences – Exercise limits later decline and influences
stability positively. Drug behaviour – increases neuroticism. Unemployment
influences traits. Negative events increased neuroticism, but neuroticism also
increased negative events. Can happen at any stage of life. Working abroad
increased positive traits, raised self-esteem. Military builds conscientiousness etc.
Both.
Downside – If someone is unstable, they will be avoided and have worse life outcomes. They
will also have difficulty directing their own life. Radical change associated with poor mental
and physical health.