Examtests with Personality Psychology: Domains of Knowledge About Human Nature of Larsen and Buss - 2nd international edition
- What is personality? - ExamTests 1 (2)
- How can personality be measured? - ExamTests 2 (2)
- How can personality traits be described and classified? - ExamTests 3 (2)
- What theories are there about measuring personality? - ExamTests 4 (2)
- Does personality develop during different phases of life? - ExamTests 5 (2)
- More ExamTests - Chapter 6 to 20 (Exclusive for members with full online access)
What is personality? - ExamTests 1 (2)
Open questions
Question 1
Define the concept of personality.
Question 2
Which three parts consist of psychological mechanisms?
Question 3
Identify the three levels of personality analysis.
Question 4
Describe the nomothetic and idiographic research method.
Question 5
Which six research areas, from different angles, are aimed at gaining insight into the nature of man?
Question 6
Which three requirements are placed on personality theories?
MC questions
Question 1
What is the study of a single individual an example of?
Nomothetic research
Correlational research
Idiographic research
Cognitive psychological research
Question 2
Which of the following possibilities makes a typical statement about character?
I am big and strong
You can rely on me
I come up with solutions to problems
I respond quickly and energetically
Question 3
Psychological mechanisms differ from properties in that mechanisms:
Referring more to processes
Be less stable
No decision-making rules
All the above answers are correct
Question 4
The dispositional area assumes that change occurs
When the environment changes
By therapy
By the way properties are expressed
Because properties change
Question 5
Personality psychologists believe that traits:
Describe behavior
Cause behavior
Answer A and B are both correct
Answer A and B are both incorrect
Question 6
According to the intrapsychic approach (FREUD!), The source of all psychological problems lies in:
The unconscious
(Bad) environments
Chemical imbalance in the brain
None of the above answers are correct
Question 7
The dispositional domain deals with personality problems:
by psychoanalysis
by cognitive therapy
by fitting in the right environments
by changing relationships between reward and punishment
Question 8
Which of the following concepts is a subcategory of personality?
Individual differences
Character
Intelligence
The Big Five
Question 9
Which domain relies most on the statistical method to identify fundamental properties?
The dispositional domain
The biological domain
The domain of the adaptation
The social and cultural domain
Question 10
The intrapsychic approach sees behavior as
especially random
mainly caused by environment
mainly determined by mental powers
none of the above answers are correct
Question 11
A dispositional researcher would expect someone who is friendly at work to:
at home is also friendly
is friendly in social situations
at home is not friendly before
answer a and b are both correct
Question 12
A talkative person
will always talk more than a quiet person
can never shut up
talk more than a quiet person in the theater, for example
talks more than a quiet person on average
Question 13
Which of the following questions emphasizes research on personality traits?
How many fundamental properties are there?
How are traits organized within the person?
Where do properties come from?
All the above answers are correct
Question 14
Personality psychologists believe that traits:
describe behavior
cause behavior
answer A and B are both correct
answers A and B are both incorrect
Answer indication Open questions
Question 1
Personality is a collection of an individual's psychological traits and mechanisms that exhibit coherence, generally persist, and affect the individual's interaction and his / her adaptation to intrapsychic, physical, and social environments.
Question 2
Input (information from the environment), decision rules (way of thinking), and output (tendency to certain behavior).
Question 3
Each person is in certain respects: 1) equal to others (the level of human nature), 2) similar to others (the level of individual and group differences) and 3) unique (the level of individual uniqueness).
Question 4
Nomothetic research: statistical comparisons of individuals or groups. It is used to distinguish universal human traits. Idiographic (descriptive) research: concerns a single subject and observes the way in which general principles are applicable in a single case. This often concerns a psychological biography or a study of one person.
Question 5
The dispositional, biological, intrapsychic, cognitive-experimental, socio-cultural and adaptation domain.
Question 6
First, the theory should guide researchers, leading to new findings. Second, the theory must explain known findings. Finally, the theory must make specific predictions that can be tested empirically.
Answer indication MC questions
C
B
A
C
C
A
C
A
A
C
D
D
D
D
How can personality be measured? - ExamTests 2 (2)
Open questions
Question 1
Name the four main forms of data collection.
Question 2
Name a disadvantage of S-data, O-data and T-data.
Question 3
What does fMRI mean and what is its purpose?
Question 4
When can a test be called reliable?
Question 5
When can a test be considered valid?
Question 6
What three types of research designs are there and what are they best suited for?
MC questions
Question 1
Which of the following alternatives is an example of an unstructured questionnaire?
True / false questions
Open questions
Forced choice questions
All the above answers are correct
Question 2
What do we know if dominance positively correlates with ego strength?
Ego-strength dominance
Dominance causes ego-strength
People who score high on dominance also score high on ego strength
None of the above answers are correct
Question 3
In an experimental design, the manipulated variable is
The randomly assigned variable
The independent variable
The dependent variable
None of the above answers are correct
Question 4
Someone who tends to agree with all the questions in a questionnaire will likely show the response set:
Giving extreme answers (extreme responding)
Faking
Acquiescence (agree with everything)
Social desirability
Question 5
What someone tells you about their friend is considered to be:
S data
L data
O-data
T data
Question 6
Which of the following concepts is not important for assessing a personality measurement?
Validity
Manipulation
Generalizability
Reliability
Question 7
What do psychological researchers mainly derive their psychological statements from?
The style of the behavior
The content of the behavior
From someone's reputation
None of the above answers are correct
Question 8
If someone's personality has been assessed four times, and each time that person gets the same score, we know that that rating…
is reliable
is valid
is statistically significant
all the above answers are correct
Question 9
If people who score high on 'extraversion' also score high on measurements of 'being happy', then 'extraversion' and 'being happy'…
uncorrelated
positively correlated
negatively correlated
perhaps correlated, but there is not enough information to say anything about it
Question 10
When different measurements of the same construct correlate high with a given test, that test has high….
convergent validity
discriminant validity
face validity
none of the above answers are correct
Answer indication Open questions
Question 1
Self-reporting (S-data), observer data (O-data), laboratory tests (T-data) and life outcomes (L-data).
Question 2
S-data: Participants can lie or fake.
O-data: Observers may not have access to relevant information.
T-data: Lab tests may not be suitable for discovering patterns in everyday life.
Question 3
Functional magnetic resonance imaging; discovering the place and patterns of brain activity when participants perform certain tasks.
Question 4
When the same scores are obtained with repeated measurements.
Question 5
When the test measures what it should measure.
Question 6
The first is experimental research. This method is best suited for determining causality between two variables. The second type is correlational research. This method is best suited for investigating relationships between variables in natural settlements. The third method is the case study. This is suitable for formulating hypotheses and gaining insight into individual cases.
Answer indication MC questions
B
C
B
C
C
B
A
A
B
A
How can personality traits be described and classified? - ExamTests 3 (2)
MC-questions
Question 1
What are the two most used personality dimensions in the history of personality psychology?
Conscientiousness and Neuroticism.
Neuroticism and Extraversion.
Agreeableness and Conscientiousness.
Extraversion and Agreeableness.
Question 2
Which of the following alternatives exemplifies the view that properties are descriptive summaries?
The sociosexual orientation scale (…).
Theoretical scale construction (1-2-3-4-5).
Eysenck's theory (3 main features; extroversion, neuroticism, psychotic).
The “act-frequency” method (Act nomination, proto. Judg., Rec or act perf).
Question 3
A researcher who defines properties before examining them follows ...
The statistical approach.
The theoretical approach.
The lexical approach.
All the above answers are correct.
Question 4
Features in a circumplex that are each other's opposites ...
Do not correlate.
Correlate positively.
Correlate negatively.
None of the above answers are correct.
Question 5
The idea that all major differences have been precipitated in the natural language is known as ...
The individual differences hypothesis.
The lexical hypothesis.
Factor analysis.
Property taxonomy.
Question 6
In Wiggins' circumplex, dominance and warmth-friendliness (agreeableness) convey the relationship of ...
'Adjacency' to.
Bipolarity.
Orthogonality.
Factor loads.
Question 7
Someone who is anti-social and shows lack of empathy probably scores high on the trait ...
Extraversion.
Neuroticism.
Psychoticism.
All the above answers are correct.
Open questions
Question 1
Which two approaches are there to conceptualize traits?
Question 2
What three approaches exist to distinguish the most important features?
Question 3
Describe Eysenck's model.
Question 4
Describe Cattell's taxonomy.
Question 5
What are circumplex models of personality?
Question 6
Which five factors of personality are distinguished in the Big Five?
Question 7
Which sixth factor is distinguished in the HEXACO model?
Answer indication MC-questions
Question 1
B. Neuroticism and Extraversion.
Question 2
D. The “act-frequency” method (Act nomination, proto. Judg., Rec or act perf).
Question 3
B. The theoretical approach.
Question 4
C. Correlate negatively.
Question 5
B. The lexical hypothesis.
Question 6
C. Orthogonality.
Question 7
C. Psychoticism.
Answer indication open questions
Question 1
The first approach states that traits are inner traits that cause behavior. So pulling causes external behavior. The second approach states that traits are descriptive summaries of external behavior. This approach does not assume that pulling causes behavior.
Question 2
The lexical approach sees all important features as caught in the language. This approach uses synonym frequency and cross-cultural universality as criteria to distinguish important features. The statistical approach uses statistical procedures such as factor analysis to distinguish clusters from related traits. The theoretical approach uses existing personality theories to determine which traits are important.
Question 3
Eysenck developed a hierarchical model in which the features of extraversion, neuroticism and psychoticism are distinguished. These general traits include more specific traits such as activity level, mood and egocentricity. The taxonomy is based on factor analysis but has biological roots, such as a hereditary and physiological basis of the traits.
Question 4
Cattell's taxonomy consists of 16 personality traits, based on factor analysis. This taxonomy arose from the use of multiple types of data sources.
Question 5
Circumplex taxonomies focus on the domain of interpersonal traits. They are circular arrangements of traits around two dimensions - status (dominance) and love (kindness).
Question 6
Extraversion, kindness, conscientiousness, emotional stability and open-mindedness.
Question 7
In addition to the five factors of the Big Five, the HEXACO model distinguishes the factor Honesty-Humility. This factor includes sincerity, honesty, avoidance of greed and modesty.
What theories are there about measuring personality? - ExamTests 4 (2)
Open questions
Question 1
What three assumptions do personality psychologists make with regard to personality?
Question 2
Why is personality psychology also called differential psychology?
Question 3
What is meant by situationism (Mischel)?
Question 4
Describe the phenomenon of person-situation interaction.
Question 5
Describe what situational selection entails.
Question 6
What is meant by faking by participants?
Question 7
What are Barnum statements?
Question 8
What is the problem with Jung's theory of the psychological types on which the MBTI is based?
MC questions
Question 1
How is the idea that personality traits influence the choice of situations in which people find themselves known?
Situational selection
Aggregation (averaging)
Manipulation (changing targeted behavior of others)
Evocation (create situation; generate reaction from others)
Question 2
What, according to Mischel (1968), was the most important thing in determining behavior?
Intellectual capabilities
Situations
Attitudes
Properties
Question 3
The idea that personality traits influence the choice of situations people find themselves in is known as:
Aggregation (averaging)
Situational selection
Evocation (create situation; generate reaction from others)
Manipulation (changing targeted behavior of others)
Question 4
The point of view of the person-situation interaction implies that when we observe a certain behavior:
both the relevant personality trait and the appropriate situation will be available
this observation is possible because situations cause personality traits
the behavior will remain consistent across situations
we can attribute that behavior almost entirely to personality
Answer indication Open questions
Question 1
There are meaningful individual differences in personality. The personality is stable over time. The personality is consistent in different situations.
Question 2
Personality psychology deals with differences between people. Differential psychology studies not only individual differences in personality, but also ability, fitness and intelligence.
Question 3
If behavior differs per situation, behavior is not determined by underlying traits, but by situational differences.
Question 4
Behavior is a function of the interaction between character traits and situational influences.
Question 5
A form of interactionism, the tendency to choose situations in which one can be oneself.
Question 6
The deliberate bias of answers to a questionnaire.
Question 7
Generalities, statements that could apply to everyone. For example, "You sometimes doubt whether you did the right thing" or "You want others to like you."
Question 8
People cannot be divided into types that are, for example, completely introverted or completely extroverted. Character traits are normally distributed. Very few personal characteristics follow a bimodal distribution.
Answer indication MC questions
A
B
B
A
Does personality develop during different phases of life? - ExamTests 5 (2)
Open questions
Question 1
Name three forms of personality stability.
Question 2
Which traits of the Big Five change over time and in which direction (increase or decrease)?
Question 3
What other properties change over time and in which direction?
Question 4
To which characteristics do changes apply, specifically in women?
Question 5
What did Twenge's (2001) study show about cohort effects related to change in assertiveness and dominance in women?
Question 6
What Traits Predict Bad Marriage and Divorce?
Question 7
What is the effect of work experience on personality?
MC questions
Question 1
Freud's theory of psychosexual stages (oral, anal, etc.) exemplifies personality change at the level of analysis of:
Group differences
The population
Individual uniqueness
Individual differences
Question 2
Self-efficacy is defined as
The belief that one can do the necessary to achieve desired results
Making attributions that are unstable, temporary and global
The expectation that there will be many positive events, and few negative ones
Having a higher self-esteem than average
Question 3
For which of the following terms does balance historically count as a central feature?
Character
Temperament
Personality
Answer A and B are both correct
Question 4
The trait “competence” appears in women
Decrease with age
Increase with age
Stay the same with aging
To increase when they are married, but to decrease when they are unmarried
Question 5
When is personality least stable?
In early childhood
In later youth
In the adolescence period
In the adult period
Answer indication Open questions
Question 1
Ranking stability
Average level stability
Personality coherence
Question 2
Neuroticism diminishes with time; kindness and conscientiousness increase with time.
Question 3
Self-esteem increases; impulsivity decreases; sensation seeking decreases after a peak in adolescence.
Question 4
In women, femininity appears to be declining around age 40-50. This is probably related to menopause. Autonomy, independence and competence, in particular, seem to increase with women as they age.
Question 5
Assertiveness was high after 1930, when women were extremely independent. Then, in the 1950s / 60s, women became mainly housewives. From 1967 to 1993 assertiveness increased again due to changes in social roles and more women in the workplace.
Question 6
High levels of neuroticism in both sexes and impulsivity in men.
Question 7
People successful at work become happier, more confident and less anxious over time.
Answer indication MC questions
B
A
B
B
C
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Exams: Practice exams and study tips for Clinical and health psychology
Practice exams and study tips for Clinical and health psychology
Exams: Practice exams and study tips for Personality psychology and human development
Practice exams and study tips for Personality psychology and human development
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