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30 Cards in this Set
- Front
- Back
consist whatever sensations and experiences you are aware of at the given moment of time. |
Conscious Level |
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this domain is sometimes called available memory |
Preconscious level |
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the deepest and major stratum of the human mind. |
Unconscious level |
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named after Greek god for death. |
Thanatos |
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This includes not only striving for death but also destructive motives such as hostility and aggression. These drives highly influence the personality of a person. |
Thanatos |
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this is named after the Greek god for love |
Eros |
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refers to the characteristics of an individual, describing a habitual way of behaving, thinking, and feeling. |
Trait |
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these are personally traits that are shared by most members of particular culture. |
Common trait |
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these are personality traits that define a person’s unique individual qualities. |
Individual trait |
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It is a powerful and dominating behavioral predisposition that provides the pivotal point in a person’s life. |
Cardinal traits |
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these are the core traits that characterize an individuals personality. |
Central trait |
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these are traits that are inconsistent or relatively superficial, less generalized and far less enduring that affects our behaviors in specific circumstances. |
Secondary traits |
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the major characteristics of our personalities that are quite generalized and enduring; they form the building blocks of our personalities.
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Central traits |
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this dimension contrast such traits as sociable, outgoing, talkative assertive, persuasive,decisive, and active with more introverted traits such as withdrawn , quite, passive , retiring and reserved. |
Extra version |
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They tend to experience negative emotions and to be moody, irritable, nervous, and prone to worry. |
Neuroticism |
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this factor differentiates individuals who are dependable,organized, reliable, responsible through hard working and preserving from those undependable, disorganized, impulsive , unreliable, irresponsible, careless negligent and lazy. |
Conscienctiousness |
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this factor is composed of a collection of traits that range from compassion to antagonism towards others |
Agreeableness |
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this factor contracts individuals who are imaginative, curios, broad-minded, and cultured with those who are concrete minded and practical, and whose interests are narrow. |
Openness to experience |
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refers to the fundamental groundwork of character, generally presumed to be biologically determined and existent early in life, inclusive of traits like emotional reactiveness, energy level, reaction tempo, and motivation to explore. |
Temperament |
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He noted that criminality is a result of emotional immaturity |
Walter Bromberg ( crime and mind, 1946) |
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He claimed that crime is an expression of mental content of the individual. |
William Healey ( individual delinquency, 1916) |
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He conducted a study 105 pairs of boarders where one was a persistent offender the other a none offender |
Healey and boner(1936) |
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best known for his theory on social development of human beings |
Erik H. Erickson |
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the child learns by doing: looking, touching, sucking. The child has a primitive understanding of cause and effect relationship. Object performance appears around months. |
Sensori motor |
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the child uses language and symbols, including letters and numbers. Egocentrism is also evident. Conservation marks the end of preoperational stage and the beginning of concrete operation. |
Pre- operational |
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the child demonstrates conservation, reversability, serial ordering , and a mature understanding of cause-and effect relationships. Thinking at this stage is still concrete. |
Concrete operational |
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the individual demonstrates abstract thinking, incliding logic, deductive reasoning, comparison and classification. |
Formal operational |
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theory of General emotionality. |
Cyril Burt(young delinquent 1925) |
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it is a trait that is being anxious, excitable, and easily disturbed. |
Emotional |
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it is the idea that people need more efficient social programs to be introduce by their governments. |
Production |