Dimensions of personality and temperament
	The search for behavioral taxonomies
	
		- Early taxonomies
		
			- Ancient Greek
			
				- Theophrastus and The Characters
					the flatter, the dissembler, the mean, the tactless, the garrulous, the avaricious
				
 - Plato
					two dimensions of personality
					anxiety and impulsivity
				
 - Hippocrates and Galen: the four temperaments and the four bodily fluids
					
					- sanguine: blood
					
 - phlegmatic: phlegm
					
 - melancholic: black bile
					
 - choleric: yellow bile
					
 
				 
	
			 - Late 19th--Early 20th Century
			
				- Wundt's dimensions 
					two dimensions to account for Galen's types
							
 - changeable
							
 - 	melancholic and phlegmatic versus sanguine and choleric
							
 - excitable
							
 - 	phlegmatic and sanguine versus melancholic and choleric
				
 - Freud and Jung: Character Types
				
					- Freud: Interaction of character and childrearing
					
							- Oral
							
							- 	Indulgent: oral erotic -- oral passive
							
 - 		optimistic, gullible, dependent, manipulative
							
 - 	Restrictive: oral sadistic, oral agressive
							
 - 		pessimistic, suspicious, quarrelsome
							
 
							 - Anal
							
							- 	Indulgent: anal retentive, anal compulsive
							
 - 		stingy, stubborn, punctual, precise, orderly
							
 - 	Restrictive: anal agressive, anal expulsive
							
 - 		cruel, destructive, hostile, disorderly
							
 
							 - Phallic
							
							- 	Indulgent: phallic-dominant
							
 - 		vain, proud, domineering, ambitious, virile
							
 - 	Restrictive: phallic-submissive
							
 - 		meek, submissive, modest, timid, feminine
							
 
							 
					 - Jung
						
							- Orientations 
							
 - Psychological Functioning 
							- 	Thinking
							
 - 	Feeling
							
 - 	Sensing
							
 - 	Intuiting
 
							 - Popular applications -- psychological typing
							
 
				 - McDougall's domains
					- Intellect
					
 - Character
					
 - Temperament
					
 - Disposition
					
 - Temper
 
					 
 
 
		 - Systematic Analyses of the Personality Sphere
			
			- Dimensions of language
			
				- The lexical hypothesis: Personality sphere as defined by  language
					
						- Any difference which makes a difference is measurable
							
 - language reflects reality
							
 - important differences will be expressed in language
					
 
					 - Gordon Allport listed traits	
							- trait terms selected from unabridged dictionary        18,000
							
 - Allport-Odbert word lists
							
 - 	stable traits
							
 - 	fluctuating states
							
 
				 - Raymond Cattell's taxonomic project
			
				
						- Cattell selected words from Allport	                           4,504 
							- grouped by semantic meaning	      171
							
 - formed intuitive clusters	        36-46
							
 - factored rating scales	             12-14
								
								- 	Univ. Illinois fraternity members
								
 - 	early use of factor analysis
								
 
							 - formed personality instruments 14-16
 
						 - Reanalyses and extensions of Cattell	
							- Fiske, 1948 -  5 factors
							
 - Tupes and Christal (1958)	5 factors of peer ratings
							
 - Norman (1963) 5 Factors of peer ratings: The "Big 5"
							- 	1. Surgency/Extraversion
							
 - 	2. Agreeableness
							
 - 	3. Conscientiousness
							
 - 	4. Emotional Stability versus Emotionality
							
 - 	5. Culture/Openness
							
 
							 - Digman (1985)	5 factors of ratings (teachers + peers)
			
 - 	Warren Norman/Jerry Wiggins/Lewis Goldberg
			
						- structure of language
							
 - Norman
								
							- 	replicated Tupes and Christal
							
 - 	redid Allport 
							
 - 		read entire Websters 3rd
							
 - 		meaningful words   2800
							
 
							 - Wiggins
							
							- 	emphasizes a "circumplex" of meaning
							
 - 		but this is really just a two dimensional structure
							
 - 		see also Leary
							
 - 	no dimension is primary
							
 
							 - Goldberg
							
							- 	structure of Norman's lists
							
 - 	clusters based upon meaning
							
 - 	circumplex descriptions--The Abridged Big Five Circumplex
							
							
							
 
							 
						 - language but not reality?
						
							- structure of what people say, not what people do?
							
 - description of the stranger (MacAdams)?
						
 
 
 
 
	 - 		Dimensions of self report
		
				- Comrey (1985)	8-9  dimensions of self report
				
 - Guilford -- dimensions of self report 
					
						- structure of the intellect
							
 - a conceptual model
						
 - orthogonal dimensions of temperament
							
 - Guilford-Zimmerman Temperament Scales
					
 
				 - Hogan (1983) 6 dimensions of interpersonal behavior
				
 - Howarth (1976)	6-7 dimensions of self report
			
 
		 - 	Dimensions of biology and behavior--The "Even Bigger 3"
			
			- 	H. J. Eysenck (1948-1985)  dimensions of behavioral measures
					
						- empirical clustering of behavioral characteristics
						
 - 2-4 dimensions of personality
							 
							- introversion-extraversion
							
 - stability-neuroticism
							
 - normality - psychoticism
							
 - low - high intelligence
							
 
 
				 - Strelau and dimensions of Pavlovian nervous system 
					
						- Strength of the nervous system
						
 - Excitation
						
 - Inhibition
						
 - Balance
					
 
				 
		 - 	Dimensions of behavior or of semantics?
		
			- 	Semantics
					
						- Passini and Norman (1966)
							
							- peer ratings of strangers
							
 - structure is the same as Norman's peer ratings
							
 - does this imply that big 5 are just semantic
							
 
						 - Mulaik (1964)
						
							- used the adjectives summarizing Norman's scales
							
 - ratings of adjectival structure
							
 - structure of adjectives is same as Norman's 
							
 
						 - Mischel (1968) 
							
							- critique of trait models in general
							
 - critique of taxonomies in particular
							
 
						 - Shweder and D'Andrade (1980)
							
							- method 
							- 	ratings taken of behavior at time it occurs ("on line")
							
 - 	ratings done from memory
							
 - 	semantic judgements of similarity
							
 
							 - results
							
							- 	structure of "on line measures" not the same as memory based
							
 - 	structure of memory based equivalent to semantic structure
							
 
 
 
			 - 	Behavior
					
						- Norman and Goldberg (1966)
							
							- inter-judge agreement increases with knowledge of target
							
 - structure remains fairly consistent across changes in knowledge of target
							
 - ==> structure is not enough
							
 
						 - Romer and Revelle (1984)	
							
							- conceptual replication of Shweder's "on line ratings"
							
 - 	varied "on line ratings"
							
 - 		used forced choice (ala Shweder)
							
 - 			which trait does this behavior represent
							
 - 		used complete rating of all traits
							
 - 			how X is this behavior Y?
							
 - structure of "on line ratings" depends upon method
							
 - 	forced choice categories do not correlate
							
 - 	on line ratings of traits match memory based
							
 
						 - Borkenau (1992) -- extension of R & R
						
 
	 - 		Towards consensus on the "Big 5" or the "Five Factor Model"
		
			- 	cross cultural - Bond, Eysenck
			
 - 	cross inventory--McCrae and Costa (1987)
			
 - 	behavioral genetic evidence--Loehlin (1992)
		
 
 
 
	Personality taxonomies and personality theories 
		general agreement that 4-7 dimensions does a pretty good job of describing others
		A taxonomy of taxonomies
	
		- 	Descriptive: concern is with finding the regularities in behavior rather than explaining them 
			
			- 	Fiske
			
 - 	Tupes and Christal
			
 - 	Norman
			
 - 	Goldberg
			
 - 	Wiggins
			
 - 	McCrae and Costa
			
 
		 - 	Causal: what are the mechanisms that lead to dimensions --"Even Bigger 3"
			
			- 	Eysenck
			
 - 	Gray
			
 - 	Depue
			
 - 	Tellegen
			
 - 	Cloninger
			
 - 	Strelau
			
 
		 - Interrelationships of traits and states 
			
			- approach traits - positive states
			
 - avoidance traits - negative states