1,509,570 research outputs found
A tale of two visions: Can a new view of personality help integrate psychology?
Personality psychology studies how psychological systems work together. Consequently, the field can act as a unifying resource for the broader discipline of psychology. Yet personality\u27s current fieldwide organization promotes a fragmented view of the person, seen through such competing theories as the psychodynamic, trait, and humanistic. There exists an alternative--a systems framework for personality--that focuses on 4 topics: identifying personality, personality\u27s parts, its organization, and its development. This new framework and its view of personality are described. The framework is applied to such issues as personality measurement, psychotherapy outcome research, and education. The new framework may better organize the field of personality and help with its mission of addressing how major psychological systems interrelate
3D Face Synthesis Driven by Personality Impression
Synthesizing 3D faces that give certain personality impressions is commonly
needed in computer games, animations, and virtual world applications for
producing realistic virtual characters. In this paper, we propose a novel
approach to synthesize 3D faces based on personality impression for creating
virtual characters. Our approach consists of two major steps. In the first
step, we train classifiers using deep convolutional neural networks on a
dataset of images with personality impression annotations, which are capable of
predicting the personality impression of a face. In the second step, given a 3D
face and a desired personality impression type as user inputs, our approach
optimizes the facial details against the trained classifiers, so as to
synthesize a face which gives the desired personality impression. We
demonstrate our approach for synthesizing 3D faces giving desired personality
impressions on a variety of 3D face models. Perceptual studies show that the
perceived personality impressions of the synthesized faces agree with the
target personality impressions specified for synthesizing the faces. Please
refer to the supplementary materials for all results.Comment: 8pages;6 figure
ESPERANZA’S PERSONALITY DEVELOPMENT AS REFLECTED IN SANDRA CISNEROS’ THE HOUSE ON MANGO STREET
This study discusses The House on Mango Street, a novel written by
Sandra Cisneros. This novel presents a main character named Esperanza who
experiences personality development. This study is meant to answer three
problems concerning the main character’s personality development. The first
problem is Esperanza’s basic personality in the novel. The second problem is
Esperanza’s personality development. The third problem is the influencing factors
toward Esperanza’s personality development.
This study is a qualitative study applying content analysis method. This
study applies the theory of personality and personality development emphasizing
on Hurlock’s theory on personality development. The object of this study is
Sandra Cisneros’ The House on Mango Street. The data collected are lines related
to the topic under study found in the novel. The data analysis was conducted by
analyzing the required lines found in The House on Mango Street in accordance
with the theory. In achieving reliability, the researcher read and reread the novel
comprehensively, then recorded the data. The triangulation method was applied to
gain the trustworthiness of the data through consulting the finding with first and
second consultant.
The result of this study shows that Esperanza’s personality develops.
There are two significant factors that influence Esperanza’s personality
development. The first is the early experiences within family. The second is the
important events outside home. Early experience within family gives influence
toward Esperanza through supportive parents and family’s financial difficulty,
while important events outside home also gives influence toward Esperanza’s
personality mostly through the peers and neighborhood. From the analysis on the
factors that influence Esperanza’s personality, the researcher finds that Esperanza
is unconfident, pessimistic, and naĂŻve at the beginning of the story, and then she
turns into a confident, optimistic, and sophisticated person at the end
The big questions of personality psychology: Defining common pursuits of the discipline
Big questions of personality are those that are simple, important, and often have been asked repeatedly over time, such as “Who am I?” “What is human nature?” and “How does personality work?” This article identifies 20 big questions relevant to personality psychology. The historical background of each question is briefly described, and the questions are arranged into a model of big questions about personality. The questions, it is argued, both reflect and help to clarify the intrinsic interest in studying personality psychology. They offer insight into the cohesive nature of the field of personality by helping to define its common pursuits
Computer-Aided Discovery and Categorisation of Personality Axioms
We propose a computer-algebraic, order-theoretic framework based on
intuitionistic logic for the computer-aided discovery of personality axioms
from personality-test data and their mathematical categorisation into formal
personality theories in the spirit of F.~Klein's Erlanger Programm for
geometrical theories. As a result, formal personality theories can be
automatically generated, diagrammatically visualised, and mathematically
characterised in terms of categories of invariant-preserving transformations in
the sense of Klein and category theory. Our personality theories and categories
are induced by implicational invariants that are ground instances of
intuitionistic implication, which we postulate as axioms. In our mindset, the
essence of personality, and thus mental health and illness, is its invariance.
The truth of these axioms is algorithmically extracted from histories of
partially-ordered, symbolic data of observed behaviour. The personality-test
data and the personality theories are related by a Galois-connection in our
framework. As data format, we adopt the format of the symbolic values generated
by the Szondi-test, a personality test based on L.~Szondi's unifying,
depth-psychological theory of fate analysis.Comment: related to arXiv:1403.200
Gender Differences in Personality and Earnings: Evidence from Russia
Does personality affect earnings? If so, are there gender differences in personality that explain part of the gender wage gap? We use survey data collected from over 2,600 Russian employees between 2000 and 2003 to evaluate the impact on earnings of two personality traits: locus of control (Rotter 1966) and challenge-affiliation (Hill et al. 1985). We find that gender differences in personality traits are significant. Men are more likely to exhibit an internal locus of control and need for challenge, while women are more likely to exhibit an external locus of control and need for affiliation. Moreover, there are differences in the effect of personality on earnings by gender – women’s earnings are affected by personality, while men’s earnings are not. Among participating employees in our study, the “unexplained” portion of the gender wage gap falls by as much as 12% when personality traits are included.http://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/40177/3/wp791.pd
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