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ویرایش: [Seventh ed.] نویسندگان: David M. Buss, Randy J. Larsen سری: ISBN (شابک) : 9781260254129, 1260838978 ناشر: سال نشر: 2021 تعداد صفحات: [769] زبان: English فرمت فایل : PDF (درصورت درخواست کاربر به PDF، EPUB یا AZW3 تبدیل می شود) حجم فایل: 339 Mb
در صورت تبدیل فایل کتاب Personality psychology : domains of knowledge about human nature به فرمت های PDF، EPUB، AZW3، MOBI و یا DJVU می توانید به پشتیبان اطلاع دهید تا فایل مورد نظر را تبدیل نمایند.
توجه داشته باشید کتاب روانشناسی شخصیت: حوزه های دانش در مورد طبیعت انسان نسخه زبان اصلی می باشد و کتاب ترجمه شده به فارسی نمی باشد. وبسایت اینترنشنال لایبرری ارائه دهنده کتاب های زبان اصلی می باشد و هیچ گونه کتاب ترجمه شده یا نوشته شده به فارسی را ارائه نمی دهد.
ما زندگی خود را وقف مطالعه شخصیت کردهایم و معتقدیم که این رشته یکی از هیجانانگیزترین رشتهها در تمام روانشناسی است. بنابراین از دیدن حجم ایمیلها، نامهها و نظرات مشتریان راضی بسیار خوشحال شدیم. در عین حال، آمادهسازی نسخه هفتم تجربهای فروتنآور بود.آبشار انتشارات هیجانانگیز در زمینه شخصیت بسیار بزرگ است و نه تنها نیازمند بهروزرسانی، بلکه همچنین به افزودن بخشهای عمده مطالب جدید است. به جای سازماندهی متن خود حول نظریه های بزرگ سنتی شخصیت، چارچوبی از شش حوزه مهم دانش در مورد عملکرد شخصیت ابداع کردیم. حوزه زیستی (فیزیولوژی، ژنتیک، تکامل)، حوزه درون روانی (روان پویایی، انگیزه ها)، حوزه شناختی-تجربی (شناخت، عاطفه و خود)، حوزه اجتماعی و فرهنگی (تعامل اجتماعی، جنسیت و فرهنگ)، و حوزه سازگاری (استرس، مقابله، سلامت و اختلالات شخصیت). ما معتقد بودیم که این حوزههای دانش نشاندهنده وضعیت معاصر در روانشناسی شخصیت هستند و پیشرفت در این زمینه از زمان انتشار اولین نسخه ما همچنان بر این باور است.
"We have devoted our lives to the study of personality and believe this field is one of the most exciting in all of psychology. Thus we were enormously gratified to see the volume of e-mails, letters, and comments from satisfied consumers. At the same time, preparing the seventh edition proved to be a humbling experience. The cascade of exciting publications in the field of personality is formidable, requiring not merely updating but also the addition of major sections of new material. Moreover, in important ways our first edition proved prescient. Rather than organize our text around the traditional grand theories of personality, we devised a framework of six important domains of knowledge about personality functioning. These six domains are the dispositional domain (traits, trait taxonomies, and personality dispositions over time), the biological domain (physiology, genetics, evolution), the intrapsychic domain (psychodynamics, motives), the cognitive-experiential domain (cognition, emotion, and the self), the social and cultural domain (social interaction, gender, and culture), and the adjustment domain (stress, coping, health, and personality disorders). We believed these domains of knowledge represented the contemporary state of affairs in personality psychology, and progress in the field since publication of our first edition has continued to bear out that belief"--
Cover Personality Psychology Dedication Brief Contents Contents About the Authors Preface Acknowledgments INTRODUCTION Chapter 1: Introduction to Personality Psychology Personality Defined Personality Is the Set of Psychological Traits . . . And Mechanisms . . . Within the Individual . . . That Are Organized and Relatively Enduring . . . And That Influence . . . His or Her Interactions with . . . And Adaptations to . . . The Environment Three Levels of Personality Analysis Human Nature Individual and Group Differences Individual Uniqueness A Fissure in the Field Grand Theories of Personality Contemporary Research in Personality Six Domains of Knowledge About Human Nature Dispositional Domain Biological Domain Intrapsychic Domain Cognitive-Experiential Domain Social and Cultural Domain Adjustment Domain The Role of Personality Theory Standards for Evaluating Personality Theories Is There a Grand Ultimate and True Theory of Personality? Key Terms Chapter 2: Personality Assessment, Measurement, and Research Design Sources of Personality Data Self-Report Data (S-Data) Observer-Report Data (O-Data) Test Data (T-Data) Life-Outcome Data (L-Data) Issues in Personality Assessment Evaluation of Personality Measures Reliability Response Sets Validity Generalizability Research Designs in Personality Experimental Methods Correlational Studies Case Studies When to Use Experimental, Correlational, and Case Study Designs Summary and Evaluation Key Terms PART I: The Dispositional Domain Chapter 3: Traits and Trait Taxonomies What Is a Trait? Two Basic Formulations Traits as Internal Causal Properties Traits as Purely Descriptive Summaries The Act Frequency Formulation of Traits—An Illustration of the Descriptive Summary Formulation Act Frequency Research Program Evaluation of the Act Frequency Formulation Identification of the Most Important Traits Lexical Approach Statistical Approach Theoretical Approach Evaluating the Approaches for Identifying Important Traits Taxonomies of Personality Eysenck’s Hierarchical Model of Personality Circumplex Taxonomies of Personality Five-Factor Model The HEXACO Model Summary and Evaluation Key Terms Chapter 4: Theoretical and Measurement Issues in Trait Psychology Theoretical Issues Meaningful Differences Among Individuals Stability over Time Consistency Across Situations Person–Situation Interaction Aggregation Measurement Issues Carelessness Faking on Questionnaires Beware of Barnum Statements in Personality Test Interpretations Personality and Prediction Applications of Personality Testing in the Workplace Legal Issues in Personality Testing in Employment Settings Personnel Selection—Choosing the Right Person for the Job Selection in Business Settings—The Myers–Briggs Type Indicator: A Worst-Case Example Selection in Business Settings—The Hogan Personality Inventory: A Best-Case Example Summary and Evaluation Key Terms Chapter 5: Personality Dispositions over Time: Stability, Coherence, and Change Conceptual Issues: Personality Development, Stability, Coherence, and Change What Is Personality Development? Rank Order Stability Mean Level Stability Personality Coherence Personality Change Three Levels of Analysis Population Level Group Differences Level Individual Differences Level Personality Stability over Time Stability of Temperament During Infancy Stability During Childhood Rank Order Stability in Adulthood Mean Level Stability and Change in Adulthood Personality Change Changes in Self-Esteem from Adolescence to Adulthood Autonomy, Dominance, Leadership, and Ambition Sensation Seeking Femininity Independence and Traditional Roles Personality Changes Across Cohorts: Assertiveness and Narcissism Personality Coherence over Time: Prediction of Socially Relevant Outcomes Marital Stability, Marital Satisfaction, and Divorce Alcoholism, Drug Use, and Emotional Disturbance Religiousness and Spirituality Education, Academic Achievement, and Dropping Out Health, Retirement, and Longevity Predicting Personality Change Summary and Evaluation Key Terms PART II: The Biological Domain Chapter 6: Genetics and Personality The Human Genome Controversy About Genes and Personality Goals of Behavioral Genetics What Is Heritability? Misconceptions About Heritability Nature–Nurture Debate Clarified Behavioral Genetic Methods Selective Breeding—Studies of Humans’ Best Friend Family Studies Twin Studies Adoption Studies Major Findings from Behavioral Genetic Research Personality Traits Attitudes and Preferences Drinking and Smoking Marriage and Satisfaction with Life Shared Versus Nonshared Environmental Influences: A Riddle Genes and the Environment Genotype–Environment Interaction Genotype–Environment Correlation Molecular Genetics Behavioral Genetics, Science, Politics, and Values Summary and Evaluation Key Terms Chapter 7: Physiological Approaches to Personality A Physiological Approach to Personality Physiological Measures Commonly Used in Personality Research Electrodermal Activity (Skin Conductance) Cardiovascular Activity The Brain Other Measures Physiologically Based Theories of Personality Extraversion–Introversion Sensitivity to Reward and Punishment Sensation Seeking Neurotransmitters and Personality Morningness–Eveningness Brain Asymmetry and Affective Style Summary and Evaluation Key Terms Chapter 8: Evolutionary Perspectives on Personality Evolution and Natural Selection Natural Selection Sexual Selection Genes and Inclusive Fitness Products of the Evolutionary Process Evolutionary Psychology Premises of Evolutionary Psychology Empirical Testing of Evolutionary Hypotheses Human Nature Need to Belong Helping and Altruism Universal Emotions Sex Differences Sex Differences in Aggression Sex Differences in Jealousy Sex Differences in Desire for Sexual Variety Sex Differences in Mate Preferences Individual Differences Environmental Triggers of Individual Differences Heritable Individual Differences Contingent on Other Traits Frequency–Dependent Strategic Individual Differences The Big Five, Motivation, and Evolutionarily Relevant Adaptive Problems Limitations of Evolutionary Psychology Summary and Evaluation Key Terms PART III: The Intrapsychic Domain 258 Chapter 9: Psychoanalytic Approaches to Personality Sigmund Freud: A Brief Biography Fundamental Assumptions of Psychoanalytic Theory Basic Instincts: Sex and Aggression Unconscious Motivation: Sometimes We Don’t Know Why We Do What We Do Psychic Determinism: Nothing Happens by Chance Structure of Personality Id: Reservoir of Psychic Energy Ego: Executive of Personality Superego: Upholder of Societal Values and Ideals Interaction of the Id, Ego, and Superego Dynamics of Personality Types of Anxiety Defense Mechanisms Psychosexual Stages of Personality Development Personality and Psychoanalysis Techniques for Revealing the Unconscious The Process of Psychoanalysis Why Is Psychoanalysis Important? Evaluation of Freud’s Contributions SUMMARY AND EVALUATION KEY TERMS Chapter 10: Psychoanalytic Approaches: Contemporary Issues The Neo-Analytic Movement Repression and Contemporary Research on Memory Application: False Memories from Fake News Contemporary Views on the Unconscious Ego Psychology Erikson’s Eight Stages of Development Karen Horney and a Feminist Interpretation of Psychoanalysis Emphasis on Self and the Notion of Narcissism Object Relations Theory Early Childhood Attachment Adult Relationships Summary and Evaluation Key Terms Chapter 11: Motives and Personality Basic Concepts Need Press Apperception and the TAT The Big Three Motives: Achievement, Power, and Intimacy Need for Achievement Need for Power Need for Intimacy Humanistic Tradition: The Motive to Self-Actualize Maslow’s Contributions Rogers’s Contributions Summary and Evaluation Key Terms PART IV: The Cognitive/Experiential Domain Chapter 12 : Cognitive Topics in Personality Personality Revealed Through Perception Field Dependence Pain Tolerance and Sensation Reducing/Augmenting Personality Revealed Through Interpretation Kelly’s Personal Construct Theory Locus of Control Learned Helplessness Personality Revealed Through Goals Personal Projects Analysis Cognitive Social Learning Theory Intelligence Summary and Evaluation Key Terms Chapter 13: Emotion and Personality Issues in Emotion Research Emotional States Versus Emotional Traits Categorical Versus Dimensional Approach to Emotion Content Versus Style of Emotional Life Content of Emotional Life Style of Emotional Life Interaction of Content and Style in Emotional Life Summary and Evaluation Key Terms Chapter 14: Approaches to the Self Descriptive Component of the Self: Self-Concept Development of the Self-Concept Self-Schemata: Possible Selves, Ought Selves, and Undesired Selves Evaluative Component of the Self: Self-Esteem Evaluation of Oneself Research on Self-Esteem Social Component of the Self: Social Identity The Nature of Identity Identity Development Identity Crises Summary and Evaluation Key Terms PART V: The Social and Cultural Domain Chapter 15: Personality and Social Interaction Selection Personality Characteristics Desired in a Marriage Partner Assortative Mating for Personality: The Search for the Similar Do People Get the Mates They Want? And Are They Happy? Personality and the Selective Breakup of Couples Shyness and the Selection of Risky Situations Other Personality Traits and the Selection of Situations Evocation Aggression and the Evocation of Hostility Evocation of Anger and Upset in Partners Evocation of Likability, Pleasure, and Pain Evocation Through Expectancy Confirmation Manipulation: Social Influence Tactics A Taxonomy of Eleven Tactics of Manipulation Sex Differences in Tactics of Manipulation Personality Predictors of Tactics of Manipulation Panning Back: An Overview of Personality and Social Interaction Summary and Evaluation Key Terms Chapter 16: Sex, Gender, and Personality The Science and Politics of Studying Sex and Gender History of the Study of Sex Differences Calculation of Effect Size: How Large Are the Sex Differences? Minimalists and Maximalists Sex Differences in Personality Temperament in Children Five-Factor Model Basic Emotions: Frequency and Intensity Other Dimensions of Personality Masculinity, Femininity, Androgyny, and Sex Roles The Search for Androgyny Gender Stereotypes Theories of Sex Differences Socialization and Social Roles Hormonal Theories Evolutionary Psychology Theory An Integrated Theoretical Perspective Summary and Evaluation Key Terms Chapter 17: Culture and Personality Cultural Violations: An Illustration What Is Cultural Personality Psychology? Three Major Approaches to Culture Evoked Culture Transmitted Culture Cultural Universals SUMMARY AND EVALUATION KEY TERMS PART VI: The Adjustment Domain Chapter 18: Stress, Coping, Adjustment, and Health Models of the Personality–Illness Connection The Concept of Stress Stress Response Major Life Events Daily Hassles Varieties of Stress Primary and Secondary Appraisal Coping Strategies and Styles Attributional Style Dispositional Optimism Management of Emotions Disclosure Type A Personality and Cardiovascular Disease Hostility: The Lethal Component of the Type A Behavior Pattern How the Arteries Are Damaged by Hostile Type A Behavior Summary and Evaluation Key Terms Chapter 19: Disorders of Personality The Building Blocks of Personality Disorders The Concept of Disorder What Is Abnormal? The Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders What Is a Personality Disorder? Specific Personality Disorders The Erratic Cluster: Ways of Being Unpredictable, Violent, or Emotional The Eccentric Cluster: Ways of Being Different The Anxious Cluster: Ways of Being Nervous, Fearful, or Distressed Prevalence of Personality Disorders Gender Differences in Personality Disorders Dimensional Model of Personality Disorders Causes of Personality Disorders SUMMARY AND EVALUATION KEY TERMS CONCLUSION Chapter 20: Summary and Future Directions Current Status of the Field Domains of Knowledge: Where We’ve Been, Where We’re Going Dispositional Domain Biological Domain Intrapsychic Domain Cognitive/Experiential Domain Social and Cultural Domain Adjustment Domain Integration: Personality in the Twenty-First Century Glossary References Name Index Subject Index