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Test your basic knowledge |
GRE Psychology: Personality
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Subjects
:
gre
,
psychology
Instructions:
Answer 50 questions in 15 minutes.
If you are not ready to take this test, you can
study here
.
Match each statement with the correct term.
Don't refresh. All questions and answers are randomly picked and ordered every time you load a test.
This is a study tool. The 3 wrong answers for each question are randomly chosen from answers to other questions. So, you might find at times the answers obvious, but you will see it re-enforces your understanding as you take the test each time.
1. People often make assumptions about the dispositions of an individual based on the actions of that person
Gender and depression
Authoritarianism
Dispositional attribution
Implicit theories (personality)
2. Self-defeating behaviour that allows one to dismiss or excuse failure
Mesomorph
External locus of control
Martin Seligman
Self-handicapping
3. Dispositional attribution; tendency for others to think actions are caused more by personality than situation (e.g. lie because he is a liar - not because of the situation)
Self-esteem
Fundamental attribution error
Phrenology
Walter Mischel and Nancy Cantor
4. Found interaction between gender and social status - how easily an individual might be influenced
Self-handicapping
Alice Eagly
Endomorph
Self-esteem
5. Suggested females shun masculine-type successes not because of fear or failure or lack of interest - but they fear success and its negative repercussions (i.e. resentment and rejection)
Self-handicapping
Walter Mischel and Nancy Cantor
Matina Horner
Thematic Apperception Test (TAT)
6. Hierarchy of needs
Abraham Maslow
Type theory
Personality
Personality tests (2 types)
7. Found few sex differences existed that could not be explained by simple social learning; - most consistent difference that seems independent of social influence is that females have greater verbal ability and males have greater visual/spatial ability
Seymour Epstein
Eleanor Maccoby and Carol Jacklin
Walter Mischel and Nancy Cantor
Cognitive prototype approach
8. Characterized by drive - competitiveness - aggressiveness - tension - hostility; found - most common in middle to upper class men
William Sheldon
Matina Horner
Type A personality
Mirrors
9. Experience can change people'S personalities; after a series of events one feels helpless or out of control - negative or pessimistic explanatory style develops; gives up in general - exhibits helpless disposition; countered with learned optimism
Learned helplessness
Consistency paradox
Twin studies
Alfred Adler (personality typology; +types)
10. Androgynous individuals have higher self-esteem - lower anxiety - more adaptability than their highly masculine or feminine counterparts
Mesomorph
Self-handicapping
Bem Sex Role Inventory
Gender and depression
11. Critical of personality trait theory
Somatotypes (personality theory' +types)
Mirrors
Seymour Epstein
Bem Sex Role Inventory
12. A trait; how often one generally becomes self-aware; very - if you pay a lot of attention to your self
George Kelley
Alice Eagly
Henry Murray
Self-consciousness
13. Thematic Apperception Test (TAT)
Mesomorph
Self-monitoring
Henry Murray
Fundamental attribution error
14. At the top a cardinal trait (always consistent) - then central traits - then secondary traits (may conflict)
Nature-nurture debate in terms of personality
Trait hierarchy
Self-handicapping
Gordon Allport
15. Knowing you are worthwhile and in touch with strengths; 50% perceive selves accurately - 35% narcissistically
Self-monitoring
Self-esteem
Seymour Epstein and Walter Mischel
Meyer Friedman and Ray Rosenmean
16. Possessing both male and female qualities
Androgynous
Narcissism
George Kelley
Authoritarianism
17. People who emphasize internal determinants of behavior
Narcissism
dispositionist
Kay Deaux
Internal locus of control
18. Relatively stable characteristics of behavior that a person exhibits (trait is stable - state is more of temporary feeling or characteristics)
Gender and depression
situationists
Seymour Epstein and Walter Mischel
trait
19. The study of why people act the way that they do and why different people act differently
Grant Dahlstrom
Alice Eagly
Bem Sex Role Inventory
Personality
20. Personal constructs determine personality and behaviour
George Kelley
Self-esteem
Nomothetic approach
Authoritarianism
21. Possibility that a person may behave inconsistently - presents problems for labelling people as one internal disposition
Dispositional attribution
Consistency paradox
Big Five
Self-efficacy
22. Cognitive prototype approach
Walter Mischel and Nancy Cantor
Meyer Friedman and Ray Rosenmean
Internal locus of control
Costa and McCrae
23. Learned helplessness
Taxonomies
Martin Seligman
Dispositional attribution
Type theory
24. Women are twice as likely as men to become depressed
Seymour Epstein and Walter Mischel
Lexical approach
Ectomorph
Gender and depression
25. A state; temporary condition of being aware of how you are thinking - feeling or doing
Henry Murray
Self-awareness
Self-esteem
Alice Eagly
26. Belief that one can effectively perform a task
Nature-nurture debate in terms of personality
Personality
Self-efficacy
situationists
27. Originally dominated personality theory (Hippocrates) - many placed into type categories based on physical appearance; including using phrenology and somatotypes
Trait hierarchy
Type theory
Self-monitoring
Personality tests (2 types)
28. Minnesota Multiphasic Personality Inventory (MMPI) and California Personality Inventory (CPI)
Eleanor Maccoby and Carol Jacklin
Nomothetic approach
Cognitive prototype approach
Personality tests (2 types)
29. Allport; his version of the ego - believed it acted relatively consistently based on traits developed through experience
External locus of control
Idiographic approach
Gender and depression
Proprium or propriate function
30. External and internal locus of control
Julian Rotter
Costa and McCrae
Seymour Epstein and Walter Mischel
Self-consciousness
31. Used factor analysis to identify underlying traits of 2 personality-type dimensions (introversion-extraversion and stable-unstable [neuroticism]); - two dimensions formed a cross and four quadrants of phlegmatic - melancholic - choleric - sanguine
Self-monitoring
Hans Eysenck
Barnum effect
personal constructs
32. Organized categorization systems - by statistical techniques for personality
Bem Sex Role Inventory
Idiographic approach
Barnum effect
Taxonomies
33. Generally make people more self-aware; small mirror - not so self-aware since its common - large mirror - very self-aware since we see a view of ourselves as others see us
Mirrors
Learned helplessness
Idiographic approach
Lexical approach
34. Skinny - fragile means inhibited - intellectual
George Kelley
Ectomorph
Raymond Cattell
Gordon Allport
35. Suggested personality typology based on personal activity and social interest; ruling-dominant type (choleric; high-low) - getting-learning type (phlegmatic; low-high) - avoiding type (melancholic; low-low) - and socially useful type (sanguine; high-
Alfred Adler (personality typology; +types)
Self-esteem
Mesomorph
Eleanor Maccoby and Carol Jacklin
36. Scrutiny of own behaviour - motivation to act appropriately rather than honestly - ability to mask true feelings
Personality
Endomorph
Alfred Adler (personality typology; +types)
Self-monitoring
37. Capture individual'S unique - defining characteristics
Idiographic approach
Personality tests (2 types)
Cognitive prototype approach
Mirrors
38. To show personality traits exist in a person - show person exhibits those traits in a variety of situations; cognitive behaviour (e.g. formulation of and attention to prototypes) is examined in social situations; - consistency of behaviour is result
Cognitive prototype approach
Self-esteem
Self-efficacy
Abraham Maslow
39. Studies androgyny; created Bem Sex Role Inventory
Somatotypes (personality theory' +types)
Sandra Bem
Thematic Apperception Test (TAT)
personal constructs
40. Uses large numbers of people to study commonalities of personality
William Sheldon
Self-esteem
Nomothetic approach
Idiographic approach
41. Linked Type A personality to heart disease and other health problems
Grant Dahlstrom
William Sheldon
Matina Horner
Alfred Adler (personality typology; +types)
42. Personality characteristic - causes one to view events as result of luck or fate; too much breeds helplessness
Martin Seligman
External locus of control
Implicit theories (personality)
Twin studies
43. Criticized trait and type theories that both assume behaviour is stable across situations and people fail to take circumstances into account; - studies show that people often act different in different situations; consistency paradox
Type A personality
Abraham Maslow
Seymour Epstein and Walter Mischel
Mesomorph
44. In the forefront -a combination of stable - internal factors and situations
Sandra Bem
interactionists
Consistency paradox
Fundamental attribution error
45. Ambiguous story cards - people project own 'needs'
Self-consciousness
Self-efficacy
Thematic Apperception Test (TAT)
Self-esteem
46. The disposition to view the world as full of power relationships - measured by the F-scale (Fascism scale); - these individuals are either highly domineering (if top dog of situation) or submissive (as if they are in presence of a more powerfulfigure
Self-efficacy
Grant Dahlstrom
dispositionist
Authoritarianism
47. Personality changes little after age 30
Phrenology
Henry Murray
Costa and McCrae
William Sheldon
48. Picking all possible traits out of dictionary
Lexical approach
Self-esteem
situationists
trait
49. Conscious ideas about the self - others and situations
Seymour Epstein
Mesomorph
Taxonomies
personal constructs
50. Sheldon - Somatotypes' short - plump means pleasure-seeking - social
Consistency paradox
Androgynous
Endomorph
Henry Murray