Module 3
Module 3
Superego
The aspect of personality that represents a
person’s conscience
Evaluates right from wrong
Develops about age 5 or 6
Learned from parents, teachers, other
significant figures
Freud also explored ways in which personality developed
during childhood…
Psychosexual development theory
--series of stages that children pass through
--pleasure or gratification is focused particular biological function or
body part on a
5 main stages
1) oral (birth to 12-18 months)
2) anal (12-18 months to 3 years)
3) Phallic (3 to 5-6 years)
4) Latency (5-6 years to adolescence)
5) Genital (adolescence to adulthood)
Erik Erikson (1902-1994): Psychoanalytic
Theory
Eight psychosocial stages in the lifespan
Trust v. mistrust
Autonomy v. shame/doubt
Initiative v. guilt
Industry v. inferiority
Identity v. confusion
Intimacy v. isolation
Generativity v. stagnation
Integrity v. despair
Erikson’s Theory
Psychosocial
Stage Age Psychosexual Virtue Danger
Crisis
Trust vs.
Infancy to age 2 Oral/ Sensory Hope Withdrawal
Mistrust
Autonomy vs.
Early 2-3 Muscular/ Anal Will Compulsion/
Shame
Initiative vs.
Play Age 3-5 Locomotor/ Purpose Inhibition
Guilt
Industry vs.
School Age 6-12 Latency Competence Inertia
Inferiority
Identity vs.
Adolescence 12-18 Puberty Identity Fidelity Role Repudiation
Confusion
Intimacy vs.
Young 19-35 Love Exclusivity
Isolation
Generativity
Adulthood 35-65 vs.Stagnati Care Rejectivity
on
Integrity vs.
Old Age after 65 Wisdom Disdain
Despair
In Erikson’s Psychosocial theory…
Each stage emerges as a fixed pattern
that is similar for all people
Each stage presents a crisis or conflict
that each individual must address
sufficiently at a particular stage
No crisis is ever fully resolved, making
life complicated
UNLIKE FREUD, Erickson believed that
development continued throughout the
lifespan
Assessing the psychodynamic
perspective
Pros
Contemporary psychology
research supports the idea that
unconscious memories have an
influence on our behavior
Erickson’s view that development
continues throughout the lifespan
is highly important and supported
by research
Assessing the psychodynamic
perspective, continued
Cons
Idea that people pass through stages in
childhood that determine their adult
personality has little research support
Freud’s research based on small sample
of upper middle class Austrians
Freud’s theory male focused/sexist
Both too vague to test, problems with
operational definitions
Behavioral Theories
Ivan Pavlov: Classical Conditioning
Pair a neutral stimulus (CS)with a stimulus (UCS)
that automatically produces a response (UCR).
John B. Watson: Emotional responses can be
classically conditioned (Little Albert).