Handbook of personality psychology [[electronic resource] /] / edited by Robert Hogan, John Johnson, Stephen Briggs |
Pubbl/distr/stampa | San Diego, : Academic Press, c1997 |
Descrizione fisica | 1 online resource (1012 p.) |
Disciplina |
155.2
155.2 20 158.1 |
Altri autori (Persone) |
HoganRobert <1937->
JohnsonJohn (John A.) BriggsStephen R |
Soggetto topico |
Personality
Individuality |
Soggetto genere / forma | Electronic books. |
ISBN |
1-281-03269-7
9786611032692 0-08-053317-5 |
Formato | Materiale a stampa |
Livello bibliografico | Monografia |
Lingua di pubblicazione | eng |
Nota di contenuto |
Front Cover; Handbook of Personality Psychology; Copyright Page; Contents; Contributors; Preface; Part I: Introduction Nature of Personality Psychology; Chapter 1. A Conceptual History of Personality Psychology; I. Personaltty Psychology's Unique Features: Holism, Motivation, and Individual Differences; II. Historical Roots: Before the 1930s; III. The Formation of Systems: 1930-1950; IV. The Elaboration of Constructs: 1950-1970; V. Doubt and A Renewal of Conhdence: 1970 to the Present; VI. Conclusions: Progress and Stagnation; References
Chapter 2. Studying Lives: Psychobiography and the Conceptual Structure of Personality PsychologyI. Introduction; II. The Conceptual Structure of Personality Psychology; III. Progress in Psychobiographical Inquiry; IV. Relationships Between the Study of Lives and Other Areas of Personality Psychology; V. The Study of Lives as A ""son Synthesis"" in Psychology; VI. Conclusion; References; Part II: Conceptual and Measurement Issues in Personality; Chapter 3. Units of Analysis for the Description and Explanation of Personality; I. The Need for Units of Analysis; II. Traits as Units of Analysis III. Issues in the Assessment of TraitsIV. Alternatives To Traits; References; Chapter 4. In Defense of Traits; I. Theories and Viewpoints; II. Traits as Ahributes of Behavior; III. Traits as Attributes of Persons; IV. Traits as Predictors of Behavior; V. Traits as Explanations of Behavior; References; Chapter 5. Individuals and the Differences Between Them; I. Why Individual Differences Research Cannot Advance Personality Theory; II. Some Issues in Need of Clarification; III. ""idiothetic"" Inquiry as An Alternative To Traditional ""nomotheticism""; References Chapter 6. Personality Measurement: Reliability and Validity IssuesI. The Nature of Personality Construas: Basic Issues; II. Reliability; III. Validity; IV. Conclusion; References; Chapter 7. Personality Influences on the Choice of Situations; I. What Does ""choosing Situations"" Mean?; II. Conceptual and Methodological Issues; III. Assessing the Dimensions of Social Situations; IV. Understanding Individuals in Terms of Situational Choices; V. Conclusion; References; Part III: Developmental Issues; Chapter 8. Stages of Personality Development; I. Measurement of Personality II. Personality Stages and TypesIII. Kohlberg: Stages of Moral Judgment; IV. A Stage-Type Theory: Ego Development; V. Stages of Ego Development; VI. Sources of Error; VII. Stages Versus Factors; References; Chapter 9. The Emotional Basis of Early Personality Development: Implications for the Emergent Self-Concept; I. The Emotional Basis of Early Personality Development; II. Infant Personality Development: First Signs of the Self-Concept; III. The Transition Between Infancy and Childhood: Toddlers' Social Understanding; IV. Personality Development in Early Childhood V. Putting It All Together: A Model of Personality Development |
Record Nr. | UNINA-9910480219803321 |
San Diego, : Academic Press, c1997 | ||
Materiale a stampa | ||
Lo trovi qui: Univ. Federico II | ||
|
Handbook of personality psychology [[electronic resource] /] / edited by Robert Hogan, John Johnson, Stephen Briggs |
Pubbl/distr/stampa | San Diego, : Academic Press, c1997 |
Descrizione fisica | 1 online resource (1012 p.) |
Disciplina |
155.2
155.2 20 158.1 |
Altri autori (Persone) |
HoganRobert <1937->
JohnsonJohn (John A.) BriggsStephen R |
Soggetto topico |
Personality
Individuality |
ISBN |
1-281-03269-7
9786611032692 0-08-053317-5 |
Formato | Materiale a stampa |
Livello bibliografico | Monografia |
Lingua di pubblicazione | eng |
Nota di contenuto |
Front Cover; Handbook of Personality Psychology; Copyright Page; Contents; Contributors; Preface; Part I: Introduction Nature of Personality Psychology; Chapter 1. A Conceptual History of Personality Psychology; I. Personaltty Psychology's Unique Features: Holism, Motivation, and Individual Differences; II. Historical Roots: Before the 1930s; III. The Formation of Systems: 1930-1950; IV. The Elaboration of Constructs: 1950-1970; V. Doubt and A Renewal of Conhdence: 1970 to the Present; VI. Conclusions: Progress and Stagnation; References
Chapter 2. Studying Lives: Psychobiography and the Conceptual Structure of Personality PsychologyI. Introduction; II. The Conceptual Structure of Personality Psychology; III. Progress in Psychobiographical Inquiry; IV. Relationships Between the Study of Lives and Other Areas of Personality Psychology; V. The Study of Lives as A ""son Synthesis"" in Psychology; VI. Conclusion; References; Part II: Conceptual and Measurement Issues in Personality; Chapter 3. Units of Analysis for the Description and Explanation of Personality; I. The Need for Units of Analysis; II. Traits as Units of Analysis III. Issues in the Assessment of TraitsIV. Alternatives To Traits; References; Chapter 4. In Defense of Traits; I. Theories and Viewpoints; II. Traits as Ahributes of Behavior; III. Traits as Attributes of Persons; IV. Traits as Predictors of Behavior; V. Traits as Explanations of Behavior; References; Chapter 5. Individuals and the Differences Between Them; I. Why Individual Differences Research Cannot Advance Personality Theory; II. Some Issues in Need of Clarification; III. ""idiothetic"" Inquiry as An Alternative To Traditional ""nomotheticism""; References Chapter 6. Personality Measurement: Reliability and Validity IssuesI. The Nature of Personality Construas: Basic Issues; II. Reliability; III. Validity; IV. Conclusion; References; Chapter 7. Personality Influences on the Choice of Situations; I. What Does ""choosing Situations"" Mean?; II. Conceptual and Methodological Issues; III. Assessing the Dimensions of Social Situations; IV. Understanding Individuals in Terms of Situational Choices; V. Conclusion; References; Part III: Developmental Issues; Chapter 8. Stages of Personality Development; I. Measurement of Personality II. Personality Stages and TypesIII. Kohlberg: Stages of Moral Judgment; IV. A Stage-Type Theory: Ego Development; V. Stages of Ego Development; VI. Sources of Error; VII. Stages Versus Factors; References; Chapter 9. The Emotional Basis of Early Personality Development: Implications for the Emergent Self-Concept; I. The Emotional Basis of Early Personality Development; II. Infant Personality Development: First Signs of the Self-Concept; III. The Transition Between Infancy and Childhood: Toddlers' Social Understanding; IV. Personality Development in Early Childhood V. Putting It All Together: A Model of Personality Development |
Record Nr. | UNINA-9910784633103321 |
San Diego, : Academic Press, c1997 | ||
Materiale a stampa | ||
Lo trovi qui: Univ. Federico II | ||
|
Handbook of personality psychology [[electronic resource] /] / edited by Robert Hogan, John Johnson, Stephen Briggs |
Pubbl/distr/stampa | San Diego, : Academic Press, c1997 |
Descrizione fisica | 1 online resource (1012 p.) |
Disciplina |
155.2
155.2 20 158.1 |
Altri autori (Persone) |
HoganRobert <1937->
JohnsonJohn (John A.) BriggsStephen R |
Soggetto topico |
Personality
Individuality |
ISBN |
1-281-03269-7
9786611032692 0-08-053317-5 |
Formato | Materiale a stampa |
Livello bibliografico | Monografia |
Lingua di pubblicazione | eng |
Nota di contenuto |
Front Cover; Handbook of Personality Psychology; Copyright Page; Contents; Contributors; Preface; Part I: Introduction Nature of Personality Psychology; Chapter 1. A Conceptual History of Personality Psychology; I. Personaltty Psychology's Unique Features: Holism, Motivation, and Individual Differences; II. Historical Roots: Before the 1930s; III. The Formation of Systems: 1930-1950; IV. The Elaboration of Constructs: 1950-1970; V. Doubt and A Renewal of Conhdence: 1970 to the Present; VI. Conclusions: Progress and Stagnation; References
Chapter 2. Studying Lives: Psychobiography and the Conceptual Structure of Personality PsychologyI. Introduction; II. The Conceptual Structure of Personality Psychology; III. Progress in Psychobiographical Inquiry; IV. Relationships Between the Study of Lives and Other Areas of Personality Psychology; V. The Study of Lives as A ""son Synthesis"" in Psychology; VI. Conclusion; References; Part II: Conceptual and Measurement Issues in Personality; Chapter 3. Units of Analysis for the Description and Explanation of Personality; I. The Need for Units of Analysis; II. Traits as Units of Analysis III. Issues in the Assessment of TraitsIV. Alternatives To Traits; References; Chapter 4. In Defense of Traits; I. Theories and Viewpoints; II. Traits as Ahributes of Behavior; III. Traits as Attributes of Persons; IV. Traits as Predictors of Behavior; V. Traits as Explanations of Behavior; References; Chapter 5. Individuals and the Differences Between Them; I. Why Individual Differences Research Cannot Advance Personality Theory; II. Some Issues in Need of Clarification; III. ""idiothetic"" Inquiry as An Alternative To Traditional ""nomotheticism""; References Chapter 6. Personality Measurement: Reliability and Validity IssuesI. The Nature of Personality Construas: Basic Issues; II. Reliability; III. Validity; IV. Conclusion; References; Chapter 7. Personality Influences on the Choice of Situations; I. What Does ""choosing Situations"" Mean?; II. Conceptual and Methodological Issues; III. Assessing the Dimensions of Social Situations; IV. Understanding Individuals in Terms of Situational Choices; V. Conclusion; References; Part III: Developmental Issues; Chapter 8. Stages of Personality Development; I. Measurement of Personality II. Personality Stages and TypesIII. Kohlberg: Stages of Moral Judgment; IV. A Stage-Type Theory: Ego Development; V. Stages of Ego Development; VI. Sources of Error; VII. Stages Versus Factors; References; Chapter 9. The Emotional Basis of Early Personality Development: Implications for the Emergent Self-Concept; I. The Emotional Basis of Early Personality Development; II. Infant Personality Development: First Signs of the Self-Concept; III. The Transition Between Infancy and Childhood: Toddlers' Social Understanding; IV. Personality Development in Early Childhood V. Putting It All Together: A Model of Personality Development |
Record Nr. | UNINA-9910823149703321 |
San Diego, : Academic Press, c1997 | ||
Materiale a stampa | ||
Lo trovi qui: Univ. Federico II | ||
|