Personality and Individual Differences
Personality and Individual Differences
Personality and Individual Differences
Situational Consistency
Individual characteristics will be similar in different situations only if
(a) the situations are similar or
(b) the characteristics have produced similar outcomes
in these situations in the past
Stability:
Considerable evidence suggest it is stable and enduring over time.
The overall profile or combination of characteristics that capture the unique
nature of a person as that person reacts and interacts with others.
Heredity
◦ Study of identical twins
◦ Assessments of newborns
◦ Genes
Environment
◦ Social exposures
◦ Physiological forces
◦ Socioeconomic factors
• Heredity and environment.
◦ Social factors include family life, religion, and many kinds of formal
and informal groups.
Chris Argyris notes that people develop along a continuum of dimensions from
immaturity to maturity
Argyris believes that many organizations treat mature adults as if they were still
immature and this creates many problems in terms of bringing out the best in
employees
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Extraversion Conscientiousness
Personality
Openness to
Agreeableness
experience
Emotional stability
Research has shown that emotionally stable individuals tend to have an edge
in task performance across a large number of occupations
Adapter Challenger
Trusting Co- Agreeableness Rude, cold
operative soft- Uncaring
hearted
Flexible sloppy,
Focused dependable, Conscientiousness inefficient, careless
efficient, organized
Unstable
Stable Self-
Emotional stability Anxious, angry
confident,
depressed
relaxed, secure
Preserver,
Explorer Openness to Experience Unimaginative,
Imaginative,
conventional, habit
curious, broad
bound
minded
E = extraversion, C = Conscientiousness,
A = Agreeableness, ES = Emotional stability
O = Openness to experience
A “++” indicates the higher scores on a trait appear to have a very
significant effect on the listed competency
A “-” that a lower level of a trait appear to promote the competency
Parentheses are used in some cases where some aspects of a trait are
associated with the listed competency but the overall trait is not
(see slides 22 and 23)
Exhibit 5-2 The Big Five and High-Involvement Management
Competencies Description Big Five Traits*
For Managers
Delegating to Patience in providing information E+ C+ A- ES+ O+
others and support when empowering
others, but also the ability to
confront individuals when there is a
Developing others problem
Interest in sharing information, E+ (C+) A++ ES+ (O+)
ability to coach and train, and
interest in helping others plan
careersto bring out the best in other
Motivating others Ability E++ C+ (A+) ES+
people, desire to recognize
contributions of others, and in
general an interest in others
Isabel Myers and her mother Katherine Briggs revived the idea of temperaments
and devised Meyers and Briggs Type Indicator, a tool for identifying sixteen
different patterns of behavior.
The type indicators as identified by Jung were:
Extraversion( E), Introversion (I); Sensation (S) Intuition (N); Thinking(T) Feeling (F);
Perceiving (P), and judging (J).
1. A person is neither one or the other of these four pairs. Each person has some
degree of both the opposing pairs
Extraverts Introverts
Acts and then (may be) reflects Reflects then (may be ) act
E’s may be seen shallow to I’s I’s may seen withdrawn to E’s
Are ways of taking information. The sensing function takes information by way of
five senses, the intuition function takes information by sixth sense
Intuition ( N)
Sensing (S)
Like things that are definite, Like opportunities for being inventive
and measurable
Starts at the beginning, takes Jumps every where, leaps over steps
a step at a time
When interviewing someone for Not much interested in what applicant has
job, would want to know type of done but what he could for the organization
experience applicant has had
The N’s see S as plodding, too slow to The S’s see N as flighty, impractical and
see future possibilities unrealistic
Thinking Vs. Feeling
Are ways of making decisions. The thinking function decides on the basis of logic and objective
consideration. The Feeling decides on the basis of personal subjective values.
•When T becomes emotional, body •Tends to make their emotions more visible. Their
reactions are not noticed by others . The T hands become moist, color flushes or drains from
person gets embarrassed by a show of his face, body trembles, heart beat faster, others
intense emotions become affected by this
•Feelersmay consider thinkers as heartless, •Thinkers may consider Feelers as too soft
have ice in their veins hearted,illogical fuzzy thinkers.
Judging Vs Perceiving
Are complimentary life style. Judging life style is decisive, planned and orderly. A perceptive life
style is flexible, adaptable and spontaneous
Judging (J) Perception (P)
Enjoys being decisive
Enjoys being curious, discovering surprises
Likes clear limits and categories
High Machs manipulate more, win more, are persuaded less and persuade others more
The successful outcomes of high Machs behavior depends upon:
e
◦ Degree to which people attempt to present the image they think
others want to see in the given situation
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EXHIBIT 4-4
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The “myth of rationality”
◦ Organizations are not emotion-free.
Emotions of any kind are disruptive to
organizations.
◦ Original OB focus was solely on the effects of
strong negative emotions that interfered with
individual and organizational efficiency.
Emotions Moods
Intense feelings that are Feelings that tend to be
directed at someone or less intense than emotions
something. and that lack a contextual
stimulus.
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© 2003 Prentice Hall Inc. All rights 4–
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© 2003 Prentice Hall Inc. All rights 4–
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Variety of emotions
◦ Positive
◦ Negative
Intensity of emotions
◦ Personality
◦ Job Requirements
Frequency and duration of emotions
◦ How often emotions are exhibited.
◦ How long emotions are displayed.
EXHIBIT 4-6
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Women
◦ Can show greater emotional expression.
◦ Experience emotions more intensely.
◦ Display emotions more frequently.
◦ Are more comfortable in expressing emotions.
◦ Are better at reading others’ emotions.
Men
◦ Believe that displaying emotions is inconsistent with the
male image.
◦ Are innately less able to read and to identify with others’
emotions.
◦ Have less need to seek social approval by showing positive
emotions.
Individual
Emotions