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27 Cards in this Set
- Front
- Back
Homunculus
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Little person in one's head, once believed to be responsible for performing mental activities.
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Behavioral Consistency
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The degree to which one's behavior is consistent across situations.
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Self-determination
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The degree to which one believes that the cause of behavior lies within the person.
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Me
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According to William James, the aspect of the self containing everything we hold dear, and so this includes not just our personality traits, but also our body, home, possessions, and even family members.
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Psychological Self
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Your self-image and your need to maintain it may influence your behavior and organize your vast array of memories about yourself and your impressions and judgments of other people.
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Declarative Knowledge
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The facts and impressions that we consciously know and can describe.
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Procedural Knowledge
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Knowledge expressed through actions rather than words.
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Relational Self
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Procedual self-knowledge related to styles of relating to others.
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Implicit Self
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Unconscious self-knowledge.
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Declarative Self
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Comprises all of your (conscious) knowledge or opinions about your own personality traits.
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Procedural Knowledge
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Knowledge expressed through actions rather than words.
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Relational self
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Procedual self-knowledge related to styles of relating to others.
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Implicit Self
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Unconscious self-knowledge.
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Declarative self
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Comprises all of your (conscious) knowledge or opinions about your own personality traits.
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Self-esteem
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Your overall opinion about whether you are good or bad, worthy or unworthy, or somewhere in between.
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Self-schema
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Everything you know, or think you know, about your traits and abilities.
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Narcissism
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Trait in which self-esteem becomes too high.
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Rehearsal
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Repeating something over and over in your mind.
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Self-Reference effect
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The enhancement of long-term memory that comes from thinking of how information relates to the self.
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Self-discrepancy theory
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Perspective that you have three kinds of self-relevant schemas, and their interaction determines how you feel about life.
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Ideal self
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Your view of what you could be at your best.
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Ought self
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Your view of what you should—as opposed to what you would like—to be.
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Procedural self
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Unique aspects of what you do.
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Relational self-schemas
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Self-schemas based on past experience that direct how we relate with each of the important people in our lives.
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Implicit Association Test
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Instrument used to measure relational selves and other implicit aspects of the self-concept.
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Implicit self-esteem
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Unconscious form of self-esteem.
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Working self-concept
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The view of the continuously changing self.
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