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  2. Immutable characteristic - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Immutable_characteristic

    An immutable characteristic is any physical attribute perceived as unchangeable, entrenched and innate. The term is often used to describe segments of the population that share such attributes and are contrasted with others by those attributes, and is used in human rights law to classify protected groups of people who should be protected from civil or criminal actions directed against those ...

  3. Big Five personality traits - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Big_Five_personality_traits

    The result was a list of 4504 adjectives they believed were descriptive of observable and relatively permanent traits. [ 37 ] In 1943, Raymond Cattell of Harvard University took Allport and Odbert's list and reduced this to a list of roughly 160 terms by eliminating words with very similar meanings.

  4. Implicit theories of intelligence - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Implicit_theories_of...

    Research into implicit theories of intelligence has led to additional discoveries expanding the idea of entity vs incremental mindset to other areas outside of just intelligence. Views about intelligence are just a single manifestation of a more general entity or incremental mindset which reveals a great deal about a person's view of the world ...

  5. Personality change - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Personality_change

    Definition of personality [ edit ] Personality , one's characteristic way of feeling, behaving and thinking, is often conceptualized as a person's standing on each Big Five personality trait ( extraversion , neuroticism , openness to experience , agreeableness and conscientiousness ).

  6. Identification (psychology) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Identification_(psychology)

    Identification is a psychological process whereby the individual assimilates an aspect, property, or attribute of the other and is transformed wholly or partially by the model that other provides.

  7. Counterfactual thinking - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Counterfactual_thinking

    Counterfactual thinking is a concept in psychology that involves the human tendency to create possible alternatives to life events that have already occurred; something that is contrary to what actually happened.

  8. Idealization and devaluation - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Idealization_and_devaluation

    The term idealization first appeared in connection with Freud's definition of narcissism. Freud's vision was that all human infants pass through a phase of primary narcissism in which they assume they are the centre of their universe. To obtain the parents' love the child comes to do what they think the parents value.

  9. Individuation - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Individuation

    In analytical psychology, individuation is the process by which the individual self develops out of an undifferentiated unconscious – seen as a developmental psychic process during which innate elements of personality, the components of the immature psyche, and the experiences of the person's life become, if the process is more or less successful, integrated over time into a well-functioning ...