Portfolio search engine based on personal construct system

Author(s):  
Chen-Chung Liu ◽  
Ping-Hsing Don ◽  
Ren-Zuo You ◽  
Baw-Jhiune Liu
2009 ◽  
Vol 35 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Kirsty-Lee McLellan ◽  
Koos Uys

This study is aimed at exploring how self-employed women cope in balancing their dual roles as mothers and executives. Through the elicitation of constructs by making use of Kelly’s repertory grid technique, the personal construct system of five self-employed white women in Gauteng across varying industries was established. While being successful dual earners, they still bore the primary responsibility for nurturing their families and assuring their well-being. The successful balancing of their dual roles was attributed to the following central themes, which emerged from all the participants: quality time spent with children and family, structure and planning, coping with guilt, support structures and self-reliance, and balance between work and life.


1971 ◽  
Vol 118 (544) ◽  
pp. 297-300 ◽  
Author(s):  
Dorothy Rowe

In Personal Construct Theory (Kelly, 1955), a person is considered to describe and predict his perception of the world by using bi-polar constructs which form an integrated system. In clinical practice it is possible to elicit from a patient not only a description of his environment in his own constructs but also an account of how he uses his construct system to predict future events. The following study shows how an assessment of the patient's construct system is useful in evaluating the outcome by therapy.


1985 ◽  
Vol 15 (1) ◽  
pp. 1-13 ◽  
Author(s):  
Robert L. Woodfield ◽  
Linda L. Viney

Kelly's theory of personal constructs has been applied to generate an explanation of the normal processes of grief and mourning, using widowhood as an example. The psychological states characteristic of widowhood–shock and numbness, stress, anger, anxiety, guilt, sadness, despair, hostility, idealization, depression, and psychological reorganization–are viewed as manifestations of changes in parts of the widow's personal construct system. These changes involve the processes of personal construct dislocation and adaptation. Dislocation refers to the real or apparent failure of the widow's construct system to embrace the new events associated with her husband's death. Adaptation involves two processes, assimilation and accommodation. This proposal of concurrent processes of personal construct dislocation and adaptation differs from the phase-oriented approaches to bereavement. It also encourages the widow's active coping with her bereavement reaction.


1983 ◽  
Vol 52 (1) ◽  
pp. 101-102
Author(s):  
Jerome Tobacyk

110 college students were given the Paranormal Belief Scale and a 10 (people) × 15 (constructs) form of Kelly's (1955) Role Construct Repertory Grid from which a measure of cognitive complexity (differentiation of the person's personal construct system) was derived. Contrary to hypothesis, no relationship was found between cognitive complexity scores and endorsement of paranormal beliefs.


2003 ◽  
Vol 46 (4) ◽  
pp. 323-333 ◽  
Author(s):  
Todd K. Shackelford

According to G. A. Kelly's (1955) Personal Construct Theory, people construe the elements of reality along bipolar meaning dimensions (e.g., sad–happy) to make reality more predictable. People are threatened by personal death when their conception of death along these dimensions is inconsistent with their conception of their self. S. R. Krieger, F. R. Epting, and L. M. Leitner (1974) developed the “Threat Index” (TI) to assess “death threat.” To complete the TI, a person indicates on several bipolar meaning dimensions on which pole he or she construes “yourself.” The person indicates on a separate form their views about personal death, “as if it were to occur at this time in your life,” on the same dimensions. The TI is scored by summing the number of “splits” in which “self” and “death” are placed at opposite ends of a dimension. Death threat is greater with more splits, because the number of these splits indicates the extent to which the construct system must be reorganized to construe death as a personal eventuality. I review evidence that the TI is a reliable and valid measure of death orientation and is uniquely suited to assess Kellian death threat. To showcase the heuristic value of Kelly's theory and the utility of the TI as an assessment of death threat, I review research testing and supporting the hypothesis that people who score high (relative to those who score low) in death threat display a denial orientation toward death-relevant stimuli.


Psichologija ◽  
2004 ◽  
Vol 30 ◽  
pp. 59-75
Author(s):  
Dalia Kujalienė

Straipsnio tikslas yra parodyti repertuarinių gardelių technikos (RGT), kaip Aš sistemos tyrimo metodo galimybes, atlikus trijų individualių atvejų analizę. RGT, kuri yra pagrįsta G. A. Kelly’o asmenybės konstruktų teorija, leidžia suderinti nomotetinės ir ideografinės psichodiagnostikos principus, atskleisti unikalų asmenybės Aš sistemos turinį, struktūrą, savigarbos lygį. Tyrimui naudotas RGT variantas – įvertinimų gardelė. Atlikta individualių duomenų koreliacinė analizė, apskaičiuoti konstruktų intensyvumo balai ir gardelės sąryšio balas, tiriamųjų Aš sistemos pavaizduotos grafiškai. Trys pateikti atvejai atspindi skirtingą tiriamųjų Aš sistemos turinį, struktūrą ir savęs vertinimą. Savęs interpretavimui tiriamieji naudoja įvairius konstruktų rinkinius. Atsiskleidė trys skirtingos Aš sistemos struktūros – monolitinė, integruotoji ir difuzinė. Koreliacijos tarp realaus ir idealaus Aš koeficientas atskleidė tiriamųjų savigarbos lygį. Išryškėjo vienas bendras visiems tiriamiesiems bruožas –  „privalomojo Aš“ reikšmingumas Aš sistemoje. Rezultatai padeda suprasti problemas, su kuriomis tiriamieji gali susidurti. THE POSSIBILITIES OF REPERTORY GRID TECHNIQUE AS A METHOD OF RESEARCH OF THE SELF-SYSTEMDalia Kujalienė SummarySelf is a topic of great interest and very widely researched problem in psychology. Nevertheless after a century of researches and discussions there is no theory and definition of the self which would agree most of scholars with. Very viable is distinction between two fundamental aspects of the self, the “I” and the “Me”, self as a subject and self as an object. I-self is the knower, the active agent responsible for constructing of the Me-self. “I” initiates and controls activity, processes information about self. “Me” represents all things known about self. “Me” came to be labeled the self-concept and has received major attention of researchers. There are many definitions of the selfconcept. Discussions about its nature, structure and influence on the functioning of a person are still continuing. One can find very little agreement in consideration of these questions. It is possible to trace out three common themes that almost all scholars recognize: knowledge about the self, evaluation of self and feelings towards self. Because of theoretical confusion there is no satisfactory method of research of self-concept. Various theoretical models of the selfconcept are in essence sets of dimensions which are invented by authors. Researches using the methods, based on these models, almost always confirm theoretical presumptions. The question arises: are these dimensions really those which exhaustively reveal true content and structure of self-concept? Some authors question the purposefulness of nomotethic investigation in this area and suggest to change the point of view to the problem from researcher’s perspective to the perspective of participants, and apply ideographic, phenomenological methods for the research of self.One of the method of the investigation of self, poorly known in Lithuania, is repertory grid technique based on G. A. Kelly’s personal construct theory.From the standpoint of personal construct theory self can be treated in three ways: 1) as an object (element) that can be evaluated by some dimensions, 2) as construct “Me – not-Me” (construct is a dimensijon used by the person for interpreting of himself and surrounding world), other objects can be evaluated as “like Me” and “not like Me”; 3) as a system of constructs – self-system, the sum of constructs related with the pole “Me” of construct “Me – not-Me”. Selfsystem is the central part of personal construct system and influences all its functioning. As every construct system self-system is just one of possible ways of interpreting of self and thus it may be not accurate and adequate. The main function of self-system is to help the person to predict his reactions to future events and to control his needs, emotions and actions.Repertory grid technique allows to reveal unique individual content, structure and evaluative aspects of the self-system and thus shows person’s view to himself from his own perspective. In order to investigate the self-system two schemes may be used. First, when various aspects of the self (Me as I am, as I would like to be, as I ought to be, etc.) are used as elements. Second, when various aspects of the self are used as constructs. In this case other people important to the person under investigation are used as elements. The content of self-system can be revealed through constructs that are related to different aspects of the self. The structure of self-system can be find out, analisying relationships of constructs. The evaluative aspect of self-system becomes clear from the relationship between real and ideal self.The aim of this paper is to demonstrate the possibilities of repertory grid technique as a method of research of the self-system by presenting three individual cases. The rating grid was used. The scheme of investigation: 1. filling in of the list of elements; 2. construct elicitation using dyads of elements; one of elements always was “Me as I am”; 3. rating of elements on each construct on 5 point scale. The result of this process – an element by construct matrix of ratings that could be analysed by various methods of mathematical statistic. Correlation analysis was performed. Intensity and relation scores were computed. The graphical representation of self-systems was presented.Three given cases represent very different content and structure of the self-system and self-evaluation of participants. Each participant used different set of constructs for self-interpretation. Three types of the structure of self-system were revealed: monolithic, integrated and diffuse. Through the correlation between real and ideal self the level of self-evaluation emerged. One common feature of participants was detected – the importance of “ought self”. Results help to understand the personal problems that participants can face with.


1985 ◽  
Vol 15 (2) ◽  
pp. 139-144 ◽  
Author(s):  
Paul J. Robinson ◽  
Keith Wood

In the past, fear of death and death anxiety have been shown to be directly related to how well “own death” has been integrated into an individual's personal construct system. Other, more recent evidence, has demonstrated that fear of death and death anxiety are also influenced by the degree to which an individual has actualized his/her life goals. The present study, designed to investigate the role of actualization and integration, provides clear evidence that actualization and integration have an additive effect on fear of death and death anxiety.


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