Publication | Closed Access
Interaction Concepts of Personality.
695
Citations
0
References
1970
Year
Human BehaviourSocial PsychologyEducationTrait TheoryPsychologySocial SciencesPersonality DisorderPersonality DevelopmentCharacter PsychologyBehavioral SciencesSullivanian BaseApplied Social PsychologyBehavior CharacteristicSullivanian ConceptionsPersonality PsychologyInteraction ConceptsSocial BehaviorHuman Behavior (Behavioral Psychology)Human Behavior (French Literary Studies)Personality SciencePsychopathology
Personality research is notoriously complex, with few empirically valid generalizations and a lack of shared language and conceptual systems at the time of publication. Carson’s 1969 book introduced an empirically grounded, systematic framework that reinterprets Sullivanian interpersonal personality theory into a more complete, observable‑event‑based model for analyzing and explaining human transactions. The book synthesizes empirical findings and conceptual insights from psychology and social sciences into a comprehensive account of socially significant personal conduct, integrating trends from behavior theory, personality, social psychology, and behavior disorder.
Personality is an intimidatingly complex area of human behaviour, where empirically valid generalizations are not easily established or formulated, and where investigators at the time of publication were themselves a long way from the development of a commonly shared language and conceptual system. Originally published in 1969, Dr Carson’s book provided, for the first time, an empirically grounded, systematic framework to analyse, describe, and to some extent explain the transactions that occur between people from a standpoint of a personologist. The author starts from a Sullivanian base, which views personality as a largely interpersonal phenomenon. He then reformulates Sullivanian conceptions into a more complete framework, one more firmly tied to observable events or empirically testable hypotheses. This work represents a unique effort to integrate, from available empirical findings and conceptual formulations within psychology and the social sciences, a comprehensive account of socially significant personal conduct. It brings together, within an integrating framework, diverse trends from modern behaviour theory, personality, social psychology, and behaviour disorder.