Lecture 3 Notes 1
Lecture 3 Notes 1
Extraversion:
Enthusiasm &
Assertiveness
Lecture Notes 3
This lecture covers the first of the Big Five personality traits: extraversion.
In terms of behavior, people who are high in extraversion are sociable, fun-loving, talkative, and
spontaneous. People who are low in extraversion (also known as introversion) are reserved,
inhibited, quiet, and aloof. This trait is normally distributed, meaning that most people fall
somewhere in between these two extremes.
Dr. Peterson also discusses the concept of delay discounting, the functions of positive emotion,
and what happens when there is an excess of positive emotion.
What is extraversion?
Because we solve the problem of how to weigh the present against the future with our
temperaments, it’s helpful to think about this at the population level. A population of humans
with a normally distributed tendency to experience positive emotion about the present is likely to
be able to handle the changing environment and therefore adapt to their current situation.
Some of the strongest human rewards are social in nature, meaning they are due to affiliation
and status. Enthusiasm as motivation for affiliation and assertiveness is motivation for
social status. Although social behavior is one of the most obvious cues to a person’s
extraversion, extraverts also tend to pursue negative rewards like sex, drugs, and gambling.
Delay discounting is a research method used to determine how much people value the present
over the future. In delay discounting experiments, people are asked whether they would like a
small amount of money now or a larger amount of money in the future. Their answers reveal
how much they value the present over the future.
The probability with which you can predict what the future will look like decreases with its
distance from the present. To account for this, we’re biased in varying degrees toward the
present. Extraverts value the present more highly and tend to discount the future more, while
the opposite is true of introverts.
Positive and negative emotion help orient you as you work toward achieving your goals.
Your mind acts as a series of maps that specify a journey. These maps help you perceive goals
and aims, understand where you are, and calculate a path forward. Positive and negative
emotion function to help you understand your location relative to your goals and to motivate you
toward or away from them. We perceive those emotions as a measure of how effective and valid
the map is.
We calibrate our emotions, both positive and negative, based on the emotions of those around
us. The optimal state of being, however, is not to be happy or to maximize positive emotion.
Instead, the goal is to be appropriately happy based on current circumstances. Additionally,
studies have shown that humans don’t crave happiness, but freedom from suffering (which are
two separate concepts).
People who are extremely high in extraversion can struggle with impulsive and risky behavior,
including gambling, drugs, and unprotected sex. Because they value the present so highly,
they’re wired to exploit it, often at the expense of the future. Extreme extraverts act almost
exclusively in pursuit of current impulses.
Key Takeaways
1. Extraversion is the Big Five personality trait associated with positive emotion and is
composed of two aspects: enthusiasm and assertiveness.
○ Extraverted individuals know how to lead and tend to be the first to act in any
given situation. They can also keep their head in a crisis and are highly
persuasive.
6. Motivations establish goals, while emotions keep you on track. More specifically, positive
emotion moves you forward toward desired goals, while negative emotions can cause
you to stop or move backward.
7. We solve the problem of how much to value the present with our positive emotion
system. Experiments involving delay discounting can measure how we value these
different points in time.
○ Extraverts tend to value the present more than the future.
○ Introverts tend to value the future more than the present.
8. The optimal state of being is not to be happy or to maximize positive emotion. Instead,
the goal is to be appropriately happy based on current circumstances. Additionally,
studies have shown that humans don’t crave happiness, but freedom from suffering
(which are two separate concepts).