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AP Psychology: Psychodynamic and Humanistic Theories of Personality (Drill 22)

Drill 22 ยท Multiple Choice ยท Unit 4: Social Psychology and Personality

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About This Drill

AP Psychology: Psychodynamic and Humanistic Theories of Personality (Drill 22) is a Multiple Choice practice drill covering Unit 4: Social Psychology and Personality. It contains 5 original questions created by Brian Stewart, a Barron's test prep author with over 20 years of tutoring experience.

AP Psychology practice questions covering psychodynamic and humanistic theories of personality, including Freudian structures and defense mechanisms, neo-Freudian contributions, and the humanistic frameworks of Rogers and Maslow. Five AP exam prep questions with full explanations and research methods application.

Questions & Explanations

Question 1. Marcus is a graduate student who was harshly criticized by his dissertation advisor during a meeting. That evening, he comes home and snaps angrily at his partner over a minor issue with dinner. Which of the following best explains Marcus's behavior from a psychodynamic perspective?

  • A) Displacement, because the unacceptable impulse is redirected toward a safer target ✓
  • B) Reaction formation, because the unwanted feeling is transformed into its opposite
  • C) Sublimation, because the aggressive drive is channeled into a productive activity
  • D) Rationalization, because Marcus is justifying his behavior with a socially acceptable reason

Explanation: Marcus experiences anger he cannot safely direct at his advisor (the actual source), so he redirects it toward his partner, a less threatening target. This is the textbook operation of displacement. (B) is wrong because reaction formation would mean Marcus behaves unusually warmly toward the advisor, not that he takes anger out elsewhere; students commonly confuse these defense mechanisms. (D) describes a different defense, creating after-the-fact justifications, which Marcus is not doing in the stem. [Practice 1]

Question 2. A therapist working from Carl Rogers's humanistic framework notices that her client describes herself in sessions as confident and successful, but privately feels anxious, insecure, and disconnected from that description. Rogers would most likely describe this client's difficulty as stemming from:

  • A) An overactive superego that generates excessive unconscious guilt in this scenario
  • B) Fixation at an early stage of psychosexual development
  • C) Incongruence between the client's self-concept and her actual lived experience ✓
  • D) An external locus of control shaped by past reinforcement

Explanation: Rogers argued that psychological distress often arises when a person's self-concept, how they describe and understand themselves, diverges from what they actually experience day to day. The client describes herself as confident and successful but lives with anxiety and insecurity, and that gap between self-concept and lived experience is exactly what Rogers called incongruence. (A) invokes a Freudian concept that is accurate on its own but doesn't answer the question, which specifically asks for a Rogerian interpretation. (D) borrows from Rotter's social-cognitive approach rather than from humanism. [Practice 1]

Question 3. A researcher wants to assess whether the Rorschach Inkblot Test is a valid measure of unconscious personality conflicts. Two trained clinicians independently score the same set of 50 protocols and arrive at markedly different personality profiles for most clients. Which of the following is the most appropriate conclusion?

  • A) The test has strong construct validity but notably weak predictive validity
  • B) The test shows low inter-rater reliability, which seriously undermines confidence in any validity claims drawn from it ✓
  • C) The test has high internal consistency but low test-retest reliability
  • D) The results confirm that unconscious conflicts exist but vary by clinician

Explanation: When two trained scorers working from the same protocols reach different conclusions, the immediate problem is inter-rater reliability, the scorers are not agreeing. Scoring that varies this much between trained clinicians reduces confidence that the test is measuring the intended construct at all. (A) names real psychometric concepts, but the data described speak to scoring agreement rather than to whether the test predicts outcomes, accurate on its own but doesn't answer the question. (D) is wrong because disagreement between scorers does not confirm the existence of unconscious conflicts; it just shows the instrument is inconsistent. This question reflects an ongoing debate about projective tests that the CED acknowledges rather than treating as settled. [Practice 2]

Question 4. A therapist is working with a client who shows repeated patterns of denying clear problems and blaming others for conflicts. The therapist uses the DSM-5-TR to determine whether the client meets criteria for a specific disorder and separately uses psychodynamic theory to describe the defense mechanisms at work. Which of the following best describes the appropriate relationship between these two approaches?

  • A) Psychodynamic theory provides the formal diagnostic criteria used throughout the DSM-5-TR
  • B) Defense mechanisms describe underlying unconscious processes, while the DSM-5-TR classifies observable patterns of symptoms ✓
  • C) Because defense mechanisms are unconscious, they cannot play any role in diagnosing a DSM-5-TR disorder
  • D) The DSM-5-TR treats personality as a set of continuous traits, replacing psychodynamic theory

Explanation: The DSM-5-TR classifies disorders based on observable patterns of symptoms, while psychodynamic constructs like defense mechanisms describe the underlying processes a therapist might discuss during case conceptualization. These two frameworks do different jobs and can be used together. This is a cross-unit question connecting Topic 4.4 to Unit 5 classification. (A) reverses the relationship, the DSM-5-TR does not draw its criteria from psychodynamic theory. (C) overgeneralizes: a process being unconscious does not prevent a therapist from describing it. (D) is accurate on its own but doesn't answer the question, the DSM-5-TR is a disorder-classification system, not a personality model, so it doesn't "replace" psychodynamic theory. [Practice 1]

Question 5. A researcher administers a self-actualization inventory to four groups of adults. Mean scores (out of 60) are as follows: Group 1 = 52, Group 2 = 48, Group 3 = 47, Group 4 = 31. The researcher claims the data support Maslow's hierarchy of needs. Which of the following would most strengthen that specific claim?

  • A) Group 4 consists of adults whose basic physiological and safety needs are currently unmet, while Groups 1โ€“3 have those needs met ✓
  • B) Self-actualization scores correlate positively with annual income across all four groups
  • C) Group 4 consists of adults whose basic needs are fully met, while Groups 1-3 lack food and safety
  • D) The inventory has been shown to have high test-retest reliability

Explanation: Maslow's specific claim is that higher needs like self-actualization cannot be pursued meaningfully until lower-level physiological and safety needs are met. The only option that directly tests that hierarchical claim is (A), which shows self-actualization scores drop sharply precisely in the group whose lower needs are unmet. (B) is true in many datasets, but income correlates with many outcomes and doesn't specifically test the hierarchical structure Maslow proposed, accurate on its own but doesn't answer the question. (C) is similarly off-target: life satisfaction and self-actualization are related constructs, so Groups 1โ€“3 scoring higher on both is consistent with almost any theory, not specifically Maslow's. (D) speaks to measurement reliability, which is necessary but does not strengthen the theoretical claim. This is a hard question because (B), (C), and (D) are all factually plausible, but only (A) directly tests Maslow's hierarchical structure. [Practice 3]