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Section 19
The Role of Temperament

Question 19 | Test | Table of Contents

There is no such thing as an angry temperament. However, certain tem­peramental qualities determine whether a person will experience normal or toxic anger. Temperament is a set of inherited traits that define the style of our emotional and behavioral responses—the tone and direction of our emotions. Dr. Avshalom Caspi of Harvard University, for example, distinguishes among the angry, ill-tempered person who moves against the world; the shy person who moves away from the world; and the dependent person who moves toward the world.5

Dr. Arnold Buss, a psychologist at the University of Texas, identifies the person most likely to become angry or act aggressively with refer­ence to the following four temperamental characteristics:6

•       Impulsivity
•       High activity
•       Behavioral and physiological hyperreactivity
•       Independence

The highly impulsive person cannot delay gratification or tolerate the frustration that ensues when his or her needs are not quickly and easily met. When confronted with a potentially anger-arousing situation, the impulsive person must act immediately and decisively by getting angry. The highly active person expends more energy than the average person in the course of a day and is much more likely to have interactions with people that provoke anger. The hyperreactive individual responds in a more intense and vigorous manner than most people. As Brian put it, "Where another person gets a little upset, I’m angry!" Last, the indepen­dent individual chafes and becomes angry more often in response to strong interpersonal pressures to conform and submit to societal de­mands and restrictions.

Impulsivity, activity level, and independence define the frequency with which we become angry, whereas reactivity defines the intensity and duration of our anger.

How does your temperament define your anger? Circle the one num­ber on each of the following dimensions of temperament that best de­scribes you:

+2                                           +1                                          —1    _____                    __     —2
Impulsive/quick to act                                                                                      Deliberate/thoughtful
+2                                           +1                                          —1    _____                    __     —2
Active/energetic                                                                                              Passive/nonenergetic+2                                           +1                                          —1    _____                    __     —2
Intense/excitable                                                                                                           Calm/placid
+2                                           +1                                          —1    _____                    __     —2
Independent/self-reliant                                                                            Dependent/rely on others

Add up your numbers to determine your biological arousal (BA)

If you have a negative BA score, anger should not to be a problem for you. If your BA score is positive, however, you probably get angry too often, feel anger too intensely, or stay angry too long. In short, you suffer from TAS.*

Temperamental Continuity
Temperament is defined in early childhood and doesn’t drastically change over a lifetime. If you were a happy five-year-old, you can expect to be a reasonably happy eighty-five-year-old. Similarly, if you were an ill-tempered, easily upset child, you will be the same irascible individual throughout your life unless, of course, you make a concerted effort to change.

Continuity of temperament exists for two primary reasons.7 One, we tend to seek environments—people and situations—that are compatible with our temperament We look for a situation in which our style will "work." A socially extroverted individual may seek a job in marketing because it offers him more day-to-day variation in work demands and more of a challenge, whereas an introverted person may prefer working as a lab­oratory technician or computer operator because the job requirements are more routine and involve less contact with people.

Second, we tend to act in ways that consistently provoke the same coun­terreactions in others, which then reinforce or sustain our temperamental style. Anger begets anger. Love begets love. John, the sixty-year-old ex­Marine, for example, began his cycle of anger during his early school years. He was treated as an outsider by the other children, so he fought back by being angry and aggressive. But this behavior only made him more of an outsider, and in turn, he became even more angry and ag­gressive. Fifty years later, he still feels like an outsider, even from his family, and he is still ready to fight.
- Gentry, Doyle, Anger-Free: Ten Basic Steps to Managing your Anger, William Morrow and Company, Inc.: New York, 1999.

Personal Reflection Exercise #5
The preceding section contained information about the role of temperament.  Write three case study examples regarding how you might use the content of this section in your practice.

Update
Preschoolers' Temperament
and Social functioning in Novel
and Routine Contexts

- Vaughan, H. S., & Teglasi, H. (2022). Preschoolers' temperament and social functioning in novel and routine contexts. Frontiers in psychology, 13, 975110.

Peer-Reviewed Journal Article References:
Bateman, A., & Fonagy, P. (2019). A randomized controlled trial of a mentalization-based intervention (MBT-FACTS) for families of people with borderline personality disorder. Personality Disorders: Theory, Research, and Treatment, 10(1), 70–79.

Daros, A. R., Williams, G. E., Jung, S., Turabi, M., Uliaszek, A. A., & Ruocco, A. C. (2018). More is not always better: Strategies to regulate negative mood induction in women with borderline personality disorder and depressive and anxiety disorders. Personality Disorders: Theory, Research, and Treatment, 9(6), 530–542.

DeShong, H. L., Grant, D. M., & Mullins-Sweatt, S. N. (2019). Precursors of the emotional cascade model of borderline personality disorder: The role of neuroticism, childhood emotional vulnerability, and parental invalidation. Personality Disorders: Theory, Research, and Treatment, 10(4), 317–329.

Śniecińska, J. (2020). Associations between self-reported temperament and self-knowledge. Journal of Individual Differences, 41(3), 144–151.

Zapała, D., Małkiewicz, M., Francuz, P., Kołodziej, M., & Majkowski, A. (2020). Temperament predictors of motor imagery control in BCI. Journal of Psychophysiology, 34(4), 246–254.

QUESTION 19
What is temperament? To select and enter your answer go to Test
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