Abstract:
This paper presents a social-cognitive analysis of cross-situational
coherence in personality functioning. Social-cognitive analyses are
contrasted with those of trait approaches in personality psychology. Rather
than attributing coherence to high-level constructs that correspond directly
to observed patterns of social behavior, social-cognitive theory pursues a
"bottom-up" analytic strategy in which coherence derives from interactions
among multiple underlying causal mechanisms, no one of which directly
corresponds to a broad set of responses. Research investigating social- and
self-knowledge underlying cross-situational coherence in a central
social-cognitive mechanism, perceived self-efficacy, is presented.
Idiographic analyses reveal that individuals' schematic self-knowledge and
situational beliefs give rise to high and low patterns in self-efficacy
appraisal across diverse, idiosyncratic sets of situations that do not, in
general, correspond to traditional high-level trait categories. Bottom-up
analyses in personality psychology are related to other disciplines'
analyses of organization in complex, adaptive systems.