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Published Online: August 1957

IS THE HUMAN PERSONALITY MORE PLASTIC IN INFANCY AND CHILDHOOD?

Publication: American Journal of Psychiatry

Abstract

The article reviews data, much of rather recent origin, bearing on the assumption that human personality is more plastic in infancy and childhood than in adulthood. The available data permit the following conclusions:
l. We have no compelling evidence of a predictable relationship between child training practices and later personality.
2. Severe psychological stresses can have as marked effects in adulthood as in infancy and childhood, sometimes having greater effects in adulthood than in childhood.
3. Important personality changes occur after childhood (in the absence of treatment) including the disappearance of marked psychological disorders.
4. Infants reared according to ostensibly ideal methods of infant care show no greater immunity to mental illness than do other children reared differently. Infants reared under apparently inadequate or harmful circumstances do not necessarily develop psychological disorders.
5. Resemblances between patterns of behavior in children and adults can be explained without the hypothesis of a special impressionability or vulnerability of personality in childhood.
6. The initial immobility and the prolonged physical dependency of children upon adults places them at a special disadvantage in that they cannot readily change their environments to obtain new experiences. A lack of new experiences may give to the personality a pattern which appears more fixed than it really is.
The assumption that the human personality is more plastic in infancy and childhood than in adulthood remains unproven. Neither is it disproven. We need much further research in this area and this research may eventually show that the human personality is more plastic during childhood in some respects, but not in others.

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Go to American Journal of Psychiatry
Go to American Journal of Psychiatry
American Journal of Psychiatry
Pages: 152 - 161
PubMed: 13444481

History

Published in print: August 1957
Published online: 1 April 2006

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IAN STEVENSON
Dept. of Psychiatry and Neurology, School of Medicine, University of Virginia, Charlottesville, Va.

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