Find over 25,000 psychological definitions


oral personality

in classical psychoanalytic theory, a pattern of personality traits derived from fixation at the oral stage of psychosexual development. If the individual has experienced sufficient sucking satisfaction and adequate attention from the mother during the oral-sucking phase, he or she is posited to develop an oral-receptive personality marked by friendliness, optimism, generosity, and tolerance of dependency on others, allowing the individual to move on to late stages of psychosexual development. If the individual does not get enough satisfaction during the sucking and biting phases (see oral-biting phase), he or she is posited to develop an oral-aggressive personality marked by tendencies to be hostile, critical, envious, and exploitative. Also called oral character. [identified by German psychoanalyst Karl Abraham (1877–1925)]

Browse dictionary by letter

a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z

Psychology term of the day

January 19th 2025

Emmert’s law

Emmert’s law

the principle that the perceived size of an afterimage is proportional to the distance of the surface on which it is projected: The larger the afterimage, the farther away it is. See size constancy. [Emil Emmert (1844–1913), German physiologist]