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Comparing Associations Between Personality and Loneliness at Midlife across Three Cultural Groups Journal of Personality (IF 5.429) Pub Date : 2022-08-05 Colin D. Freilich, Frank D. Mann, Robert F. Krueger
Loneliness represents a public health threat given its central role in predicting adverse mental and physical health outcomes. Prior research has established four of the Big Five personality traits as consistent cross-sectional predictors of loneliness in largely western, White samples. However, it is not clear if the personality predictors of loneliness vary across cultures.
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Boredom belief moderates the mental health impact of boredom among young people: Correlational and multi-wave longitudinal evidence gathered during the COVID-19 pandemic Journal of Personality (IF 5.429) Pub Date : 2022-08-04 Katy Y. Y. Tam, Christian S. Chan, Wijnand A. P. van Tilburg, Iris Lavi, Jennifer Y. F. Lau
Abstract
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Awe, curiosity, and multicultural experience Journal of Personality (IF 5.429) Pub Date : 2022-08-05 Jia Wei Zhang, Ryan T. Howell, Joseph A. Januchowski, Tamilselvan Ramis, Zena Mello, Maria Monroy
Despite broad consensus about multicultural experience's benefits, there is a lack of research on the antecedents to multicultural experiences. Research has indicated that awe shifts attention away from the self toward larger entities, which could include elements of other cultures.
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Pathways of personality and learning risk for addictive behaviors: A systematic review of mediational research on the Acquired Preparedness model Journal of Personality (IF 5.429) Pub Date : 2022-07-28 Max A. Halvorson, Liliana J. Lengua, Gregory T. Smith, Kevin M. King
The Acquired Preparedness (AP) model proposes that impulsive personality traits predispose some individuals to learn certain behavior-outcome associations (expectancies), and that these expectancies in turn influence the escalation of risky behaviors. This theory has been applied to the development of behaviors such as drinking, drug use, gambling, and disordered eating. In the current study, we aimed
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Trauma exposure and short-term volitional personality trait change Journal of Personality (IF 5.429) Pub Date : 2022-07-29 Laura E. R. Blackie, Nathan W. Hudson
Research into post-traumatic growth (PTG) finds individuals report positive changes in their identity, relationships, and worldviews after trauma. In a pre-registered 16-week longitudinal study, we examined trait change after recent trauma exposure to test an operationalization of PTG as positive personality change. We examined the influence of intrapersonal and social factors including motivation
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Social expectations and abilities to meet them as possible mechanisms of youth personality development Journal of Personality (IF 5.429) Pub Date : 2022-07-28 Yuzhan Hang, Christopher Soto, Billy Lee, Lydia Gabriela Speyer, Aja Louise Murray, René Mõttus
Personality traits change from childhood through late-adolescence, however the effects of social expectations and self-regulatory efforts remain unknown. This study aims to explore mechanisms underlying personality development by assessing mean levels personality traits from childhood to late-adolescence.
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A developmental perspective on personality–relationship transactions: Evidence from three nationally representative samples Journal of Personality (IF 5.429) Pub Date : 2022-07-22 Janina Larissa Bühler, Marcus Mund, Franz J. Neyer, Cornelia Wrzus
Throughout their lives, people experience different relationship events, such as beginning or dissolving a romantic relationship. Personality traits predict the occurrence of such relationship events (i.e., selection effects), and relationship events predict changes in personality traits (i.e., socialization effects), summarized as personality–relationship transactions. So far, evidence was partly
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The psychological imprint of inequality: Economic inequality shapes achievement and power values in human life Journal of Personality (IF 5.429) Pub Date : 2022-07-22 Hongfei Du, Friedrich M. Götz, Ronnel B. King, Peter J. Rentfrow
This research investigates how economic inequality shapes basic human values across three cross-national, cross-regional, and longitudinal studies (Ntotal = 219,697).
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Outsider at Home: Reading Babasaheb Ambedkar as a Radical, Decolonial Psychologist Journal of Personality (IF 5.429) Pub Date : 2022-07-15 Sunil Bhatia, Anjali Ram
Known primarily as the architect of the constitution of India, Babasaheb Ambedkar was also a human rights lawyer, an economist, a social justice advocate, and a polymath. Yet his story is often overlooked in favor of national leaders such as Gandhi. This study highlights Ambedkar as a visionary who called for a radical and new psychology of self that was anchored in ideas of social justice, equity
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Social Change at the Local Level: A Psychobiography of Khali Sweeney from Detroit’s Downtown Boxing Gym Journal of Personality (IF 5.429) Pub Date : 2022-07-15 Amanda S. Case, Sergio Maldonado Aguiñiga, Abigail Hoxsey
This psychobiography analyzes the life of Khali Sweeney from Detroit’s Downtown Boxing Gym to understand his motivation for and methods as a social change agent. In doing so, the project also considers how to prepare the next generation of youth development leaders as social change agents.
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Authenticity, meaning in life, and life satisfaction: A multicomponent investigation of relationships at the trait and state levels Journal of Personality (IF 5.429) Pub Date : 2022-07-15 Paul K. Lutz, David B. Newman, Rebecca J. Schlegel, Derrick Wirtz
The present study sought to examine: (1) how the components of authenticity (i.e., authentic living, self-alienation, accepting external influence) relate to one another at between- and within-person levels of analysis; (2) how the authenticity facets relate to meaning in life (i.e., purpose, comprehension, mattering) and life satisfaction at these levels of analysis; and (3) whether these relationships
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Dispositional forgiveness buffers paranoia following interpersonal transgression Journal of Personality (IF 5.429) Pub Date : 2022-07-15 Lyn Ellett, Anna Foxall, Tim Wildschut, Paul Chadwick
To test a novel proposition that dispositional forgiveness has the unrecognized benefit of buffering feelings of paranoia following negative interpersonal experiences and interpersonal transgressions.
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Daily fluctuations in social status, self-esteem, and clinically relevant emotions: Testing hierometer theory and social rank theory at a within-person level Journal of Personality (IF 5.429) Pub Date : 2022-07-15 Nikhila Mahadevan, Aiden P. Gregg, Constantine Sedikides
Grounded in hierometer theory and social rank theory, this research examined how within-person fluctuations in social status relate to within-person fluctuations in self-esteem and several clinically relevant emotions. Both hierometer theory and social rank theory postulate that particular psychological mechanisms help individuals to navigate social hierarchies adaptively. However, hierometer theory
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#Insta personality: Personality expression in Instagram accounts, impression formation, and accuracy of personality judgments at zero acquaintance Journal of Personality (IF 5.429) Pub Date : 2022-07-15 Sarah Osterholz, Emily I. Mosel, Boris Egloff
This study examined personality expression, impression formation, and the consensus and accuracy of zero-acquaintance personality judgments that were based on people's Instagram accounts.
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From Adversity to Activism: A Psychobiographical Case Study of Cori Bush Journal of Personality (IF 5.429) Pub Date : 2022-07-01 Megan E. Wilson, Patrick L. Hill
Cori Bush is a prominent modern activist in the U.S., becoming involved in activism following Michael Brown’s death. Bush, like many activists before her, has set clear goals for social change, yet work is needed to understand why Bush (and like others) became an activist when others did not. One potential reason may be that these exemplars found purpose in life in activism. Thus, the current psychobiography
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The “Teacher” and Martial Arts: A Psychobiographical Analysis of Jack Ma as a Business Change Agent Journal of Personality (IF 5.429) Pub Date : 2022-07-01 Shu Yueyu, Xia Xie, Zhang Xinyu, Li Wucheng, Xiao Yang, Liao Shuyi, Wei Runzhi, Wang Zeyu, Zhang Jiyuan
Scholars have conducted in-depth research on social change agents, but there are few collaborative studies in this realm between sociology and psychology. From the perspective of psychobiography, this before study uses Jung’s Analytical Psychology as a theoretical framework to explore Jack Ma’s influence on business change, thereby revealing the deep motivation behind Jack Ma’s sudden retirement and
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Everyday Heroes: Graphical Life Stories and Self-Defining Memories in COVID-19 Medical Volunteers Journal of Personality (IF 5.429) Pub Date : 2022-06-18 Veronika Nourkova, Alena Gofman
This study aimed to explore the autobiographical foundations of specific narrative identities, which made it possible to choose medical volunteering in the time of the pandemic, resist highly hazardous conditions of working in COVID-19 "red zones,” and emerge from this work with a sense of meaning and optimism.
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“You gotta give them hope”: A structural psychobiography of Harvey Milk (1930-1978) Journal of Personality (IF 5.429) Pub Date : 2022-06-17 Nic M. Weststrate, Kate C. McLean
In this psychobiographical study, we examined the life and times of social change agent Harvey Milk, one of the first openly gay public officials in the United States. Milk is remembered as a gay hero who fought for the rights of marginalized people, often by invoking the importance of hope. Milk was assassinated less than one year after his election. In this psychobiography, we adopted a structural
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A Trans Agent of Social Change in Incarceration: A Psychobiographical Study of Natasha Keating Journal of Personality (IF 5.429) Pub Date : 2022-06-17 Carol du Plessis, Sherree Halliwell, Amy B. Mullens, Tait Sanders, Jessica Gildersleeve, Tania Phillips, Annette Brömdal
This psychobiography focuses on the advocacy work of Natasha Keating, a trans woman incarcerated in two male prisons in Australia between 2000 and 2007. Incarcerated trans women are a vulnerable group who experience high levels of victimization and discrimination. However, Natasha advocated for her rights while incarcerated and this advocacy contributed to substantial changes in the carceral system
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Being and Becoming: A Psychobiography of James Baldwin Journal of Personality (IF 5.429) Pub Date : 2022-06-17 Jason D. Reynolds(Taewon Choi), Simonleigh P. Miller, Nicole T. Maleh
This article presents a psychobiography of James Baldwin (1924-1987), a prolific African American author and activist whose writing centered primarily on race, sexuality, and religion. Baldwin’s lived experiences and breadth of knowledge provided him with a unique perspective of the Black experience in America, a theme he frequently revisited in his work and the impetus for his involvement in the Civil
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The social side of personality: Do affiliation and intimacy motives moderate associations of personal relationships with well-being? Journal of Personality (IF 5.429) Pub Date : 2022-06-18 Philipp Kersten, Elisabeth Borschel, Franz J. Neyer, Marcus Mund
The quantity of social relationships and social interactions is positively related to well-being, but the underlying role of personality dispositions in these associations is unclear. The present study investigated whether social motives for affiliation and intimacy moderate associations of personal networks with well-being.
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Personality and peer groups in adolescence: Reciprocal associations and shared genetic and environmental influences Journal of Personality (IF 5.429) Pub Date : 2022-06-10 D. Angus Clark, C. Emily Durbin, Mary M. Heitzeg, William G. Iacono, Matt McGue, Brian M. Hicks
Peer groups represent a critical developmental context in adolescence, and there are many well-documented associations between personality and peer behavior at this age. However, the precise nature and direction of these associations are difficult to determine as youth both select into, and are influenced by, their peers.
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Becoming Jane Barney: Developing a generative identity as an engaged citizen Journal of Personality (IF 5.429) Pub Date : 2022-06-10 Nicky J. Newton, Abigail J. Stewart
We propose that analysis of the life of Jane Lockwood Barney provides insight into the notion of a “generative identity”—an integrated sense of self constructed around caring for others and the world. During her 104 years, the socially prescribed roles for women grew in range; Barney's own roles included minister's wife, mother of four, theological philosopher, social work student and professional
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Development of intraindividual value structures in middle childhood: A multicultural and longitudinal investigation Journal of Personality (IF 5.429) Pub Date : 2022-06-10 Ella Daniel, Anna K. Döring, Jan Cieciuch
We examined changes in value interrelations during middle childhood. In line with the Personal Values Theory, we expected a value system, with individuals similarly valuing related motivations, and setting priorities between conflicting motivations. We hypothesized this system to develop dynamically during middle childhood as children deepen their understanding of their own values.
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Four types of change and self-other agreement on change in personality traits during college years: A multi-informant longitudinal study Journal of Personality (IF 5.429) Pub Date : 2022-06-10 Phuong Linh L. Nguyen, Moin Syed, Colin G. DeYoung
Research in personality trait change has largely relied on mean-level and rank-order change across the lifespan. The current research expanded the literature in several ways: analyzing four types of change and correlated change patterns, obtaining multi-informant reports, including lower-order personality traits, and collecting multiple assessments during a short yet important time for college-attending
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The comforter-in-chief: How two traumatic experiences shaped president joe Biden's first 100 days Journal of Personality (IF 5.429) Pub Date : 2022-06-09 Dan P. McAdams
In the first 100 days of his U.S. presidency, Joe Biden sought to comfort Americans who had lost loved ones to the pandemic and to initiate a surprisingly progressive policy agenda. I interpret these two cardinal features of his early presidency in terms of two traumatic losses in Biden's personal life, contextualizing the argument within a 3-tiered model of personality.
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Mental health trajectories after juridical divorce: Does personality matter? Journal of Personality (IF 5.429) Pub Date : 2022-06-03 Gert Martin Hald, Cathrine Lawaetz Wimmelmann, Camilla S. Øverup, Ana Cipric, Søren Sander, Jenna Marie Strizzi
This study investigated whether the Big Five personality dimensions were associated with mental health trajectories and/or intervention effects of a digital divorce intervention from juridical divorce to 12 months following juridical divorce. The study utilized a randomized controlled trial study design (N = 676) and measured mental health outcomes (anxiety, depression, somatization, and stress) at
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Mouse movements reflect personality traits and task attentiveness in online experiments Journal of Personality (IF 5.429) Pub Date : 2022-05-19 Kimberly L. Meidenbauer, Tianyue Niu, Kyoung Whan Choe, Andrew J. Stier, Marc G. Berman
In this rapidly digitizing world, it is becoming ever more important to understand people's online behaviors in both scientific and consumer research settings. The current work tests the feasibility of inferring personality traits from mouse movement patterns as a cost-effective means of measuring individual characteristics.
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The long and short of mistress relationships: Sex-differentiated mate preferences reflect a compromise of mating ideals Journal of Personality (IF 5.429) Pub Date : 2022-05-14 Bryan K. C. Choy, Norman P. Li, Kenneth Tan
Evolved mate preferences have taken center stage in evolutionary psychology research, yet this literature has been fairly muted on mate preferences for extrapair partners. Here, we examined the mate preferences for mistress relationships (the traits that men prioritize in a mistress and mistresses prioritize in their male partners) and compared these preferences to those of short- and long-term relationships
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Introversion and the frequency and intensity of daily uplifts and hassles Journal of Personality (IF 5.429) Pub Date : 2022-05-14 Natasha N. DeMeo, Joshua M. Smyth, Stacey B. Scott, David M. Almeida, Martin J. Sliwinski, Jennifer E. Graham-Engeland
There is reason to believe that introversion may relate to different patterns of negative and positive experiences in everyday life (“hassles” and “uplifts”), but there is little evidence for this based on reports made in daily life as events occur. We thus extend the literature by using data from ecological momentary assessments to examine whether introversion is associated with either the frequency
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Pitfalls of self-reported measures of self-control: Surprising insights from extreme debtors Journal of Personality (IF 5.429) Pub Date : 2022-05-12 Lile Jia, Wei Lun Yuen, Qiyan Ong, Walter Edgar Theseira
We took a rare opportunity to examine whether extreme debtors have inflated assessment of their self-control capacity, potentially rendering self-reported measures ineffective as prediction tools for debt risks.
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Integration and expression: The complementary functions of self-reflection Journal of Personality (IF 5.429) Pub Date : 2022-05-12 Andrzej Nowak, Robin R. Vallacher, Wiesław Bartkowski, Lauren Olson
No construct is more central to personality than the person's self-concept. Higher-order domains of self-assessment, including self-perceived skills, traits, and values, are expressed in action and provide frames of reference for deciding whether to accept or reject personally relevant social feedback. To perform these functions in a consistent manner, the domains of self-concept need to achieve coherence
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Gloria Steinem: The childhood foundations of a feminist Journal of Personality (IF 5.429) Pub Date : 2022-05-12 Lauren E. Duncan
Gloria Steinem is one of the best-known feminists active in the United States today. This article addresses aspects of Steinem's childhood and adolescence to help us understand how her experiences helped set the stage for Steinem's development into a feminist in midlife.
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Self-control in adolescence predicts forgivingness in middle adulthood Journal of Personality (IF 5.429) Pub Date : 2022-05-12 Mathias Allemand, Andrea E. Grünenfelder-Steiger, Helmut A. Fend, Patrick L. Hill
This 33-year study examined associations between self-control development in adolescence and forgivingness, i.e., the dispositional tendency to forgive others, in middle adulthood.
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Genetics, parenting, and family functioning—What drives the development of self-control from adolescence to adulthood? Journal of Personality (IF 5.429) Pub Date : 2022-05-06 Ida M. Mueller, Frank M. Spinath, Malte Friese, Elisabeth Hahn
Self-control is a meaningful predictor of crucial life outcomes. Knowingly, genes contribute substantially to differences in self-control, but behavioral genetic findings are often misinterpreted regarding environmental influences. Therefore, we reinvestigate the heritability of self-control as well as potential environmental influences, namely parenting and a chaotic home environment.
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Individual differences in social power: Links with beliefs about emotion and emotion regulation Journal of Personality (IF 5.429) Pub Date : 2022-04-22 Felicia K. Zerwas, Jordan A. Tharp, Serena Chen, Iris B. Mauss
People differ in how they regulate their emotions, and how they do so is guided by their beliefs about emotion. We propose that social power—one's perceived influence over others—relates to one's beliefs about emotion and to emotion regulation. More powerful people are characterized as authentic and uninhibited, which should translate to the belief that one should not have to control one's emotions
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The complex story of educational identity in adolescence: Longitudinal relations with academic achievement and perfectionism Journal of Personality (IF 5.429) Pub Date : 2022-04-21 Oana Negru-Subtirica, Lavinia E. Damian, Eleonora Ioana Pop, Elisabetta Crocetti
Education has a strong impact on adolescent development. This study investigated the complex longitudinal associations between educational identity processes, academic achievement, and perfectionism.
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How many and what mechanisms are needed to explain self-regulatory functions in personality dynamics: Toward a model based on the Circumplex of Personality Metatraits Journal of Personality (IF 5.429) Pub Date : 2022-04-21 Ewa Skimina, Włodzimierz Strus, Jan Cieciuch, Ewa Topolewska-Siedzik
We propose a model of basic self-regulatory mechanisms that integrates descriptive-structural and dynamic-explanatory approaches to personality. Using a structural way of thinking and based on a structural model of personality (the Circumplex of Personality Metatraits), we deduced two orthogonal (distinct) but interactive mechanisms: (a) Impulse Control responsible for controlling automatically activated
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Longitudinal bidirectional associations between personality and becoming a leader Journal of Personality (IF 5.429) Pub Date : 2022-04-16 Eva Asselmann, Elke Holst, Jule Specht
Leaders differ in their personalities from non-leaders. However, when do these differences emerge? Are leaders “born to be leaders” or does their personality change in preparation for a leadership role and due to increasing leadership experience?
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Origins of antimining resistance in the life of a grassroots American Indian leader: Prospects for Indigenizing psychobiography Journal of Personality (IF 5.429) Pub Date : 2022-04-16 Joseph P. Gone
American Indian communities have long been subject to environmental degradation, but successful “grassroots” struggles to end such exploitation are exceedingly rare. How is it that Joseph William Azure—my father and an unsung hero of social change—came to “notice” in 1985 that “our entire [reservation] mountain range was at risk” from destructive gold mining and, in response, to form “a small grassroots
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Personality coherence as a personality dynamics-related concept Journal of Personality (IF 5.429) Pub Date : 2022-04-08 Małgorzata Fajkowska
Extant theoretical models of personality coherence/incoherence do not sufficiently address the challenge of explaining personality coherence dynamics and the role of psychological mechanisms, including temperament and attention. To overcome these limitations, the Complex-System Approach to Personality (C-SAP) postulates that personality coherence is a within-person structure that arises from the functional
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The personality meta-trait of stability and carotid artery atherosclerosis Journal of Personality (IF 5.429) Pub Date : 2022-04-02 Whitney R. Ringwald, Aleksandra Kaurin, Caitlin M. DuPont, Peter J. Gianaros, Anna L. Marsland, Matthew F. Muldoon, Aidan G. C. Wright, Stephen B. Manuck
Several personality traits increase the risk for atherosclerotic cardiovascular disease. Because many of these traits are correlated, their associations with disease risk could reflect shared variance, rather than unique contributions of each trait. We examined a higher-order personality trait of Stability as related to preclinical atherosclerosis and tested whether any such relationship might be explained
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Character strengths and fluid intelligence Journal of Personality (IF 5.429) Pub Date : 2022-03-18 André Kretzschmar, Lisa Wagner, Fabian Gander, Jennifer Hofmann, René T. Proyer, Willibald Ruch
Research on the associations between cognitive and noncognitive personality traits has widely neglected character strengths, that means positively and morally valued personality traits that constitute good character.
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Lighten the darkness: Personality interventions targeting agreeableness also reduce participants' levels of the dark triad Journal of Personality (IF 5.429) Pub Date : 2022-03-14 Nathan W. Hudson
Previous research suggests that people want to change their big five traits—and moreover, they may be able to do so. This paper extends these findings in three ways. First, I examined the extent to which people want to change their levels of the dark triad—Machiavellianism, narcissism, and psychopathy. Second, I tested whether desires to change the dark triad predicted actual changes in the corresponding
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Self-esteem development during the transition to work: A 14-year longitudinal study from adolescence to young adulthood Journal of Personality (IF 5.429) Pub Date : 2022-03-13 Lorenzo Filosa, Guido Alessandri, Richard W. Robins, Concetta Pastorelli
Previous studies examined the trajectory of self-esteem during critical developmental periods and over the life-span. However, little is known about how self-esteem changes during the school-to-work transition.
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Selection and socialization effects of studying abroad Journal of Personality (IF 5.429) Pub Date : 2022-03-13 Adam T. Nissen, Wiebke Bleidorn, Samantha Ericson, Christopher J. Hopwood
Studying abroad is often considered a life-changing experience. However, research on studying abroad has not always disentangled selection from socialization effects, leading to uncertainty about the actual impact of this experience. In this 4-wave longitudinal study, we examined both selection and socialization effects of a 4-week intensive study abroad program on 17 psychosocial variables related
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Negative internal working models as mechanisms that link mothers’ and fathers’ personality with their parenting: A short-term longitudinal study Journal of Personality (IF 5.429) Pub Date : 2022-02-25 Danming An, Lilly C. Bendel-Stenzel, Grazyna Kochanska
Research on associations between parents’ personality and parenting has a long history, but mechanisms that explain them remain unsettled. We examined parents’ explicit and implicit negative internal working models (IWMs) of the child, assessed at toddler age, as linking parental personality and parenting.
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When intelligence hurts and ignorance is bliss: Global pandemic as an evolutionarily novel threat to happiness Journal of Personality (IF 5.429) Pub Date : 2022-02-25 Satoshi Kanazawa, Norman P. Li, Jose C. Yong
The savanna theory of happiness posits that it is not only the current consequences of a given situation that affect happiness but also its ancestral consequences, and that the effect of ancestral consequences on happiness is stronger among less intelligent individuals. But what about situations that did not exist in the ancestral environment and thus have no ancestral consequences? Global pandemic
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Aligning the self and reaping the benefits: Ego effectiveness in romantic relationships Journal of Personality (IF 5.429) Pub Date : 2022-02-25 Michael D. Robinson, Roberta L. Irvin, Michelle R. Persich
There are components of self that recognize effective courses of action and there are components of self that enact behaviors. The objective of the research was to examine alignment between these different components of self.
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Beyond (low) Agreeableness: Toward a more comprehensive understanding of antagonistic psychopathology Journal of Personality (IF 5.429) Pub Date : 2022-02-21 David D. Scholz, Benjamin E. Hilbig, Isabel Thielmann, Morten Moshagen, Ingo Zettler
In clinical psychopathology research, up to seven traits have been suggested as instances of antagonistic psychopathology. Those antagonistic traits, in turn, are commonly viewed as reflections of low Agreeableness as per the Big Five (BF-AG). However, specific theoretical differences between antagonistic traits suggest that other broad, basic dimensions beyond BF-AG ought to provide further points
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Synthesizing contemporary integrative interpersonal theory and the narrative identity approach to examine personality dynamics and regulatory processes Journal of Personality (IF 5.429) Pub Date : 2022-02-20 William L. Dunlop, Majse Lind, Christopher J. Hopwood
The goal of this paper is to promote the integration of two approaches to personality and assessment: Contemporary Integrative Interpersonal Theory (CIIT) and the Narrative Identity Approach (NI).
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Beliefs about the nature of knowledge shape responses to the pandemic: Epistemic beliefs, the Dark Factor of Personality, and COVID-19–related conspiracy ideation and behavior Journal of Personality (IF 5.429) Pub Date : 2022-02-13 Jan Philipp Rudloff, Fabian Hutmacher, Markus Appel
Global challenges such as climate change or the COVID-19 pandemic have drawn public attention to conspiracy theories and citizens' non-compliance to science-based behavioral guidelines. We focus on individuals' worldviews about how one can and should construct reality (epistemic beliefs) to explain the endorsement of conspiracy theories and behavior during the COVID-19 pandemic and propose the Dark
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Knowing how you see me: Exploring meta-accuracy of personality, emotions and values and their links with relationship well-being among young adults Journal of Personality (IF 5.429) Pub Date : 2022-01-24 Hasagani Tissera, John E. Lydon
Do people (i.e., metaperceivers) know their romantic partners’ (i.e., perceivers’) impressions, displaying meta-accuracy? Is it related to relationship well-being? We explored two components of meta-accuracy: (1) positive meta-accuracy (i.e., knowing the perceiver’s positive impressions of the metaperceiver), and (2) distinctive meta-accuracy (i.e., knowing the perceiver’s unique impressions of the
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Why are you (un)conscientious? The dynamic interplay of goals, states, and traits in everyday life Journal of Personality (IF 5.429) Pub Date : 2022-01-17 Marco Di Sarno, Giulio Costantini, Juliette Richetin, Emanuele Preti, Marco Perugini
Personality involves both trait and state components, personal goals serving a crucial regulatory function for the expression of personality states. The present study investigates the dynamic interplay between conscientiousness-related goals, conscientious personality states, and trait conscientiousness.
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The nonlinear association between grandiose and vulnerable narcissism: An individual data meta-analysis Journal of Personality (IF 5.429) Pub Date : 2021-12-03 Emanuel Jauk, Lisa Ulbrich, Paul Jorschick, Michael Höfler, Scott Barry Kaufman, Philipp Kanske
Narcissism can manifest in grandiose and vulnerable patterns of experience and behavior. While largely unrelated in the general population, individuals with clinically relevant narcissism are thought to display both. Our previous studies showed that trait measures of grandiosity and vulnerability were unrelated at low-to-moderate levels of grandiose narcissism, but related at high levels.
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Looks and status are still essential: Testing the mate preference priority model with the profile-based experimental paradigm Journal of Personality (IF 5.429) Pub Date : 2021-12-30 Jose C. Yong, Yi Wen Tan, Norman P. Li, Andrea L. Meltzer
Although the mate preference priority model (MPPM) has advanced our understanding of mate preferences, tests of the MPPM have relied on methods using text labels and thus lack ecological validity. We address this gap by testing the MPPM using J. M. Townsend's profile-based experimental paradigm, which utilizes profiles comprising photos of pre-rated models to manipulate physical attractiveness as well
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Mapping political trust and involvement in the personality space—A meta-analysis and new evidence Journal of Personality (IF 5.429) Pub Date : 2022-01-09 Laurits Bromme, Tobias Rothmund, Flávio Azevedo
Relations between the Big Five personality dispositions and individual differences in political trust and involvement in politics have been investigated in many studies. We aimed to systematically integrate these findings and further explore the correlations at different hierarchical levels of the Big Five and political trust and involvement.
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Developmental trajectories of Big Five personality traits among adolescents and young adults: Differences by sex, alcohol use, and marijuana use Journal of Personality (IF 5.429) Pub Date : 2021-12-17 Scott A. Jones, Ryan P. Van Fossen, Wesley K. Thompson, Fiona C. Baker, Duncan B. Clark, Bonnie J. Nagel
Individual differences in adolescent personality are related to a variety of long-term health outcomes. While previous studies have demonstrated sex differences and non-linear changes in personality development, these results remain equivocal. The current study utilized longitudinal data (n = 831) from the National Consortium on Alcohol and Neurodevelopment in Adolescence to examine sex differences
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The tangled webs we wreak: Examining the structure of aggressive personality using psychometric networks Journal of Personality (IF 5.429) Pub Date : 2021-12-17 Samuel J. West, David S. Chester
Trait aggression is a prominent construct in the psychological literature, yet little work has sought to situate trait aggression among broader frameworks of personality. Initial evidence suggests that trait aggression may be best couched within the nomological network of the Five-Factor Model (FFM). The current work sought to locate the most appropriate home for trait aggression among the FFM.
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The relation between self-event connections and personality functioning in youth with severe psychopathology Journal of Personality (IF 5.429) Pub Date : 2021-12-21 Elisabeth L. de Moor, Jolien Van der Graaff, Nagila Koster, Odilia M. Laceulle, Susan Branje
One way in which individuals construct their narrative identity is by making self-event connections, which are often linked to better functioning. Being unable to make connections is related to identity discontinuity and psychopathology. Work in the general population corroborates this association, but also highlights the importance of focusing on specific aspects of these connections and on vulnerable