| Literature DB >> 23088227 |
Wayne Chan1, Robert R Mccrae, Filip De Fruyt2, Lee Jussim3, Corinna E Löckenhoff4, Marleen De Bolle2, Paul T Costa1, Angelina R Sutin1, Anu Realo5, Jüri Allik5, Katsuharu Nakazato6, Yoshiko Shimonaka7, Martina Hřebíčková8, Sylvie Graf8, Michelle Yik9, Marina Brunner-Sciarra10, Nora Leibovich De Figueroa11, Vanina Schmidt11, Chang-Kyu Ahn12, Hyun-Nie Ahn13, Maria E Aguilar-Vafaie14, Jerzy Siuta15, Barbara Szmigielska15, Thomas R Cain16, Jarret T Crawford17, Khairul Anwar Mastor18, Jean-Pierre Rolland19, Florence Nansubuga20, Daniel R Miramontez21, Verónica Benet-Martínez22, Jérôme Rossier23, Denis Bratko24, Iris Marušić25, Jamin Halberstadt26, Mami Yamaguchi26, Goran Knežević27, Thomas A Martin28, Mirona Gheorghiu29, Peter B Smith30, Claudio Barbaranelli31, Lei Wang32, Jane Shakespeare-Finch33, Margarida P Lima34, Waldemar Klinkosz35, Andrzej Sekowski35, Lidia Alcalay36, Franco Simonetti36, Tatyana V Avdeyeva37, V S Pramila38, Antonio Terracciano1.
Abstract
Age trajectories for personality traits are known to be similar across cultures. To address whether stereotypes of age groups reflect these age-related changes in personality, we asked participants in 26 countries (N = 3,323) to rate typical adolescents, adults, and old persons in their own country. Raters across nations tended to share similar beliefs about different age groups; adolescents were seen as impulsive, rebellious, undisciplined, preferring excitement and novelty, whereas old people were consistently considered lower on impulsivity, activity, antagonism, and Openness. These consensual age group stereotypes correlated strongly with published age differences on the five major dimensions of personality and most of 30 specific traits, using as criteria of accuracy both self-reports and observer ratings, different survey methodologies, and data from up to 50 nations. However, personal stereotypes were considerably less accurate, and consensual stereotypes tended to exaggerate differences across age groups. (PsycINFO Database Record (c) 2012 APA, all rights reserved).Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2012 PMID: 23088227 PMCID: PMC3514646 DOI: 10.1037/a0029712
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Pers Soc Psychol ISSN: 0022-3514