Literature DB >> 25132698

Are there meaningful individual differences in temporal inconsistency in self-reported personality?

Andrea Soubelet1, Timothy A Salthouse2, Shigehiro Oishi2.   

Abstract

The current project had three goals. The first was to examine whether it is meaningful to refer to across-time variability in self-reported personality as an individual differences characteristic. The second was to investigate whether negative affect was associated with variability in self-reported personality, while controlling for mean levels, and correcting for measurement errors. The third goal was to examine whether variability in self-reported personality would be larger among young adults than among older adults, and whether the relation of variability with negative affect would be stronger at older ages than at younger ages. Two moderately large samples of participants completed the International Item Pool Personality questionnaire assessing the Big Five personality dimensions either twice or thrice, in addition to several measures of negative affect. Results were consistent with the hypothesis that within-person variability in self-reported personality is a meaningful individual difference characteristic. Some people exhibited greater across-time variability than others after removing measurement error, and people who showed temporal instability in one trait also exhibited temporal instability across the other four traits. However, temporal variability was not related to negative affect, and there was no evidence that either temporal variability or its association with negative affect varied with age.

Entities:  

Keywords:  age; negative affect; temporal inconsistency; variability in self-reported personality

Year:  2014        PMID: 25132698      PMCID: PMC4129464          DOI: 10.1016/j.paid.2014.06.037

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Pers Individ Dif        ISSN: 0191-8869


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