| Literature DB >> 28580022 |
Suna Tevrüz1, Tülay Turgut1, Murat Çinko2.
Abstract
The first aim of this study is to investigate whether instruments developed with an emic approach in Turkey produce the same trait-value links obtained with studies using near universal instruments, and if emic traits and value concepts are composed under agency and communal conceptions. So, the first aim of this study is to inspect the conceptual similarities in the links between traits and values. The second aim is to examine the moderating effect of disposable income on the strength of the trait-value relationship. Undergraduate and graduate students (N = 595) from six universities in Istanbul responded to the Personality Profile Scale (PPS) and the Life Goal Values (LGV) questionnaire. Second order factor analysis indicated that indigenous value and trait items were representative of communal and agency conceptions. Furthermore, most of the value-trait links revealed with regression analysis, and the sinusoid relationships revealed with Pearson correlation coefficients were consistent with the findings measured with near universal instruments. Additionally found relationships between traits and especially conservation values can be interpreted as the instrumentality of agentic traits for personal as well for social focused values. Disposable income had a moderating effect on five trait-value relationships and three out of five were weaker in the low-income group.Entities:
Keywords: agency; communion; disposable income; emic; traits; values
Year: 2017 PMID: 28580022 PMCID: PMC5450980 DOI: 10.5964/ejop.v13i2.1201
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Eur J Psychol ISSN: 1841-0413
Figure 1Configuration derived from the combination of WAG and PVQ items (Tevrüz, Turgut, & Çinko, 2015).
Factor Structure for Personality Profile Scale
| Factor Name | Items | Factor Loading | Factor Variance (%) | Reliability |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Lively | 21.50 | .86 | ||
| 20 humorous | .82 | |||
| 34 playful | .80 | |||
| 24 cheerful | .76 | |||
| 15 smiling | .62 | |||
| 21 talkative | .59 | |||
| 06 friendly | .57 | |||
| 29 affectionate | .48 | |||
| Restless | 11.85 | .77 | ||
| 19 somber | .83 | |||
| 22 pessimistic | .81 | |||
| 31 distressed | .66 | |||
| 18 capricious | .62 | |||
| 09 conflicting | .53 | |||
| Competent | 7.19 | .78 | ||
| 41 capable | .85 | |||
| 40 creative | .83 | |||
| 43 intelligent | .76 | |||
| 01 clever | .59 | |||
| Agreeable | 9.06 | .74 | ||
| 26 peaceful | .83 | |||
| 28 quiet | .76 | |||
| 25 patient | .65 | |||
| 37 docile | .63 | |||
| Diligent | 4.89 | .72 | ||
| 04 determined | -.81 | |||
| 08 hardworking | -.77 | |||
| 16 ambitious | -.70 | |||
| Bold | 3.98 | .55 | ||
| 27 aggressive | -.73 | |||
| 32 nervous | -.61 | |||
| 07 daring | -.55 | |||
| Compassionate | 3.76 | .64 | ||
| 12 devoted | -.75 | |||
| 03 modest | -.62 | |||
| 05 selfish | .55 | |||
| 17 kind | -.47 | |||
| Total Factor Variance | 62.23 | |||
Note. Kaiser Meyer Olkin Sampling Adequacy = .84; Bartlett's Test of Sphericity Chi square: 9448.66; df = 435; p = .000.
Second Order Factor Analysis for Value and Trait Factors
| Factor | Factor Loading |
|---|---|
| Factor 1: Agentic | |
| (V) Stimulation/Hedonism | .69 |
| (V) Self-direction | .66 |
| (V) Achievement/Power | .64 |
| (V) Intellectualism | .63 |
| (T) Competent | .57 |
| (T) Lively | .55 |
| (T) Diligent | .49 |
| (V) Security | .43 |
| Factor 2: Communion | |
| (T) Agreeable | .69 |
| (V) Conformity | .64 |
| (T) Compassionate | .60 |
| (V) Tradition | .56 |
| (V) Benevolence | .52 |
| (V) Universalism | .42 |
| (T) Bold | -.37 |
| (T) Restless | -.24 |
| Total Factor Variance | 36.44 |
Note. T = Traits; V = Values. Kaiser Meyer Olkin Sampling Adequacy = .72; Bartlett's Test of Sphericity Chi square = 2177.18; df = 120; p = .000.
Regression Analysis of Nine Value Factors on Seven Traits
| Statistic | Self-Enhancement | Self-Transcendence | Conservation | Openness to change | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Ach/Power | Benevolence | Universalism | Security | Conformity | Tradition | Intellectualism | Self-direction | Stim/Hedo | |
| .17 | .19 | .10 | .09 | .16 | .11 | .18 | .09 | .14 | |
| 19.86*** | 28.75*** | 14.55*** | 12.67*** | 24.25*** | 21.59*** | 21.79*** | 16.68*** | 26.93*** | |
| Trait | |||||||||
| Lively | .19*** | -.10* | .10* | .15*** | .30*** | ||||
| Restless | .11* | .13** | |||||||
| Competent | .11* | .11* | -.10* | .20*** | .15*** | .12** | |||
| Agreeable | .09* | .12** | .10* | .14** | -.09* | ||||
| Diligent | .19*** | .11* | -.14** | .19*** | .13** | .23*** | |||
| Compassionate | .31*** | .26*** | .11* | .33*** | .25*** | .16*** | .10* | ||
| Bold | .10* | -.11* | .13** | -.10* | |||||
*p < .05. **p < .01. ***p < .001.
Figure 2Results for social tendency traits (agreeable and compassionate).
Figure 3Results for individual tendency traits (lively, competent and diligent).
Figure 4Results for negative emotional tendency traits (bold and restless).
Difference Between High-Income and Low-Income Groups
| Trait, Value | H | L | Fisher’s Z | 95% CI | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| r | n | r | n | |||
| Competent | ||||||
| Benevolence | .33*** | 266 | .14** | 272 | 2.27* | [.03, .37] |
| Diligent | ||||||
| Achievement/Power | .14** | 259 | .39*** | 275 | -3.08*** | [-.44, -.10] |
| Intellectualism | .42*** | 261 | .27*** | 273 | 2.05* | [.0002, .34] |
| Bold | ||||||
| Achievement/Power | .09 | 263 | .31*** | 276 | -2.59** | [-.40, -.06] |
| Compassionate | ||||||
| Stimulation/Hedonism | .21*** | 267 | .03 | 277 | 2.11* | [.01, .35] |
Note. Only significant relations are reported. H = High income; L = Low income.
*p < .05. **p < .01. ***p < .001.