| Literature DB >> 32926800 |
Jochen E Gebauer1,2, Jennifer Eck1, Theresa M Entringer1,3, Wiebke Bleidorn4, Peter J Rentfrow5, Jeff Potter6, Samuel D Gosling7,8.
Abstract
People enjoy well-being benefits if their personal characteristics match those of their culture. This person-culture match effect is integral to many psychological theories and-as a driver of migration-carries much societal relevance. But do people differ in the degree to which person-culture match confers well-being benefits? In the first-ever empirical test of that question, we examined whether the person-culture match effect is moderated by basic personality traits-the Big Two and Big Five. We relied on self-reports from 2,672,820 people across 102 countries and informant reports from 850,877 people across 61 countries. Communion, agreeableness, and neuroticism exacerbated the person-culture match effect, whereas agency, openness, extraversion, and conscientiousness diminished it. People who possessed low levels of communion coupled with high levels of agency evidenced no well-being benefits from person-culture match, and people who possessed low levels of agreeableness and neuroticism coupled with high levels of openness, extraversion, and conscientiousness even evidenced well-being costs. Those results have implications for theories building on the person-culture match effect, illuminate the mechanisms driving that effect, and help explain failures to replicate it.Entities:
Keywords: Big Five; Big Two; basic personality traits; culture; open data; open materials; person-culture match
Year: 2020 PMID: 32926800 PMCID: PMC7549288 DOI: 10.1177/0956797620951115
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Psychol Sci ISSN: 0956-7976
The Person-Culture Match Effect Moderated by the Big Two
| Predictor | Big Two model | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Target scale | Ant colony | Brute force | ||||
| 95% CI | 95% CI | 95% CI | ||||
| Intercept | .078 | [.056, .101] | .080 | [.057, .102] | .079 | [.057, .102] |
| Religiosity | .073 | [.066, .080] | .092 | [.086, .098] | .083 | [.077, .089] |
| Country-level religiosity | .126 | [.104, .149] | .127 | [.104, .149] | .127 | [.104, .149] |
| Communion | .070 | [.060, .081] | .054 | [.045, .063] | .043 | [.033, .053] |
| Agency | .430 | [.419, .441] | .448 | [.437, .459] | .390 | [.381, .399] |
| Religiosity × Country-Level Religiosity | .025 | [.018, .032] | .026 | [.020, .032] | .031 | [.025, .037] |
| Religiosity × Communion | .010 | [.009, .011] | .004 | [.003, .005] | .006 | [.005, .007] |
| Country-Level Religiosity × Communion | .046 | [.036, .056] | .028 | [.019, .037] | .034 | [.024, .044] |
| Religiosity × Agency | −.010 | [−.011, −.009] | −.019 | [−.020, −.018] | −.016 | [−.017, −.014] |
| Country-Level Religiosity × Agency | −.029 | [−.041, −.018] | −.028 | [−.039, −.017] | −.024 | [−.033, −.014] |
| Religiosity × Country-Level Religiosity × Communion | .002 | [.001, .004] | .003 | [.002, .005] | .004 | [.003, .006] |
| Religiosity × Country-Level Religiosity × Agency | −.007 | [−.009, −.006] | −.010 | [−.011, −.009] | −.008 | [−.010, −.007] |
Note: In this model, self-esteem is predicted by religiosity, country-level religiosity, Big Two personality, and their interactions. Results are shown for three variants of the model, one variant for each Big Two measure (target scale, ant colony, brute force). The table shows standardized point estimates (zPEs) and 95% confidence intervals (CIs).
The Person-Culture Match Effect Moderated by the Big Five
| Predictor | 95% CI | |
|---|---|---|
| Intercept | .081 | [.058, .103] |
| Religiosity | .083 | [.077, .089] |
| Country-Level Religiosity | .128 | [.105, .150] |
| Agreeableness | −.094 | [−.101, −.086] |
| Conscientiousness | .137 | [.131, .143] |
| Openness | .117 | [.109, .125] |
| Extraversion | .284 | [.273, .295] |
| Neuroticism | −.306 | [−.320, −.292] |
| Religiosity × Country-Level Religiosity | .019 | [.013, .025] |
| Religiosity × Agreeableness | .004 | [.003, .005] |
| Country-Level Religiosity × Agreeableness | .038 | [.031, .046] |
| Religiosity × Conscientiousness | −.004 | [−.005, −.003] |
| Country-Level Religiosity × Conscientiousness | .030 | [.023, .036] |
| Religiosity × Openness | −.007 | [−.008, −.006] |
| Country-Level Religiosity × Openness | .004 | [−.004, .012] |
| Religiosity × Extraversion | −.006 | [−.007, −.005] |
| Country-Level Religiosity × Extraversion | −.024 | [−.035, −.013] |
| Religiosity × Neuroticism | .015 | [.013, .016] |
| Country-Level Religiosity × Neuroticism | .033 | [.019, .047] |
| Religiosity × Country-Level Religiosity × Agreeableness | .003 | [.002, .005] |
| Religiosity × Country-Level Religiosity × Conscientiousness | −.003 | [−.004, −.002] |
| Religiosity × Country-Level Religiosity × Openness | −.004 | [−.006, −.003] |
| Religiosity × Country-Level Religiosity × Extraversion | −.005 | [−.006, −.003] |
| Religiosity × Country-Level Religiosity × Neuroticism | .007 | [.005, .008] |
Note: In this model, self-esteem is predicted by religiosity, country-level religiosity, Big Five personality, and their interactions. The table shows standardized point estimates (zPEs) and 95% confidence intervals (CIs).
Fig. 1.Person-culture match effect: mean standardized point estimate (zPE) for the association between religiosity and self-esteem, separately for strong contrasters, contrasters, the average participant, assimilators, and strong assimilators. Results are shown in (a) for each group within the Big Two framework, separately for each of the three scale-construction methods and for groups in least and most religious countries. Results are shown in (b) for each group within the Big Five framework, separately for groups in least and most religious countries. Contrasters were defined as individuals +1 SD on all contrast-eliciting traits and –1 SD on all assimilation-eliciting traits, and strong contrasters were defined as individuals +2 SD and –2 SD on those respective traits. Assimilators were defined as individuals +1 SD on all assimilation-eliciting traits and –1 SD on all contrast-eliciting traits, and strong assimilators were defined as individuals +2 SD and –2 SD on those respective traits. Error bars indicate 95% confidence intervals.