| Literature DB >> 34903948 |
Jennifer A Bellingtier1, Marcus Mund2, Cornelia Wrzus3.
Abstract
Although long postulated, it has been scarcely researched how personality traits play out differently in distinct situations. We examined if Neuroticism and Extraversion, personality traits known to moderate stress processes, function differently in highly stressful situations requiring reduced social contact, that is, the COVID-19 pandemic. Based on past findings, we expected neuroticism to be associated with exacerbated perceptions of stress. In contrast to past findings, we expected extraversion, which usually ameliorates stress, to be associated with intensified perceptions of stress, especially in regard to the sociability facet. During the third wave of the COVID-19 pandemic in Germany, one-hundred-thirty adults (age M = 21.7 years) reported on their personality traits including their facets with the BFI-2, COVID-19-related stressors, and their perceived stress during the last month (using the PSS). Findings indicated that neuroticism was associated with higher perceived stress regardless of the COVID-19-related stressors experienced. Facet level analysis revealed differences for anxiety, depression, and volatility. Importantly, trait extraversion was unassociated with stress experiences, whereas specifically the facet of sociability was associated with higher perceived stress. Also, the facets of assertiveness and energy both moderated the relationship between COVID-19-related stressors and perceived stress. In line with the transactional theory of stress, our findings indicate that perceptions of stress were best understood by looking at the interaction of environmental stressors and personality differences. Furthermore, the study substantiates that facets of personality traits offer unique information beyond broad traits in specific contexts.Entities:
Keywords: COVID-19; Extraversion; Neuroticism; Personality facets; Stress process; Transactional theory of stress
Year: 2021 PMID: 34903948 PMCID: PMC8655714 DOI: 10.1007/s12144-021-02600-y
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Curr Psychol ISSN: 1046-1310
Descriptive Statistics for Study Variables
| Variables | Range | ω | 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6 | 7 | 8 | 9 | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1. Perceived Stress | 2.99 (0.69) | 1.40–4.40 | .88 | |||||||||
| 2. C19 Stressors | 2.11 (0.37) | 1.42–3.00 | .77 | .49* | ||||||||
| 3. Neuroticism | 2.86 (0.73) | 1.17–4.50 | .91 | .71* | .35* | |||||||
| 4. Anxiety | 3.21 (0.77) | 1.50–4.75 | .75 | .62* | .27* | .90* | ||||||
| 5. Depression | 2.68 (0.86) | 1.00–4.75 | .85 | .67* | .35* | .88* | .69* | |||||
| 6. Volatility | 2.70 (0.83) | 1.00–4.75 | .82 | .59* | .31* | .89* | .73* | .64* | ||||
| 7. Extraversion | 3.34 (0.63) | 1.50–5.00 | .88 | −.09 | .06 | −.23* | −.23* | −.33* | −.04 | |||
| 8. Sociability | 3.34 (0.85) | 1.50–5.00 | .84 | .08 | .08 | −.08 | −.10 | −.18* | .08 | .89* | ||
| 9. Assertiveness | 3.15 (0.74) | 1.00–5.00 | .78 | −.27* | −.02 | −.31* | −.31* | −.39* | −.13 | .83* | .60* | |
| 10. Energy | 3.55 (0.65) | 2.00–5.00 | .70 | −.08 | .08 | −.20* | −.20* | −.29* | −.07 | .81* | .59* | .50* |
Note. ω = omega, internal consistency reliability
*p < .05
Predicting Perceived Stress from Neuroticism and Its Facets
| Variables | Trait | Facets | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| B [95% BCa CI] | β | B [95% BCa CI] | β | |
| Intercept | 2.98 [2.88, 3.09] | 2.99 [2.89, 3.10] | ||
| C19 Stressors | 0.91 [0.64, 1.20] | .49* | 0.91 [0.63, 1.15] | .49* |
| R2 | .24* | .24* | ||
| Intercept | 2.99 [2.89, 3.06] | 2.99 [2.90, 3.08] | ||
| C19 Stressors | 0.51 [0.29, 0.73] | .28* | 0.50 [0.28, 0.72] | .27* |
| Neuroticism | 0.58 [0.47, 0.68] | .61* | ||
| Anxiety | 0.20 [0.05, 0.37] | .22* | ||
| Depression | 0.28 [0.12, 0.42] | .35* | ||
| Volatility | 0.11 [−0.08, 0.29] | .13 | ||
| R2 | .57* | .58* | ||
| R2Δ | .33* | .34* | ||
| Intercept | 3.00 [2.91, 3.09] | 3.00 [2.91, 3.11] | ||
| C19 Stressors | 0.52 [0.32, 0.75] | .28* | 0.47 [0.22, 0.71] | .26* |
| Neuroticism | 0.58 [0.47, 0.68] | .61* | ||
| Anxiety | 0.11 [−0.05, 0.29] | .13 | ||
| Depression | 0.30 [0.15, 0.45] | .38* | ||
| Volatility | 0.16 [−0.01, 0.32] | .19* | ||
| C19 Stressors x Neuroticism | −0.08 [−0.42, 0.21] | −.03 | ||
| C19 Stressors x Anxiety | −0.70 [−1.23, −0.14] | −.25* | ||
| C19 Stressors x Depression | −0.21 [−0.62, 0.17] | −.09 | ||
| C19 Stressors x Volatility | 0.67 [0.26, 0.98] | .30* | ||
| R2 | .57* | .62* | ||
| R2Δ | .00 | .04* |
Note. Regressions run with 1000 Bias-Corrected Bootstrap Samples. C19 Stressors and neuroticism and its facets are grand mean centered
*p < .05
Fig. 1Interaction of Neuroticism Facets and COVID-19-Related Stressors Predicting Perceived Stress. Note. Mild/Moderate stressors are graphed at 1.5, and severe stressors at 3.0, on the coronavirus impact scale. The neuroticism facets, anxiety and volatility, are graphed at ± 1 SD. Simple slopes for low anxiety = 1.02, p = .008, for high anxiety = −0.07, p = .867, low volatility = −0.09, p = .836, high volatility = 1.03, p = .038
Predicting Perceived Stress from Extraversion and Its Facets
| Variables | Trait | Facets | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| B [95% BCa CI] | β | B [95% BCa CI] | β | |
| Intercept | 2.98 [2.88, 3.09] | 2.99 [2.88, 3.09] | ||
| C19 Stressors | 0.91 [0.64, 1.20] | .49* | 0.91 [0.63, 1.19] | .49* |
| R2 | .24* | .24* | ||
| Intercept | 2.99 [2.89, 3.09] | 2.99 [2.88, 3.10] | ||
| C19 Stressors | 0.92 [0.66, 1.20] | .50* | 0.86 [0.59, 1.10] | .46* |
| Extraversion | −0.13 [−0.29, 0.03] | −.12 | ||
| Sociability | 0.29 [0.13, 0.45] | .36* | ||
| Assertiveness | −0.38 [−0.54, −0.23] | −.41* | ||
| Energy | −0.13 [−0.36, 0.08] | −.12 | ||
| R2 | .25* | .37* | ||
| R2Δ | .02 | .13* | ||
| Intercept | 2.99 [2.88, 3.10] | 2.98 [2.88, 3.07] | ||
| C19 Stressors | 0.92 [0.67, 1.20] | .50* | 0.82 [0.57, 1.04] | .44* |
| Extraversion | −0.14 [−0.29, 0.03] | −.12 | ||
| Sociability | 0.27 [0.09, 0.47] | .33* | ||
| Assertiveness | −0.41 [−0.56, −0.26] | −.43* | ||
| Energy | −0.10 [−0.31, 0.10] | −.09 | ||
| C19 Stressors x Extraversion | −0.02 [−0.54, 0.41] | −.01 | ||
| C19 Stressors x Sociability | −0.18 [−0.65, 0.32] | −.08 | ||
| C19 Stressors x Assertiveness | −0.52 [−0.92, 0.03] | −.19* | ||
| C19 Stressors x Energy | 0.77 [0.34, 1.13] | .27* | ||
| R2 | .25* | .42* | ||
| R2Δ | .00 | .05* |
Note. Regressions run with 1000 Bias-Corrected Bootstrap Samples. C19 Stressors and extraversion and its facets are grand mean centered
*p < .05
Fig. 2Interaction of Extraversion Facets and COVID-19-Related Stressors Predicting Perceived Stress. Note. Mild/Moderate stressors are graphed at 1.5, and severe stressors at 3.0, on the coronavirus impact scale. The extraversion facets, assertiveness and energy, are graphed at ± 1 SD. Simple slopes for low assertiveness = 1.20, p = .004, for high assertiveness = 0.44, p = .307, low energy = 0.32, p = .407, high energy = 1.31, p = .002