This application describes a series of projects aimed at the clarification of the Big-Five factor structure, a hierarchical representation that has been gaining consensus among personality researchers.
One aim i s to integrate the two dominant variants of that model: one associated with the work of McCrae and Costa; the other, developed by the present taxonomy team. Another aim is to provide an integrative framework for the comparison of this structure with other major models of personality, such as those proposed by Block, Cattell, Cloninger, Eysenck, and Tellegen. Over the next 4 years, the investigators will extend their previous taxonomic research, which has been rooted in the lexical hypothesis, in a variety of ways: from a primary focus on trait-descriptive adjectives (e.g., Hardworking) to nouns (e.g., Workaholic); from a primary focus on terms describing personality traits (e.g., Cowardly) to terms describing moods or other states (e.g., Afraid), and to terms describing social roles, relationships, or effects (e.g., Henpecked); and from a primary focus on the Germanic languages int he IndoEuropean stream (English, Dutch, and German) to Russian first and then to a variety of non-IndoEuropean languages. In addition, the investigators propose to extend the heterogeneity of subject samples; from college students to a quasi- representative community sample. And, finally, the investigators will continue efforts to develop evaluation-neutral personality dimensions for use in contexts where evaluative traits can prove harmful. The overall objective is to continue the development of a scientifically compelling taxonomic structure for individual differences.

Agency
National Institute of Health (NIH)
Institute
National Institute of Mental Health (NIMH)
Type
Research Project (R01)
Project #
1R01MH049227-01A1
Application #
3568069
Study Section
Emotion and Personality Review Committee (EMP)
Project Start
1993-01-01
Project End
1996-12-31
Budget Start
1993-01-01
Budget End
1993-12-31
Support Year
1
Fiscal Year
1993
Total Cost
Indirect Cost
Name
Oregon Research Institute
Department
Type
DUNS #
053615423
City
Eugene
State
OR
Country
United States
Zip Code
97403
Mlacic, Boris; Goldberg, Lewis R (2007) An analysis of a cross-cultural personality inventory: the IPIP Big-Five factor markers in Croatia. J Pers Assess 88:168-77
Grucza, Richard A; Goldberg, Lewis R (2007) The comparative validity of 11 modern personality inventories: predictions of behavioral acts, informant reports, and clinical indicators. J Pers Assess 89:167-87
Saucier, Gerard; Wilson, Kelly R; Warka, Jette (2007) The structure of retrospective accounts of family environments: related to the structure of personality attributes. J Pers Assess 88:295-308
Saucier, Gerard; Skrzypinska, Katarzyna (2006) Spiritual but not religious? Evidence for two independent dispositions. J Pers 74:1257-92
Goldberg, Lewis R; Freyd, Jennifer J (2006) Self-reports of potentially traumatic experiences in an adult community sample: gender differences and test-retest stabilities of the items in a brief betrayal-trauma survey. J Trauma Dissociation 7:39-63
Lee, Kibeom; Ashton, Michael C (2006) Further assessment of the HEXACO Personality Inventory: two new facet scales and an observer report form. Psychol Assess 18:182-91
Ashton, Michael C; Lee, Kibeom (2005) Honesty-humility, the big five, and the five-factor model. J Pers 73:1321-53
Saucier, Gerard; Georgiades, Stelios; Tsaousis, Ioannis et al. (2005) The factor structure of Greek personality adjectives. J Pers Soc Psychol 88:856-75
Ashton, Michael C; Lee, Kibeom; Goldberg, Lewis R (2004) A hierarchical analysis of 1,710 English personality-descriptive adjectives. J Pers Soc Psychol 87:707-21
Saucier, Gerard (2003) Factor structure of English-language personality type-nouns. J Pers Soc Psychol 85:695-708

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