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MEASURING PERSONALITY IN DAILY LIFE: EVIDENCE FROM AN AGE-HETEROGENEOUS ADULT SAMPLE

Research on personality has theorized that repeated short-term experiences can lead to changes in personality traits across years or decades. Whereas much research on these short-term experiences relevant to personality has been done in samples of college students, this study intended to measure per...

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Autores principales: Ferguson, Giselle, Pasquini, Giancarlo, Sliwinski, Martin, Scott, Stacey
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Oxford University Press 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9766991/
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/geroni/igac059.2374
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author Ferguson, Giselle
Pasquini, Giancarlo
Sliwinski, Martin
Scott, Stacey
author_facet Ferguson, Giselle
Pasquini, Giancarlo
Sliwinski, Martin
Scott, Stacey
author_sort Ferguson, Giselle
collection PubMed
description Research on personality has theorized that repeated short-term experiences can lead to changes in personality traits across years or decades. Whereas much research on these short-term experiences relevant to personality has been done in samples of college students, this study intended to measure personality-relevant short-term experiences among an age-heterogeneous sample of adults. As part the Effects of Stress on Cognitive Aging, Physiology, and Emotions study, 260 participants (Mage=46.49 years, range=25-65 years) completed a measure of Big Five personality traits before completing a 14-day ecological momentary assessment (EMA) period during which participants reported their momentary negative and positive thoughts, emotions, and social interactions up to six times per day on study-provided smartphones. We hypothesized that these EMA reports could be used as daily markers of trait extraversion and trait neuroticism such that these daily experiences could be interpreted as manifestations of personality traits in daily life. Results of parallel multilevel confirmatory factor analyses showed good model fit (extraversion: CFI=0.96; TLI=0.95; RMSEA=0.03; neuroticism: CFI=0.95; TLI=0.94; RMSEA=0.04). For both extraversion and neuroticism, the latent trait factor and the latent daily-marker factor were positively correlated (extraversion: r=0.36; SE=0.07; p<.001; neuroticism: r=0.45; SE=0.07; p<.001). Results suggest that among an age-heterogeneous adult sample, momentary thoughts, feelings, and behaviors across a two-week period represented expressions of extraversion and neuroticism in daily life. Measuring these short-term experiences is meaningful for understanding how personality changes across adulthood, and future work can use longitudinal data to test if daily markers of personality are sensitive to fluctuations and changes in personality.
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spelling pubmed-97669912022-12-21 MEASURING PERSONALITY IN DAILY LIFE: EVIDENCE FROM AN AGE-HETEROGENEOUS ADULT SAMPLE Ferguson, Giselle Pasquini, Giancarlo Sliwinski, Martin Scott, Stacey Innov Aging Abstracts Research on personality has theorized that repeated short-term experiences can lead to changes in personality traits across years or decades. Whereas much research on these short-term experiences relevant to personality has been done in samples of college students, this study intended to measure personality-relevant short-term experiences among an age-heterogeneous sample of adults. As part the Effects of Stress on Cognitive Aging, Physiology, and Emotions study, 260 participants (Mage=46.49 years, range=25-65 years) completed a measure of Big Five personality traits before completing a 14-day ecological momentary assessment (EMA) period during which participants reported their momentary negative and positive thoughts, emotions, and social interactions up to six times per day on study-provided smartphones. We hypothesized that these EMA reports could be used as daily markers of trait extraversion and trait neuroticism such that these daily experiences could be interpreted as manifestations of personality traits in daily life. Results of parallel multilevel confirmatory factor analyses showed good model fit (extraversion: CFI=0.96; TLI=0.95; RMSEA=0.03; neuroticism: CFI=0.95; TLI=0.94; RMSEA=0.04). For both extraversion and neuroticism, the latent trait factor and the latent daily-marker factor were positively correlated (extraversion: r=0.36; SE=0.07; p<.001; neuroticism: r=0.45; SE=0.07; p<.001). Results suggest that among an age-heterogeneous adult sample, momentary thoughts, feelings, and behaviors across a two-week period represented expressions of extraversion and neuroticism in daily life. Measuring these short-term experiences is meaningful for understanding how personality changes across adulthood, and future work can use longitudinal data to test if daily markers of personality are sensitive to fluctuations and changes in personality. Oxford University Press 2022-12-20 /pmc/articles/PMC9766991/ http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/geroni/igac059.2374 Text en © The Author(s) 2022. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of The Gerontological Society of America. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted reuse, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Abstracts
Ferguson, Giselle
Pasquini, Giancarlo
Sliwinski, Martin
Scott, Stacey
MEASURING PERSONALITY IN DAILY LIFE: EVIDENCE FROM AN AGE-HETEROGENEOUS ADULT SAMPLE
title MEASURING PERSONALITY IN DAILY LIFE: EVIDENCE FROM AN AGE-HETEROGENEOUS ADULT SAMPLE
title_full MEASURING PERSONALITY IN DAILY LIFE: EVIDENCE FROM AN AGE-HETEROGENEOUS ADULT SAMPLE
title_fullStr MEASURING PERSONALITY IN DAILY LIFE: EVIDENCE FROM AN AGE-HETEROGENEOUS ADULT SAMPLE
title_full_unstemmed MEASURING PERSONALITY IN DAILY LIFE: EVIDENCE FROM AN AGE-HETEROGENEOUS ADULT SAMPLE
title_short MEASURING PERSONALITY IN DAILY LIFE: EVIDENCE FROM AN AGE-HETEROGENEOUS ADULT SAMPLE
title_sort measuring personality in daily life: evidence from an age-heterogeneous adult sample
topic Abstracts
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9766991/
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/geroni/igac059.2374
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