Research Feed

A curated collection of research papers and articles exploring the Big Five personality traits.

RESEARCH
Openness Neuroticism
Identity Consolidation in Early Adulthood: Relations with Ego-Resiliency, the Context of Marriage, and Personality Change
Pals · Journal of Personality. · January 1999

Successful identity consolidation involves committing to adult roles and constructing a coherent sense of self. Research on women shows that ego-resiliency at age 21 predicts better identity outcomes by age 27, a process often mediated by the quality of their experience in marriage. Notably, achi...

RESEARCH
Conscientiousness Agreeableness Neuroticism
The Big Five personality traits, general mental ability, and career success across the life span
Judge et al. · Personnel Psychology · January 1999

Drawing from the longitudinal Intergenerational Studies, this research proves that personality and cognitive ability independently drive career success. Conscientiousness consistently predicted both job satisfaction and higher income, while Neuroticism hindered extrinsic achievements. Furthermore...

RESEARCH
The validity and utility of selection methods in personnel psychology: Practical and theoretical implications of 85 years of research findings
Schmidt & Hunter · Psychological Bulletin · January 1998

Meta-analytic research spanning 85 years identifies General Mental Ability (GMA) as the premier predictor of professional success. Pairing GMA with integrity tests or structured interviews yields the highest predictive validity (up to .65), effectively measuring both cognitive capacity and behavi...

RESEARCH
Neuroticism
The happy personality: A meta-analysis of 137 personality traits and subjective well-being
DeNeve, K. & Cooper, H. · Psychological Bulletin · January 1998

This meta-analysis of 137 personality constructs identifies how specific traits drive subjective well-being. While personality strongly predicts life satisfaction and happiness, it is less predictive of negative affect. Within the Big Five, Neuroticism stands as the primary predictor of overall s...

RESEARCH
The Other “Authoritarian Personality.”
Altemeyer · Advances in Experimental Social Psychology · January 1998

This research examines how authoritarian and submissive personalities develop through social learning rather than innate traits. Submissiveness often originates from adolescent training in obedience and conventionalism. Conversely, authoritarians tend to be ethnocentric and maintain double standa...

RESEARCH
Personality measurement: Reliability and validity issues
West & Finch · Handbook of personality psychology · January 1997

This work introduces foundational research in personality measurement, emphasizing key issues such as the nature of psychological constructs, as well as the importance of reliability and validity. It highlights measurement approaches that not only assess traits but also advance theoretical unders...

RESEARCH
Psychological defense: Contemporary theory and research
Paulhus et al. · Handbook of personality psychology · January 1997

Psychological defense is the process of regulating painful emotions like anxiety and loss of self-esteem, often through unconscious mental processes. While early theories focused on internal conflicts regarding sex and aggression, more primitive mechanisms like denial protect against external rea...

RESEARCH
Personality influences on the choice of situations
Ickes et al. · Handbook of personality psychology · January 1997

This chapter explores how individuals maintain behavioral consistency by actively selecting environments that align with their traits. This 'person-situation fit' suggests that stability in behavior across time is not just an internal mechanism but a result of people choosing settings where their...

RESEARCH
Extraversion and Its Positive Emotional Core
Watson, D. & Clark, L.A. · Handbook of Personality Psychology · January 1997

This review examines the evolution and structure of extraversion, tracing its development from early typological views to modern trait-based models. It integrates foundational theories with contemporary perspectives linking extraversion to affect and personality frameworks. The authors propose a ...

RESEARCH
Openness Neuroticism
Intelligence, personality, and interests: Evidence for overlapping traits
Ackerman & Heggestad · Psychological Bulletin · January 1997

This study explores how intelligence, personality, and vocational interests overlap. It distinguishes between intelligence as 'maximal performance' (testing well) and 'typical performance' (everyday thinking). By analyzing these connections, the researchers identified four 'trait complexes'—socia...

RESEARCH
Personality and coping: three generations of research
Suls et al. · Journal of personality · December 1996

The study of how individuals manage stress has evolved through three distinct theoretical generations. Early psychoanalytic models initially merged personality and coping as one, while the subsequent transactional approach shifted focus toward situational factors and cognitive appraisals. The cur...

RESEARCH
Resilient, overcontrolled, and undercontrolled boys: Three replicable personality types
Robins et al. · Journal of Personality and Social Psychology · January 1996

Research identifies three replicable personality types among adolescents (Resilients, Overcontrollers, and Undercontrollers) that generalize across different racial backgrounds. Resilients are characterized by high intelligence and ego resiliency, leading to academic success and low delinquency. ...

RESEARCH
Agreeableness
Meta-analytic review of research on hostility and physical health
Miller et al. · Psychological Bulletin · January 1996

This meta-analysis of 45 studies identifies hostility as an independent risk factor for coronary heart disease (CHD) and all-cause mortality. Using structured interviews to measure hostile potential yielded a correlation of r=.18 with CHD. Notably, the Cook-Medley Hostility Scale and similar cogn...

RESEARCH
Exploring careers with a typology: What we have learned and some new directions
Holland · American Psychologist · January 1996

Holland's typology emphasizes that professional flourishing depends on congruence between an individual’s personality and their work environment. When a person's RIASEC type aligns with their workplace characteristics, they experience higher job satisfaction, stability, and performance; conversel...

RESEARCH
Neuroticism
The longitudinal course of marital quality and stability: A review of theory, methods, and research
Karney & Bradbury · Psychological Bulletin · January 1995

This review of 115 longitudinal studies involving 45,000 marriages emphasizes that relationship success is a dynamic trajectory, not a static state. By evaluating decades of data, the authors developed an integrative model showing how individual vulnerabilities, external stressors, and adaptive c...

RESEARCH
Agreement among judges of personality: Interpersonal relations, similarity, and acquaintanceship
Funder et al. · Journal of Personality and Social Psychology · January 1995

This study investigated how different groups—including parents, friends, and strangers—agree on an individual's personality traits. Researchers found that while knowing a person in the same context helps, it is not required for agreement; in fact, acquaintances who had never met agreed as much as...

RESEARCH
Conscientiousness
Psychosocial and behavioral predictors of longevity: The aging and death of the 'Termites
Friedman et al. · American Psychologist · January 1995

This longitudinal study followed a cohort of gifted children across several decades to determine how personality and family stress impact longevity. Researchers discovered that psychosocial factors, particularly impulsive or undercontrolled personality traits and the experience of parental divorc...

RESEARCH
Persons, Places, and Personality: Career Assessment Using the Revised NEO Personality Inventory
Costa et al. · Journal of Career Assessment · January 1995

This study highlights how the NEO PI-R and its 30 specific traits can be applied to vocational counseling and job placement. By using the NEO Job Profiler alongside the inventory, researchers can identify the specific personality requirements of an occupation, such as law enforcement. This dual a...

RESEARCH
Domains and facets: Hierarchical personality assessment using the Revised NEO Personality Inventory
Costa & McCrae · Journal of Personality Assessment · January 1995

This research explains the hierarchical structure of the NEO-PI-R, where five broad personality domains are each supported by six specific facets. While domain-level scores provide a quick overview of an individual, analyzing the facets offers a more precise psychological profile. This multi-leve...