A curated collection of research papers, articles, and related news and media exploring the Big Five personality traits.
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 cognitive measures were significant predictors of mortality (r=.16), even after controlling for traditional medical risk factors. While recent high-risk studies have introduced more null findings, the overall data suggests that a hostile personality profile significantly impacts long-term cardiovascular health and longevity.
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; conversely, a lack of fit typically results in frequent career shifts and dissatisfaction. Recent research has further strengthened this model by linking Holland’s vocational types to the Big Five personality factors, such as correlating the 'Social' type with high Agreeableness and Extraversion, providing a more comprehensive psychological map of career success.
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 communication processes interact over time. This shift toward longitudinal analysis allows researchers to better predict marital stability and identify specific turning points where relationships either thrive or dissolve.
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 those who had. Acquaintances were significantly more accurate than strangers, not because they assumed the person was like them, but because they correctly identified the target's unique characteristics. These findings suggest that agreement between different judges primarily stems from mutual accuracy rather than shared social circles or simple communication.
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 divorce during childhood, serve as significant risk factors for premature death. These early-life stressors and traits also linked to unstable marriage patterns in adulthood, suggesting that long-term health is deeply influenced by the intersection of individual temperament and stable family environments.
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 approach helps determine the 'optimal match' between an individual's natural traits and the demands of their career.
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-level approach allows researchers to validate the inventory against occupational scales and other personality models, ensuring both breadth and depth in assessment.
This longitudinal study demonstrates that behavioral styles identified at age 3 are significant predictors of personality traits in young adulthood. By age 18, 'Undercontrolled' children emerged as impulsive and aggressive, while 'Inhibited' children remained socially cautious and low in danger-seeking. These findings suggest that early childhood temperament serves as a foundational blueprint, with specific behavioral patterns remaining remarkably consistent as individuals mature into their adult personalities.
This study confirms the Five-Factor Model (FFM) effectively distinguishes individuals with Axis I disorders from those without. Across 468 young adults, personality dimensions provided unique diagnostic insights, even when accounting for general psychopathological symptoms. These findings highlight the FFM's utility in clinical assessments, demonstrating that specific trait profiles can accurately signal diverse mental health conditions beyond broad measures of current distress.
This historical overview traces the evolution of the Big Five factor structure, which has become the dominant framework for studying individual differences. The taxonomy is rooted in the 'lexical hypothesis,' the idea that important personality traits are eventually encoded into language. Its development was shaped by early pioneers like Sir Francis Galton and Raymond Cattell, eventually being refined through the seminal work of researchers like Tupes and Christal. Despite facing significant criticism over the decades, the model's resilience and its ability to assimilate competing theories have led to its widespread adoption in practical fields like personnel selection and organizational classification.
This study connects James Marcia’s four identity statuses—Achievement, Foreclosure, Moratorium, and Diffusion—to the Big Five traits. Researchers found that Identity Achievers exhibit high Conscientiousness and Extraversion with low Neuroticism. Conversely, Foreclosure correlates with low Openness, while Moratorium and Diffusion involve higher Neuroticism. These findings demonstrate that our psychological 'status' in developing a self-identity is deeply linked to our underlying personality structure.
This landmark study identifies five robust and recurring personality factors (Surgency, Agreeableness, Dependability, Emotional Stability, and Culture) which served as the foundational precursors to the modern Big Five. By analyzing 35 traits across eight highly diverse samples (ranging from airmen to clinical psychologists) the researchers found these five factors remained consistent regardless of education level, rater expertise, or length of acquaintance. Even when using early computer-based analytic rotations, the same five-factor structure emerged, proving that human personality can be captured through a stable, universal set of dimensions rather than an infinite list of individual traits.
The Five-Factor Model (FFM) organizes personality into five broad, hierarchical dimensions: Extraversion, Agreeableness, Conscientiousness, Neuroticism, and Openness to Experience. Extensive research using diverse instruments and cross-cultural observers validates its comprehensiveness. Beyond simple classification, the model serves as a robust framework for understanding the origins and operations of traits, offering a standardized language for both individual psychological assessment and broader scientific inquiry into human behavior.
The Abridged Big Five Dimensional Circumplex (AB5C) model serves as a bridge between the hierarchical 'simple-structure' Big Five and traditional circumplex models. By pairing each of the Big Five factors into ten distinct circles, it defines personality facets as 'blends' of two primary dimensions (e.g., a trait that is primarily high Extraversion but secondary high Agreeableness). This taxonomy identifies 45 possible facets, of which 34 were empirically well-defined, providing a more granular and integrated map of human personality than broad factors alone.
Researchers investigated how to create the most accurate and 'univocal' (single-factor) measures for the Big Five personality domains. They discovered that while transparent bipolar scales (which use opposing pairs of adjectives) perform well, simple unipolar scales using 100 individual terms are even more robust across different groups. These 100 markers provide a highly consistent way to measure personality in both self-reports and peer descriptions. When compared to established tools like the NEO and Hogan inventories, these unipolar terms proved to be exceptionally reliable for capturing the core of the Five Factor Model.
This meta-analysis explores how the Big Five personality traits predict success across various career fields, such as sales, management, and law enforcement. The research identifies Conscientiousness as a universal predictor of high job performance regardless of the occupation. Other traits are more specialized; for instance, Extraversion is essential for roles requiring social interaction, while both Extraversion and Openness to Experience are key indicators of how quickly an individual will master new training.
This study identifies that overall physical attractiveness is a composite of both static and dynamic components. Through structural equation modeling, researchers found that while facial beauty is a primary static factor, dynamic elements (such as social and communication skills) contribute significantly to how attractive a person is perceived to be. Ultimately, this overall rating of attractiveness acts as the key driver for positive initial impressions and one's desirability as a potential dating partner.
This study details the evolution of the NEO Personality Inventory into its revised version (NEO-PI-R). Researchers expanded the model by developing specific 'facet' scales for Agreeableness (such as Trust and Altruism) and Conscientiousness, including Order and Self-Discipline. By testing these measures against a large sample, they confirmed that the Big Five domains are most accurately understood through these nuanced, lower-level traits.
This study critiques the MBTI's theoretical foundations, finding no evidence for 'dichotomous types' or Jungian categories. Instead, data from 468 participants shows the MBTI measures four continuous dimensions that align closely with the Five-Factor Model. Specifically, the MBTI indices map onto Extraversion, Openness, Agreeableness, and Conscientiousness. These findings suggest the Five-Factor Model offers a more empirically sound and comprehensive framework for interpreting the personality variations the MBTI attempts to capture.