A curated collection of research papers, articles, and related news and media exploring the Big Five personality traits.
This meta-analysis of over 65,000 participants confirms that Big Five traits significantly shape our nocturnal experiences. Neuroticism is the primary predictor of nightmare frequency and emotional distress, while Openness correlates with high dream recall, vividness, and lucid dreaming. Extraversion mainly influences the social sharing of dreams. These findings support 'continuity models,' suggesting that our waking affective vulnerabilities and cognitive styles directly extend into our dream lives.
This study highlights that core personality traits are powerful predictors of baseline fitness and the specific exercise intensities individuals enjoy. Notably, participants scoring high in Neuroticism experienced the most significant stress-reduction benefits from aerobic training, suggesting a targeted emotional utility for exercise. Across the spectrum, Openness, Conscientiousness, and Extraversion further dictate these behavioral patterns, providing a scientific basis for how stable traits influence physical health. By understanding these links, interventions can be better tailored to leverage an individual's personality for improved well-being and long-term fitness adherence.
Using German panel data and a job search and bargaining model, this study finds that Big Five personality traits shape wages and employment through multiple channels. Higher conscientiousness and emotional stability raise earnings and shorten unemployment for both sexes, while agreeableness reduces wages and bargaining power. Women's tendency toward higher agreeableness and lower emotional stability accounts for roughly as much of the gender wage gap as differences in work experience do.
This large-scale meta-analysis of over 150,000 participants explores how the Big Five traits influence dietary habits. Researchers found that lower Neuroticism and higher levels of Openness, Conscientiousness, Extraversion, and Agreeableness consistently predict a healthier diet. These traits affect everything from fruit intake to emotional eating patterns. Interestingly, the positive link between Agreeableness and healthy eating becomes even stronger as people get older.
This systematic review of 58,812 participants demonstrates that Big Five personality traits significantly influence sleep. High Neuroticism consistently correlates with poor sleep quality and disturbances, while Conscientiousness is a strong predictor of 'morningness' and better sleep hygiene. These findings suggest that personality-driven behaviors shape our nocturnal routines, highlighting the potential for personalized clinical interventions that account for individual psychological profiles to improve long-term sleep health.
This massive study of over 350,000 people across six continents reveals that preferences for Western music follow universal patterns that transcend cultural boundaries. By analyzing both genre favorability and direct audio reactions, researchers identified five consistent latent factors of musical preference that remain stable across different countries. These preferences are closely linked to the Big Five personality traits regardless of location; for instance, Extraversion consistently predicts a liking for upbeat Contemporary styles, while Openness correlates with a preference for complex Sophisticated music. Because these correlations (along with those involving gender and ethnicity) are so invariant, the findings suggest a deep, universal connection between human psychology and musical taste.
Applying a Lewinian interactionist framework, this study examined how both government policy and personality traits influenced sheltering-in-place behavior across 54 countries. Researchers found that while strict government policies effectively increased compliance, individual personality traits remained significant predictors of behavior. Specifically, high levels of Openness, Conscientiousness, Agreeableness, and Neuroticism were linked to staying home, while Extraversion was associated with lower compliance. Notably, the influence of Openness and Neuroticism weakened as government restrictions became more stringent, suggesting that while personality drives behavior in flexible environments, strong external policies can partially override these internal tendencies.
This study leverages massive streaming data from Spotify to demonstrate that musical preferences are a powerful window into personality. By analyzing millions of songs and over 200 behavioral metrics, researchers used machine learning to predict Big Five traits with high accuracy. The findings challenge previous theories by proving that our digital listening habits (rather than just self-reported tastes) provide a remarkably precise reflection of our underlying psychological makeup.
This chapter offers a comprehensive introduction to the theoretical frameworks and empirical evidence linking personality to parenting. It begins by establishing the core concepts within personality psychology and parenting research, then transitions into a detailed review of how specific traits influence caregiving behaviors. The chapter concludes by identifying critical gaps in the current literature, proposing future research directions, and summarizing the broader implications of these personality-parenting associations.
This large-scale longitudinal study involving over 22,000 adults demonstrates a powerful, bidirectional relationship between personality and sleep quality. Lower Neuroticism and higher Extraversion were the strongest predictors of better sleep, often outweighing demographic factors. Conversely, low Conscientiousness predicted a decline in sleep quality over time. Notably, the relationship is reciprocal: poor sleep quality was associated with 'detrimental' personality trajectories, including steeper declines in Extraversion, Agreeableness, and Conscientiousness. These findings suggest that sleep is not just a health outcome influenced by personality, but a critical factor in maintaining a stable and healthy personality profile as we age.
This meta-analysis demonstrates that maternal personality and psychopathology are deeply interconnected determinants of parenting. Mothers with high Agreeableness, Extraversion, and Conscientiousness, alongside low Neuroticism and psychopathology, consistently exhibited more adaptive warmth and control. Path analyses suggest these traits do not act in isolation; rather, shared variance among these psychological characteristics explains their collective impact on parenting behavior, highlighting the need for more integrated family interventions.
The site includes over 3,000 items and over 250 scales that have been constructed from the items. New items and scales are developed on an irregular basis. The items and scales are in the public domain. This work offers a robust scientific foundation for understanding the stable patterns of human personality and their significant real-world implications across different environments.
A meta-analysis of nearly 6,000 parent-child dyads indicates that a parent’s personality serves as a significant resource for their caregiving style. Higher levels of Extraversion, Agreeableness, Conscientiousness, and Openness correlate with increased warmth and behavioral control. Furthermore, Agreeable parents with low Neuroticism are more likely to support a child’s autonomy. Although these effects are small, they remain consistent across various assessment methods and family structures.
A meta-analysis of studies spanning nearly four decades identifies Extraversion, Conscientiousness, and Neuroticism as the primary personality drivers of physical activity. Specifically, individuals who are more outgoing and disciplined tend to exercise more, while those higher in emotional instability are less active. Interestingly, traits like Openness and Agreeableness showed no significant link to activity levels. While more research is needed on specific types of exercise, these core personality-activity relationships appear remarkably consistent across different ages, genders, and cultures.
The Big Five personality factors serve as powerful heuristics for predicting outcomes across multiple life domains. At the individual level, traits are linked to health, happiness, and identity. Interpersonally, they shape the quality of family and romantic relationships. Finally, at the institutional level, personality influences occupational success, political ideology, and community involvement. These findings underscore that personality dispositions are not just internal states but active drivers of significant life consequences.
This study questions whether the Five-Factor Model fully captures traits relevant to criminal behavior. It finds that only agreeableness and conscientiousness consistently predict offending, while additional criminogenic traits (such as deception and self-deception) add substantial explanatory power beyond the FFM. These traits significantly improved prediction of offending in both student and prisoner samples, suggesting important limits to the model’s coverage and to assumptions about accurate self-reported personality.
This research explores the 'personalization' of modern politics, where the individual traits of both voters and candidates drive political choice. The authors propose a congruency model, finding that voters prefer candidates whose personalities align with party ideology or mirror their own traits. Ultimately, political choice is a psychological matching process where voters seek leaders who reflect their own internal values and self-identity.
This meta-analysis explains why Conscientiousness is such a powerful predictor of a long life. By reviewing nearly 200 studies, researchers found that highly conscientious people consistently avoid risky behaviors (such as tobacco use, excessive drinking, and reckless driving) while actively engaging in beneficial habits like regular exercise and healthy eating. These findings demonstrate that personality doesn't just impact your mind; it physically protects your body by shaping your daily lifestyle choices.
This study examines how life milestones and personality traits affect relationships between 26-year-olds and their parents. Relationships tend to be more positive when young adults are married, employed, and living independently. However, personality plays a distinct role: higher levels of negative emotionality and lower self-control in young adults correlate with more strained parent-child dynamics, regardless of their life achievements.
This meta-analysis of 59 studies demonstrates that personality research provides a powerful lens for understanding criminology. By comparing four major structural models—PEN, the three-factor model, the FFM, and the seven-factor model—the authors found that antisocial behavior consistently correlates with specific traits. Regardless of the framework used, the strongest predictors of antisocial behavior are low Agreeableness and low Conscientiousness. These results suggest that the 'core' of criminal and antisocial tendencies lies in a lack of empathy, poor impulse control, and a disregard for social norms, providing a unified psychological profile for future criminological research.