A curated collection of research papers, articles, and related news and media exploring the Big Five personality traits.
This review highlights four major advancements in personality psychology since 1995. It identifies developmental shifts in the structure of personality from childhood to adulthood and explores new breakthroughs in behavioral genetics. By synthesizing longitudinal data, the researchers pinpoint specific life stages where personality is most fluid, while also documenting how specific traits drive long-term success in social relationships, career status, and physical health.
This study examines how personality traits and internal motives interact to drive volunteerism. Researchers found that 'prosocial value motivation' (the desire to help others) is the bridge that links Agreeableness and Extraversion to actual volunteering. Interestingly, as Agreeableness decreases, Extraversion becomes a stronger driver of the motivation to volunteer, suggesting that social energy can compensate for a lack of natural altruism in fostering community service.
This study investigated the link between our ability to forgive others and the Big Five personality traits. The findings show that people who are more Agreeable tend to forgive more easily, while those higher in Neuroticism may find it more difficult to let go of grudges. Interestingly, the research suggests that your personality profile predicts your level of forgiveness even after accounting for factors like religiousness or empathy.
This research indicates that basic personality traits do not determine whether someone is religious, but they do influence how that person interprets their faith. Specifically, high Openness to Experience leads people toward symbolic rather than literal interpretations. This connection is driven by an informational identity style, where individuals actively seek out and process complex information to form their worldviews.
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 study examines the link between political ideology and personality by comparing adaptive traits with their maladaptive counterparts. While Openness to Experience remains a strong predictor of ideological leanings, the research highlights that traditional Conscientiousness has a weaker link than its maladaptive extreme, Compulsiveness. Additionally, maladaptive Disagreeableness showed a significant correlation with right-wing ideology. These findings suggest that certain political orientations may be more closely associated with specific rigid or antagonistic personality patterns than with broad, healthy trait variations, offering a more nuanced view of the psychological foundations of belief systems.
Research defines inspiration as a tripartite state consisting of evocation, transcendence, and motivation. It involves two distinct processes: being inspired by an idea and being inspired to act. Unlike positive affect, which is triggered by rewards and focuses on acquisition, inspiration is sparked by illumination and serves the function of transmission; allowing individuals to actualize and share creative insights with others.
Research indicates that while lucid dreaming is a common phenomenon (reported by 82% of students) it has a surprisingly weak direct link to major personality traits. The study found no significant association with Introversion or Neuroticism, refuting theories that link lucidity to specific levels of well-being. While small correlations exist with Openness to Experience (specifically fantasy and imagination), these are largely mediated by the dreamer's overall ability to recall dreams. Interestingly, a moderate link between nightmare frequency and lucidity suggests that intense or distressing dreams may actually act as a trigger for becoming aware within the dream state.
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 twin study reveals that while parental personality and caregiving styles share a modest connection, their association is primarily driven by nongenetic factors. Although parenting dimensions themselves show moderate genetic influence, the overlap with personality traits stems from environmental experiences rather than shared DNA. This suggests that external social contexts and life events play a more decisive role in how personality shapes parenting.
Music is an essential, rule-governed human activity that, despite being universal across societies, remains a skill where only a minority achieve high proficiency. This research marks a pivotal shift in cognitive neuroscience, moving music from a neglected topic to a central focus of brain function studies. By integrating insights from neuroscience, psychology, and neurology, researchers are uncovering the specific brain architecture dedicated to music perception and performance. This interdisciplinary approach establishes the groundwork for a formal cognitive neuroscience of music, treating it as a complex high-level function comparable to language.
This meta-analysis of 62,000 employees confirms that positive and negative affect are powerful, independent drivers of job attitudes. Negative affect strongly predicts emotional exhaustion, while positive affect enhances job satisfaction and personal accomplishment. Because both affects contribute uniquely, workplace well-being requires more than just reducing stress; it necessitates fostering positive emotional states to improve organizational commitment and reduce turnover intentions.
This longitudinal research reveals a reciprocal relationship between personality and professional life during the transition into adulthood. While personality traits at age 18 significantly predict both objective and subjective work experiences by age 26, the reverse is also true: early career experiences actively shape personality development. Most notably, the study identifies a 'corresponsive' effect, where the same traits that lead an individual to choose a specific career path are further strengthened and reinforced by the demands of that environment.
This study confirms that the Big Five personality factors are reliable predictors of significant real-world behaviors, such as academic performance and alcohol consumption. By testing two independent samples using three different assessment tools (including traditional verbal inventories and an experimental nonverbal measure) researchers found consistent behavioral patterns across all versions. These results provide strong construct validity for the Big Five model, demonstrating that these five traits are not just theoretical abstractions but stable determinants of complex human actions in social and cultural contexts.
This updated research confirms that personality traits remain remarkably stable after age 30, significantly shaping individual adaptation and the life course. Through extensive longitudinal and cross-cultural studies, the authors demonstrate that the Five-Factor Model provides a reliable framework for measuring these enduring dispositions. While life circumstances change, core traits act as a consistent foundation, influencing how adults navigate challenges and maintain their psychological identity over decades.
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 study examines the connection between the Big Five personality traits and Holland’s RIASEC occupational types. The findings reveal that while these models overlap, they measure distinct aspects of an individual. The strongest links exist between Enterprising roles and Extraversion, as well as Artistic roles and Openness to Experience. In contrast, the 'Realistic' type showed almost no correlation with the Big Five, suggesting that personality and vocational interests provide unique, complementary insights into a person's profile.
Volunteerism is defined as long-term, planned prosocial behavior that benefits strangers within an organizational context. This research highlights that sustained service is driven by both dispositional variables (such as specific personality traits and religiosity) and organizational factors, such as the volunteer environment and management style. By presenting a theoretical model of these combined influences, the study suggests that the most effective way to foster community service is to understand how an individual's internal motivations interact with the structural support of the organization.
This longitudinal study demonstrates a reciprocal relationship between stable personality traits and the quality of romantic relationships in young adulthood. Personality assessed at age 18 significantly predicted relationship quality, conflict, and abuse at age 26, suggesting that individual differences create consistent patterns even across different partners. Simultaneously, relationship experiences influenced personality development over time. These findings indicate that while relationships can impact the individual, a person’s inherent traits often determine whether their romantic unions thrive or fail, underscoring the importance of considering personality as a fundamental driver of relational outcomes.