Lecture 4 - Personality (Development & Change) Flashcards
Is personality fixed?
1) William James said character has set like plaster by age 30
2) Mischel et al - how long kids could wait before eating marshmallows predicted life outcomes
3) temper tantrum frequency predicts occupational instability
What are the 3 types of stability?
1) rank-order stability - the degree to which the relative ORDERING (position) of individuals on a given trait is maintained over time
2) mean-level stability - consistency in avg. level of traits over time
3) individual stability - absolute consistency at the level of the individual person
What did Costa & McRae (1994) find about rand-order stability in personality?
- found test-retest correlations of 0.65 for the big five traits
- if one is above average on a big 5 personality trait at 30, the probability of being so at 50 is 83%
- good evidence for rank order stability being MODERATELY HIGHLY STABLE ACROSS LIFESPAN
What are 4 things Roberts & DevVecchio (2000) found about rank-order stability?
1) relatively high (r > .30)
2) increases over lifespan (from ~0.41 in childhood to ~0.55 by age 30, to ~0.70 at
age 60)
3) decreases as test-retest interval increases (~0.60 over a 1-year period, ~0.30
over a 40-year period)
4) is trait general (does NOT vary across the big 5 traits, assessment method, or gender)
What influences stability in personality?
1) Genetic influences - probabilistic influence of genes on behaviour / experience
2) environmental channelling - settling down into env, increased env stability, friends, routine
3) environment selection - we seek environments that match, support, and maintain our personality traits
(assortive mating, migration, vocational choice)
What did McGue et al (2003) suggest about rank-order stability and change in personality?
® 70-90% of rank-order stability in personality is owing to genetic factors.
® 70% of change in personality is owing to environmental factors.
What did Johnson find about heritability estimates of stability in personality?
® Looked at the overlap in heritability estimates taken at two time points.
® Found that perhaps environment also contributes to stability in personality (i.e.
that there is stability to both the heritable & non-heritable components of our
personality traits).
What did Caspi & Herbener (1990) suggest about relationships and rank order stability?
® Rank order stability was higher for couples with more similar personalities.
® In this way, your partner’s traits represent an environmental channel which
accounts for the stability of your own traits over time
1 statement about mean-level change in personality?
changes tend to be broadly positive - ‘psychosocial maturity’
What did Costa and McRae find about mean-level change in personality?
® Found that openness, extraversion and neuroticism drop over adult years; whilst
agreeableness & conscientiousness tend to increase over the adult years.
® This suggests a general tendency for people to become nicer, more responsible,
more set in their ways, less gregarious, and to experience less negative emotions
over time.
What did Bleidorn et al find that was different to Robins Mroczek about mean-level change in personality?
there were diverging patterns at the facet level – assertiveness increased whilst
gregariousness & excitement-seeking decreased.
What did Robins & Mroczek find about mean-level change in personality?
® Looked at personality change in young adulthood (university students)
® Found that agreeableness & conscientiousness rose, openness & neuroticism
decreased, extraversion remained stable.
What influences mean-level change in personality?
1) genetic influences - evolved maturation processes are encoded in our DNA, acting as genetic switches to assist with developmental tasks throughout the lifespand
2) environmental effects - major life transitions (e.g. transition to work), stages and role shifts can all induce mean-level changes in personality
What might be the sources of mean-level change?
1) people who are more similar e.g. twins change in ways that are more similar over the course of the lifespan (genetic ‘switches’)
2) universal maturation - cross-cultural studies show this (neuroticism is a bit inconsistent)
3) Cross-species universal maturation (extraversion, openness, neuroticism decrease, agreeableness + conscientiousness rise)
4) transition to workforce (increase in extraversion or ‘agency’) –> but this could be an environmental selection effect
5) transition to parenthood (higher in extraversion + agreeableness, lower in openness) - could also be an environmental selection effect
6) Twenge’s studies on “generation me” – argues that a generation characterized by inflated
self-esteem, egotism, and expectations of the future has led to differences in
personality traits
What was an issue with Twenge’s study?
sampling issues (samples of university participants collected were not representative of the broader population)
overestimation of effect sizes (due to individual scores being used over aggregated
scores)
did not find major cohort effects