Personality profile of binge drinking in university students is modulated by sex. A study using the Alternative Five Factor Model

2016 ◽  
Vol 165 ◽  
pp. 120-125 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ana Adan ◽  
José Francisco Navarro ◽  
Diego A. Forero
2018 ◽  
Vol 4 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Courtland Hyatt ◽  
W. Keith Campbell ◽  
Donald R. Lynam ◽  
Joshua D. Miller

The present research used an empirical, crowdsourced trait profiling approach to describe the personality of President Donald Trump (hereafter Trump) that accounts for political views. We recruited participants who voted for Hillary Clinton (N = 120; hereafter Clinton) and Trump (N = 118), and asked them to rate Trump’s personality on the 30 facets of the Five Factor Model. Participants also provided perceived helpfulness and harmfulness ratings of the facets before and after the election. We treated these facet level ratings as trait profiles, which were transformed into estimates of personality disorders (PDs) and complex trait-based constructs based on expert profiles. Results suggest only modest agreement between Clinton and Trump voters on Trump’s personality. Clinton voters perceived much greater antagonism, lower conscientiousness, and higher levels of impairment in Trump’s personality than did Trump voters who primarily perceived high levels of extraversion and emotional stability (i.e., low neuroticism). At the level of PDs and complex traits, there was some convergence with both groups seeing Trump as high in narcissism and psychopathy.


2006 ◽  
Vol 34 (1) ◽  
pp. 1-16 ◽  
Author(s):  
Carolina Mcbride ◽  
David C. Zuroff ◽  
Jason Bacchiochi ◽  
R. Michael Bagby

This study investigated the distinction between neediness and connectedness as measured by the Depressive Experiences Questionnaire (DEQ; Blatt, D'Afflitti, & Quinlan, 1976) by examining the association between these personality scales and: (1) depression severity, (2) the domains and facets of the Five Factor Model of Personality (FFM; Costa & McCrae, 1985, 1992), and (3) attachment style in a university student sample and in a clinical sample of depressed patients. In the student sample, both neediness and connectedness were related to depression severity; however, the association was stronger for neediness. No relation was found between these personality scales and symptom severity in the clinical sample. Differences between neediness and connectedness emerged in their relationship to personality and attachment style. In both samples, neediness was predictive of a more psychopathological personality profile and attachment style than was connectedness. The results support the argument that DEQ connectedness assesses a less maladaptive form of dependency than does neediness.


2002 ◽  
Vol 45 (1) ◽  
pp. 23-41 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jonathan F. Bassett ◽  
John E. Williams

One hundred twenty-nine undergraduate psychology students at a large urban university and 55 students at a college of funeral service completed the Death Anxiety Questionnaire (Conte, Weiner,&Plutchik, 1982), the Revised Death Anxiety Scale (Thorson&Powell, 1994), a nine question measure of belief in an afterlife (Daws, 1980), and used the 300-item Adjective Check List (ACL; Gough&Heilbrun, 1980) to describe what death might be like if personified as a human character in a play. Three Affective Meaning scores, five Transactional Analysis ego state scores, five Five Factor Model scores, and a Sex-Stereotype Index score were calculated based on ACL descriptions of the character of death. Lower death anxiety was associated with more positive ACL descriptions of death in both samples; however, belief in an afterlife was associated with differences in death personification only among university students. Men described death as higher on the Adult ego state than did women. In addition African Americans described death as a more positive character than did European Americans. Similarly, funeral service students described death as feminine, favorable, strong, but not active, more like a Nurturing Parent, and high on Extroversion, Agreeableness, and Emotional Stability; whereas, university students described death as masculine, neutral on Favorability, more like a Critical Parent, and low on Agreeableness and Emotional Stability.


2016 ◽  
Vol 3 (4) ◽  
Author(s):  
Poonam Joshi ◽  
Dr. B. K. Bhardwaj

The personality of an individual has important implications for the performance of all sorts of activities including sports and games. The Five Factor Model of personality traits have been reported to be reliable predictors of performance in many studies across the globe. The present study aimed to understand the distribution of consciousness personality profile in terms of gender and domicile of the participants in individual and team games. Four hundred male and female sports persons with different scores of trait of consciousness served as the participants in the present study. Their sports achievements in individual and team games were observed. The results of the present study evinced that sportspersons of team games scored higher on consciousness than did the sportspersons playing in individual games. The female participants showed relatively higher mean consciousness score in comparison to their male counterparts. Furthermore, the players having rural affiliations demonstrated higher mean consciousness score as compared to those who belonged to urban background. The main effect of gender on consciousness was also exhibited to have statistical significance along with statistically significant interactions between gender and background, game type and background as well as game type, gender and background. The results have been explained in the light of current theories of personality and sports achievements. The results evinced the role of gender, game types and domicile in shaping the personality trait of consciousness in sports activities the participants. The results of the study have important implications for researchers, academicians, sportspersons, policy makers and administrators. Future directions of research have also been discussed.


2014 ◽  
Vol 60 ◽  
pp. S64
Author(s):  
I. Ramos-Grille ◽  
M. Gomà-Freixanet ◽  
N. Aragay ◽  
S. Valero ◽  
R. Guillamat ◽  
...  

2012 ◽  
Vol 198 (1) ◽  
pp. 130-134 ◽  
Author(s):  
Sergi Valero ◽  
Antoni Ramos-Quiroga ◽  
Montserrat Gomà-i-Freixanet ◽  
Rosa Bosch ◽  
Nuria Gómez-Barros ◽  
...  

2020 ◽  
Vol 1 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Marieke J H Begemann ◽  
Lindy-Lou Boyette ◽  
Aimo K Kwast ◽  
Iris E C Sommer

Abstract Background Personality is associated with the etiology, course, and outcome of psychosis. Yet, more specific knowledge on this association, beyond the global domains of the Five-Factor Model, is scarce. One way to investigate this is to study the personality profile of individuals having frequent psychosis-like experiences (PE), but without clinical psychosis or Cluster A personality disorder and compare them to patients with such symptoms. Methods We included 134 individuals with nonclinical PE, 40 psychotic disorder patients, and 126 healthy controls. Participants completed the NEO-PI-R. Domain and facet-level data were compared across groups. Result As expected, group differences were significant for Neuroticism, Openness, and Conscientiousness. Facet-level analyses showed intermediate levels of Depression and Anxiety (N) in individuals with nonclinical PE, together with high Fantasy, Aesthetics and Ideas (O) compared to controls. Notably, they displayed high Angry Hostility (N) and Feelings (O), along with low Trust (A) and Gregariousness (E). Patients showed high Vulnerability and Self-Consciousness (N), and low Competence and Self-discipline (C), while both nonclinical groups showed similar levels. Conclusions This is the first study to analyze both domain and facet-level data across the psychosis continuum. Our findings show how the facets Hostility and Feelings, low Trust and Gregariousness may be related to general PE proneness, both in nonclinical and clinical individuals alike, while Vulnerability and Self-Consciousness, low Competence, and low Self-discipline may differentiate patients from individuals with nonclinical PE. Current results encourage intervention strategies targeting coping and social skills for youth at risk for psychosis.


2017 ◽  
Author(s):  
William Keith Campbell ◽  
Courtland Hyatt ◽  
Donald Lynam ◽  
Josh Miller

The present research used an empirical, crowdsourced trait profiling approach to describe the personality of Trump that accounts for political views. Clinton (N=120) and Trump (N=118) voters rated Trump’s personality on the 30 facets of the Five Factor Model. Participants also provided perceived helpfulness and harmfulness ratings of the facets before and after the election. We treated these facet level ratings as trait profiles, which were transformed into estimates of personality disorders (PDs) and complex trait-based constructs based on expert profiles. Results suggest only modest agreement between Clinton and Trump voters on Trump’s personality. Clinton voters perceived much greater antagonism, lower conscientiousness, and higher levels of impairment in Trump’s personality than did Trump voters who primarily perceived high levels of extraversion and emotional stability (i.e., low neuroticism). At the level of PDs and complex traits, there was some convergence with both groups seeing Trump as high in narcissism and psychopathy.


2013 ◽  
Vol 27 (3) ◽  
pp. 280-289 ◽  
Author(s):  
Marleen De Bolle ◽  
Jennifer L. Tackett

Although researchers have begun to explore bullying and victimization problems from a personality perspective, more work is needed on the particular personality constellations of children and adolescents who are vulnerable to victimization or prone to bullying. The principal research goal of the present study was to anchor the robust four–group classification of bullying and victimization (i.e. bullies, victims, bully/victims and uninvolved children) within the Five–Factor Model–based person–centred framework in primary school children (N = 660), controlling for gender. We found four distinct personality types in middle childhood: a mixed type, an undercontrolled type, a moderate type and a resilient type. In line with expectations, we found that a resilient personality profile protected children and adolescents against victimization and that children and adolescents with an undercontrolled or mixed personality profile were at increased risk to be bully/victims, rather than uninvolved in bully problems or victimization, compared with children with a moderate personality profile. Implications for theory and practice are discussed. Copyright © 2013 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.


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