Abstract

Spanish-language measures of the Big Five personality dimensions are needed for research on Hispanic minority populations. Three studies were conducted to evaluate a Spanish version of the Big Five Inventory (BFI) (O. P. John et al., 1991) and explore the generalizability of the Big Five factor structure in Latin cultural groups. In Study 1, a cross-cultural design was used to compare the Spanish and English BFI in college students from Spain and the United States, to assess factor congruence across languages, and to test convergence with indigenous Spanish Big Five markers. In Study 2, a bilingual design was used to compare the Spanish and English BFI in a college-educated sample of bilingual Hispanics and to test convergent and discriminant validity across the two languages as well as with the NEO Five Factor Inventory in both English and Spanish. Study 3 replicated the BFI findings from Study 2 in a working-class Hispanic bilingual sample. Results show that (a) the Spanish BFI may serve as an efficient, reliable, and factorially valid measure of the Big Five for research on Spanish-speaking individuals and (b) there is little evidence for substantial cultural differences in personality structure at the broad level of abstraction represented by the Big Five dimensions.

Keywords

Ethnic groupPsychologySocial psychologyAnthropologySociology

MeSH Terms

AdultCaliforniaCross-Cultural ComparisonCultural CharacteristicsDiscriminant AnalysisFactor AnalysisStatisticalFemaleHispanic or LatinoHumansMalePersonality InventoryPsychometricsReproducibility of ResultsSpainStudentsTranslating

Related Publications

Publication Info

Year
1998
Type
article
Volume
75
Issue
3
Pages
729-750
Citations
1201
Access
Closed

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Social media, news, blog, policy document mentions

Citation Metrics

1201
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1059
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Cite This

Verónica Benet‐Martínez, Oliver P. John (1998). Los Cinco Grandes across cultures and ethnic groups: Multitrait-multimethod analyses of the Big Five in Spanish and English.. Journal of Personality and Social Psychology , 75 (3) , 729-750. https://doi.org/10.1037/0022-3514.75.3.729

Identifiers

DOI
10.1037/0022-3514.75.3.729
PMID
9781409

Data Quality

Data completeness: 81%