Abstract
Previous longitudinal studies of personality in adulthood have been limited in the range of traits examined, have chiefly made use of self-reports, and have frequently included only men. In this study, self-reports (N = 983) and spouse ratings (N = 167) were gathered on the NEO Personality Inventory (Costa & McCrae, 1985b), which measures all five of the major dimensions of normal personality. Cross-sectional and longitudinal analyses on data from men and women aged 21 to 96 years showed evidence of small declines in Activity, Positive Emotions, and openness to Actions that might be attributed to maturation, but none of these effects was replicated in sequential analyses. The 20 other scales examined showed no consistent pattern of maturational effects. In contrast, retest stability was quite high for all five dimensions in self-reports and for the three dimensions measured at both times in spouse ratings. Comparable levels of stability were seen for men and women and for younger and older subjects. The data support the position that personality is stable after age 30.
Keywords
MeSH Terms
Affiliated Institutions
Related Publications
Updating Norman's "adequacy taxonomy": Intelligence and personality dimensions in natural language and in questionnaires.
Research on the dimensions of personality represented in the English language has repeatedly led to the identification of five factors (Norman, 1963). An alternative classificat...
Recalled Parent‐Child Relations and Adult Personality
ABSTRACT Adult children's ratings of their parents' behaviors on the Parent‐Child Relation Questionnaire II were correlated with self‐reports and peer ratings of personality on ...
Longitudinal stability of personality traits: A multitrait-multimethod-multioccasion analysis.
The longitudinal stability of personality was investigated in a group of several hundred adults who were rated by themselves, their marriage partners, and their acquaintances in...
Personality, coping, and coping effectiveness in an adult sample
Abstract Two studies of coping among community‐dwelling adults ( N = 255,151) were used to examine the influence of personality on coping responses, the perceived effectiveness ...
Self-concept clarity: Measurement, personality correlates, and cultural boundaries.
Self-concept clarity (SCC) references a structural aspect oftbe self-concept: the extent to which selfbeliefs are clearly and confidently defined, internally consistent, and sta...
Publication Info
- Year
- 1988
- Type
- article
- Volume
- 54
- Issue
- 5
- Pages
- 853-863
- Citations
- 1318
- Access
- Closed
External Links
Social Impact
Social media, news, blog, policy document mentions
Citation Metrics
Cite This
Identifiers
- DOI
- 10.1037//0022-3514.54.5.853
- PMID
- 3379583