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BLOCK V MCCRAE

BLOCK V MCCRAE. What vs something. Block (2001) “Millennial Contrarianism”. A currently popular pursuit, vigorously, resourcefully, and encompassingly advanced, has proposed that all of what we call personality can be well and sufficiently expressed by means of self-report questionnaires.

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BLOCK V MCCRAE

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  1. BLOCK V MCCRAE What vs something

  2. Block (2001) “Millennial Contrarianism” • A currently popular pursuit, vigorously, resourcefully, and encompassingly advanced, has proposed that all of what we call personality can be well and sufficiently expressed by means of self-report questionnaires. • … variants of factor analysis [being] interpreted as manifesting five robust orthogonal factors.

  3. Two Versions • Costa and McCrae • ‘‘the five-factor model.’’ • Lew Goldberg (1993) • Psycholexical Big Five

  4. The Realm of the 5FM • Comprehensive • ‘‘are both necessary and reasonably sufficient for describing at a global level the major features of personality’’ (McCrae & Costa, 1986); • Universal • ‘‘the five-factor model developed in studies of normal personality is fully adequate to account for the dimensions of abnormal personality as well’’ (Costa & McCrae, 1992a,p.347)

  5. “Signifying almost nothing … • … of central importance to the study of personality • Grabbed 50 recent articles using the 5FM • Compulsive buying • Media use • Computer stress • The Rorschach • Exercise • Multiple sclerosis • Personnel selection • Intellectual engagement • Spinal injury • Expatriate selection • A hodgepodge • But .. 4 were major reviews and 2 were substantive JPSP articles...

  6. Problems? • ‘‘the ‘true’ number of dimensions of human personality is a metaphysical rather than a scientific question’’ (Costa & McCrae, 1980, p.69). • Problem of measures • Would new items (or subjects) generate new factors? • Problem of meaning • Is impulsivity E or N or A?

  7. Answers? • ‘‘the ‘true’ number of dimensions • The dimensions are theoretical, thus they are a choice we exercise (metaphysical) but are within the scientific ambit • Would new items generate new factors? • Maybe… What would that mean? • Problem of meaning • Impulsivity is a composite of E, N, & A • This is a critical new insight from trait theory (Eysenck knew it in the 70s too!)

  8. More Problems? • Arguments for 6th factors • i.e., Ashton • Abnormal psychology • Poor discrimination amongst Personality disorders • More factors needed? Livesley

  9. More Problems? • Arguments for 6th factors • i.e., Ashton • Testable • Abnormal psychology • Poor discrimination amongst Personality disorders • More factors needed? Livesley • Maybe so. Might not undermine the 5FM (Wuthrich & Bates in press)

  10. Fractionation? • Paunonen and Jackson (1996) • Conscientious is better partitioned into • methodical and orderly (e.g., Adolf Eichmann) • dependable and reliable (e.g., Jimmy Carter) • ambitious and driven (e.g., Richard Nixon). • Lack of moral factor? • Loevinger (1994)

  11. Higher order analyses • Digman: • Socialisation: impulse control, concientious restraint, agression control • Growth: “Positive Emotionality, a venturesome encountering of life, and surgent imaginativeness”.

  12. Carrol (late of 2003) • Teacher ratings (from Digman & Inouye) • 43 1st order characteristics rated on 499 early adolescents • five 2nd order traits • two 3rd order “superfactors’’ • Superfactors explain .75% of the variance • 1 = “impulsive”, “restless”, “rude”, “fidgety”, “spiteful”, “outspoken” • 2= “socially confident”, “adaptable”, ‘‘perceptive,’’ ‘‘verbal”, ‘‘original”, “sensible”

  13. Not a theory • People differ, react, develop… • What then would Block’s science of personality look like?

  14. McCrae • “the same five factors [emerge] from a variety of instruments and methods. • Additional factors have not replicated • no one has seconded the suggestion of Paunonen and Jackson (1996) that the Conscientiousness factor lacks coherence (Costa & McCrae, 1998). • No persuasive sixth factor of comparable scope and generality

  15. Correlates: Is that so bad? • Personality correlates are why traits are important • They predict health, vocational interests, social interactions, and so on • FFM provides a systematic framework for the investigation of all these topics, • and [for] collecting these findings

  16. And there’s more than correlates! • Heritability (.5-.7) • Facet heritability (Jang) • Universal • Across cultures • Reliable developmental trends • Increasing C decreasing A across life span • Extending into childhood

  17. And the 5FM is just a system • Time must test the system • Brains must add causes and reasons and mechanisms

  18. What’s beyond the big 5? • Some suggestions (Paunonen & Jackson, 2000) • Religious • Sly • Ethical • Sexy • Thrifty • Conservative • Masculine • Egotistical • Humorous/witty • What do you think?

  19. Response to proposed candidates • Saucier & Goldberg (1998) • Based of a multiple r of <.3 from the 5-main factors • Height, weight, age, attractiveness • Only one non-physical outlier: Religiosity • Paunonen & Jackson critique • Why is feminine, cunning, and witty part of the big 5 • i.e., how do we decide what belongs in a personality inventory? • Words don’t only load on 1 factor • not multiple R) • If they load on several, usually load more than .3

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