57 results on '"David M, Condon"'
Search Results
2. Imagination as a Facet of Openness/Intellect: A New Scale Differentiating Experiential Simulation and Conceptual Innovation
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Tyler Sassenberg, David M Condon, Alexander P. Christensen, and Colin G. DeYoung
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Visual Arts and Performing Arts ,Developmental and Educational Psychology ,Psychology (miscellaneous) - Abstract
Previous research has investigated the nature of imagination as a construct related to multiple forms of higher-order cognition. Despite the emergence of various conceptualizations of imagination, few attempts have been made to explore the structure of imagination as a trait in the context of existing hierarchically-nested personality dimensions. We present a scale for measuring trait imagination that distinguishes between experiential simulation and conceptual innovation, aligned with the two major subfactors (aspects) of the Big Five dimension Openness/Intellect. Across two large samples, we provide evidence of a consistent factor structure distinguishing experiential, conceptual, and general descriptions of imagination, as well as validity as measures of facets of Openness and Intellect. Our findings provide a measure of major forms of imagination in line with mainstream models of the hierarchical structure of personality.
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- 2023
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3. Creative achievement and individual differences: Associations across and within the domains of creativity
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William Revelle, Darya L. Zabelina, Elina Zaonegina, and David M. Condon
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Visual Arts and Performing Arts ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Developmental and Educational Psychology ,Cognition ,Creativity ,Psychology ,Applied Psychology ,media_common ,Cognitive psychology - Abstract
We investigated the relationships between creative achievement, cognitive ability, temperament, and vocational interests using a large and diverse internet-based sample. Ten creative domains (visual arts, music, creative writing, dance, drama, architecture, humor, scientific discovery, inventions, culinary arts) were positively associated with higher cognitive ability, intellect and extraversion, and lower agreeableness. With regard to cognitive ability, there was no evidence for the threshold effect on achievements. With regard to age, younger individuals endorsed a greater number of low-level achievements and older individuals more high-level achievements across the 10 creative domains. Other characteristics of individual differences (e.g., vocational interests) were more domain-specific for predicting creative achievement. We also introduce a revised method for the assessment and scoring of creative achievements, and discuss suggestions for future research.
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- 2022
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4. Measurement invariance of the Domain‐Specific Risk‐Taking (DOSPERT) scale
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Dillon Welindt, David M. Condon, and Sara J. Weston
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Sociology and Political Science ,Arts and Humanities (miscellaneous) ,Strategy and Management ,General Decision Sciences ,Applied Psychology - Published
- 2023
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5. Personality traits and healthcare use: A coordinated analysis of 15 international samples
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Emily C Willroth, Jing Luo, Olivia E. Atherton, Sara J Weston, Johanna Drewelies, Philip Batterham, David M Condon, Denis Gerstorf, Martijn Huisman, Avron Spiro, Dan Mroczek, and Eileen Kranz Graham
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Some people use healthcare services more than others. Identifying factors associated with healthcare use has the potential to improve the effectiveness, efficiency, and equity of healthcare. In line with the Andersen behavioral model of healthcare utilization and initial empirical findings, personality traits may be key predisposing factors associated with healthcare use. Across 15 samples, the present study examined cross-sectional and prospective associations between Big Five personality traits and the likelihood of dental visits, general medical practitioner visits, and hospitalizations. Using coordinated data analysis, we estimated models within each of 15 samples individually (sample Ns ranged from 516 to 305,762), and then calculated weighted mean effect sizes using random effects meta-analysis across samples (total N = 358,803). According to the synthesized results, people higher in conscientiousness, agreeableness, extraversion, and openness, and lower in neuroticism were more likely to visit the dentist; people higher in neuroticism were more likely to visit general medical practitioners; and people lower in conscientiousness and agreeableness and higher in neuroticism were more likely to be hospitalized. Associations tended to be small with odds ratios around 1.20 (rs ≈ .05). These findings provide evidence across 15 international samples for small but consistent associations between personality traits and healthcare use and demonstrate that personality-healthcare associations differ by type of care. We discuss directions for future research, including examining more specific personality facets (e.g., productiveness vs. responsibility) as well as important dimensions of healthcare (e.g., preventative vs. reactive care; acute vs. chronic care).
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- 2023
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6. Occupational Prestige: The Status Component of Socioeconomic Status
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Bradley T Hughes, Sanjay Srivastava, Magdalena Leszko, and David M Condon
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The relationship between life outcomes and an individual's standing in the social and economic hierarchy of society is an important topic across the social sciences. Foundational to this work is assessing an individual’s standing in this hierarchy, often referred to as socioeconomic status (SES). One component of an individual’s SES, often overlooked in the psychological literature, is occupational prestige – the amount of status accorded to them based on their occupational role. In this research, we collected and validated a new index of occupational prestige for 1029 specific occupations, including all jobs in the US Department of Labor's O*NET database and 22 broader occupational families. In Study 1, we collected a comprehensive set of occupational prestige ratings and demonstrated their high reliability. In Study 2, we developed a crosswalk between the ratings collected in Study 1 and prior ratings of occupations listed in the US Census and show convergent validity with previous indices. In Studies 3 and 4 we used additional data to evaluate the construct validity of occupational prestige more broadly. In Study 3, we established convergent and discriminant validity with other indicators of SES: income and educational attainment. In Study 4, we use the O*NET database to identify the characteristics of occupations most strongly associated with prestige. These results support the validity of the index and suggest occupations with high prestige require skills traditionally emphasized in liberal arts education (e.g., critical thinking, reading comprehension).
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- 2022
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7. Supplementary Materials to: Deep Lexical Hypothesis - Identifying personality structure in natural language
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David M Condon and Andrew Cutler
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These are the Supplementary Materials to "Deep Lexical Hypothesis: Identifying personality structure in natural language." In addition to extensive analytic code with comments and output for the 3 studies reported in the primary manuscript, this supplement includes sections on prior findings about personality structure and the rationale for choosing the Saucier and Goldberg (1996) dataset as the historical frame of reference. An open-access preprint of the primary manuscript can be viewed at https://psyarxiv.com/gdm5v/.
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- 2022
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8. Looking for Flynn effects in a recent online U.S. adult sample: Examining shifts within the SAPA Project
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Elizabeth M. Dworak, William Revelle, and David M. Condon
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Arts and Humanities (miscellaneous) ,Developmental and Educational Psychology ,Experimental and Cognitive Psychology - Published
- 2023
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9. The personality of American Nations: An exploratory study
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Kevin Lanning, Evan A. Warfel, Geoffrey Wetherell, Marina Perez, Ryan Boyd, and David M. Condon
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HEXACO ,visualizations ,aggregation ,ideology ,regions ,General Medicine ,geography ,United States - Abstract
Some scholars have presented models of the United States as a set of “nations” with distinct settlement histories and contemporary cultures. We examined personality differences in one such model, that of Colin Woodard, using data from over 75,000 respondents. Four nations were particularly distinct: The Deep South, Left Coast, New Netherland, and the Spanish Caribbean. Differences between nations at the level of the individual person were typically small, but were larger at the level of community, revealing how aggregation can contribute to differences in the lived experience of places in nations such as Yankeedom or Greater Appalachia. We represented effects in a three-dimensional model defined by Authoritarian conventionalism (which differentiated ‘Red’ and ‘Blue’ nations) as well as Cognitive resilience and Competitiveness (which differentiated among the Blue nations). Finally, we adjusted Woodard’s model to better fit the data, and found that nations largely maintained their boundaries, with the most drastic changes occurring on the East Coast.
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- 2022
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10. That Takes the BISCUIT
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William Revelle, Sarah K. McDougald, David M. Condon, and Lorien G. Elleman
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Statistical learning ,business.industry ,media_common.quotation_subject ,05 social sciences ,050109 social psychology ,Regression analysis ,Missing data ,Machine learning ,computer.software_genre ,050105 experimental psychology ,Personality ,0501 psychology and cognitive sciences ,Artificial intelligence ,Psychology ,business ,computer ,Applied Psychology ,media_common - Abstract
Abstract. The predictive accuracy of personality-criterion regression models may be improved with statistical learning (SL) techniques. This study introduced a novel SL technique, BISCUIT (Best Items Scale that is Cross-validated, Unit-weighted, Informative, and Transparent). The predictive accuracy and parsimony of BISCUIT were compared with three established SL techniques (the lasso, elastic net, and random forest) and regression using two sets of scales, for five criteria, across five levels of data missingness. BISCUIT’s predictive accuracy was competitive with other SL techniques at higher levels of data missingness. BISCUIT most frequently produced the most parsimonious SL model. In terms of predictive accuracy, the elastic net and lasso dominated other techniques in the complete data condition and in conditions with up to 50% data missingness. Regression using 27 narrow traits was an intermediate choice for predictive accuracy. For most criteria and levels of data missingness, regression using the Big Five had the worst predictive accuracy. Overall, loss in predictive accuracy due to data missingness was modest, even at 90% data missingness. Findings suggest that personality researchers should consider incorporating planned data missingness and SL techniques into their designs and analyses.
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- 2020
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11. The distinction between symptoms and traits in the Hierarchical Taxonomy of Psychopathology (HiTOP)
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Michael Chmielewski, Douglas B. Samuel, HiTOP Normal Personality Workgroup, Colin G. DeYoung, Martin Sellbom, Stephanie N. Mullins-Sweatt, Katherine M. Thomas, Joshua D. Miller, David M. Condon, Lee Anna Clark, Aidan G. C. Wright, David Watson, Kristian E. Markon, Roman Kotov, Donald R. Lynam, Robert F. Krueger, Thomas A. Widiger, Ashley L. Watts, and Susan C. South
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050103 clinical psychology ,Systematic difference ,Personality Inventory ,Psychopathology ,Social Psychology ,media_common.quotation_subject ,05 social sciences ,Specific time ,050109 social psychology ,Personality Disorders ,Time frame ,Trait ,Humans ,Personality ,0501 psychology and cognitive sciences ,Psychology ,Categorical variable ,media_common ,Causal model ,Cognitive psychology - Abstract
The Hierarchical Taxonomy of Psychopathology (HiTOP) is an empirically and quantitatively derived dimensional classification system designed to describe the features of psychopathology and, ultimately, to replace categorical nosologies. Among the constructs that HiTOP organizes are "symptom components" and "maladaptive traits," but past HiTOP publications have not fully explicated the distinction between symptoms and traits. We propose working definitions of symptoms and traits and explore challenges, exceptions, and remaining questions. Specifically, we propose that the only systematic difference between symptoms and traits in HiTOP is one of time frame. Maladaptive traits are dispositional constructs that describe persistent tendencies to manifest features of psychopathology, whereas symptoms are features of psychopathology as they are manifest during any specific time period (from moments to days to months). This has the consequence that almost every HiTOP dimension, at any level of the hierarchy, can be assessed as either a trait or a symptom dimension, by adjusting the framing of the assessment. We discuss the implications of these definitions for causal models of the relations between symptoms and traits and for distinctions between psychopathology, normal personality variation, and dysfunction.
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- 2020
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12. William Revelle
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David M. Condon, Joshua Wilt, and Lorien G. Elleman
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- 2020
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13. Cognitive Ability in Everyday Life: The Utility of Open-Source Measures
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William Revelle, Elizabeth M. Dworak, and David M. Condon
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Open source ,Cognition ,Everyday life ,Psychology ,General Psychology ,Cognitive psychology - Abstract
The measurement of individual differences in cognitive ability has a long and important history in psychology, but it has been impeded by the proprietary nature of most assessment measures. With the development of validated open-source measures of ability (collected in the International Cognitive Ability Resource, or ICAR, available at ICAR-project.com ), it is now possible for many researchers to assess ability in large surveys or small, lab-based studies without the expenses associated with proprietary measures. We review the history of ability measurement and discuss how the growing set of items included in ICAR allows ability assessments to be more generally available to all researchers.
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- 2020
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14. Why Has Personality Psychology Played an Outsized Role in the Credibility Revolution?
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Joanne M. Chung, Richard E. Lucas, Sanjay Srivastava, Felix Cheung, David M. Condon, Rodica Ioana Damian, Jennifer L. Tackett, Julia M. Rohrer, Luke D. Smillie, Stephen Antonoplis, Sara J. Weston, R. Chris Fraley, Jessie Sun, Brent W. Roberts, David C. Funder, M. Brent Donnellan, Christopher J. Soto, Kelci Harris, K. Paige Harden, Hayley Jach, Simine Vazire, Olivia E. Atherton, Daniel K. Mroczek, and Katherine S. Corker
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Replication crisis ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Field (Bourdieu) ,Perspective (graphical) ,Credibility ,Personality ,General Medicine ,Personality psychology ,Psychology ,Social psychology ,Ideal (ethics) ,media_common ,Skepticism - Abstract
Personality is not the most popular subfield of psychology. But, in one way or another, personality psychologists have played an outsized role in the ongoing “credibility revolution” in psychology. Not only have individual personality psychologists taken on visible roles in the movement, but our field’s practices and norms have now become models for other fields to emulate (or, for those who share Baumeister’s (2016, https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jesp.2016.02.003) skeptical view of the consequences of increasing rigor, a model for what to avoid). In this article we discuss some unique features of our field that may have placed us in an ideal position to be leaders in this movement. We do so from a subjective perspective, describing our impressions and opinions about possible explanations for personality psychology’s disproportionate role in the credibility revolution. We also discuss some ways in which personality psychology remains less-than-optimal, and how we can address these flaws.
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- 2022
15. Personality Predictors of Emergency Department Post-Discharge Outcomes
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Daniel K. Mroczek, Ayla J. Goktan, Mitesh B. Rao, Emily C. Willroth, Eileen K Graham, Ted Schwaba, David M. Condon, and Olivia E. Atherton
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Post discharge ,business.industry ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Medicine ,Personality ,Emergency department ,Medical emergency ,business ,medicine.disease ,media_common - Abstract
Personality traits are important predictors of health behaviors, healthcare utilization, and health outcomes. However, we know little about the role of personality traits for emergency department outcomes. The present study used data from 200 patients (effective Ns range from 84 to 191), who were being discharged from the emergency department at an urban hospital, to investigate whether the Big Five personality traits were associated with post-discharge outcomes (i.e., filling prescriptions, following up with primary care physician, making an unscheduled return to the emergency department). Using logistic regression, we found few associations among the broad Big Five domains and post-discharge outcomes. However, results showed statistically significant associations between specific Big Five items (e.g., “responsible”) and the three post-discharge outcomes. This study demonstrates the feasibility of assessing personality traits in an emergency medicine setting and highlights the utility of having information about patients’ personality tendencies for predicting post-discharge compliance.
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- 2021
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16. Validity and reliability of automatically generated propositional reasoning Items: a multilingual study of the challenges of verbal item generation
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Fang Luo, Daniela Gühne, David M. Condon, Luning Sun, Philipp Doebler, Sun, Luning [0000-0002-2470-4278], and Apollo - University of Cambridge Repository
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automatic item generation ,Generator (computer programming) ,business.industry ,05 social sciences ,cross-cultural research ,050401 social sciences methods ,Automatic item generation ,Validity ,Cognition ,computer.software_genre ,01 natural sciences ,propositional reasoning ,010104 statistics & probability ,0504 sociology ,cognitive ability ,Item generation ,Artificial intelligence ,0101 mathematics ,business ,Psychology ,computer ,Applied Psychology ,Natural language processing - Abstract
Abstract. This study introduces a newly developed public-domain multilingual automatic item generator that creates propositional reasoning (PR) items belonging to 15 item families by using various inference rules. Psychometric properties of the resulting written PR test were investigated in three diverse samples in English, simplified Chinese, and German, respectively. Internal consistency was good to excellent across samples. The ICAR16 short form test of cognitive abilities ( Condon & Revelle, 2014 ) was used to evaluate construct validity. Correlations of ICAR16 scores and PR scores were high. Furthermore, items within families appeared to be equivalent, with only minor differential item functioning between the Chinese- and English-speaking samples. Performance on the PR test was shown to be reasonably stable over the course of 1 week. Differences of total scores between test forms (pen and paper vs. computerized administration) were not detected. Findings suggest that the automatically generated PR test is a valuable instrument for the assessment of propositional reasoning ability.
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- 2021
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17. Reliability from α to ω: A tutorial
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William Revelle and David M. Condon
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Reliability theory ,050103 clinical psychology ,Psychometrics ,Mental Disorders ,05 social sciences ,Reproducibility of Results ,Latent variable ,Variance (accounting) ,Classical test theory ,Psychiatry and Mental health ,Clinical Psychology ,Statistics ,Trait ,Humans ,0501 psychology and cognitive sciences ,Set (psychology) ,Psychology ,Categorical variable - Abstract
Reliability is a fundamental problem for measurement in all of science. Although defined in multiple ways, and estimated in even more ways, the basic concepts seem straightforward and need to be understood by practitioners as well as methodologists. Reliability theory is not just for the psychometrician estimating latent variables, it is for everyone who wants to make inferences from measures of individuals or of groups. For the case of a single test administration, we consider multiple measures of reliability, ranging from the worst (β) to average (α, λ3) to best (λ4) split half reliabilities, and consider why model-based estimates (ωh, ωt) should be reported. We also address the utility of test-retest and alternate form reliabilities. The advantages of immediate versus delayed retests to decompose observed score variance into specific, state, and trait scores are discussed. But reliability is not just for test scores, it is also important when evaluating the use of ratings. Estimates that may be applied to continuous data include a set of intraclass correlations while discrete categorical data needs to take advantage of the family of κ statistics. Examples of these various reliability estimates are given using state and trait measures of anxiety given with different delays and under different conditions. An online supplemental materials is provided with more detail and elaboration. The online supplemental materials is also used to demonstrate applications of open source software to examples of real data, and comparisons are made between the many types of reliability. (PsycINFO Database Record (c) 2019 APA, all rights reserved).
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- 2019
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18. Does recall period matter? Comparing PROMIS® physical function with no recall, 24-hr recall, and 7-day recall
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Sara Shaunfield, Michael A. Kallen, David M. Condon, James W. Shaw, Allison Martin Nguyen, Debanjali Mitra, David Cella, Jennifer L. Beaumont, Robert Chapman, Kelly McQuarrie, Daniel Eek, Karen Keating, Katy Benjamin, and Jamae Liu
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education.field_of_study ,Demographics ,Recall ,030503 health policy & services ,Population ,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health ,Item bank ,Physical function ,Differential item functioning ,03 medical and health sciences ,Fluency ,0302 clinical medicine ,030220 oncology & carcinogenesis ,Analysis of variance ,0305 other medical science ,education ,Psychology ,Clinical psychology - Abstract
To evaluate the influence of recall periods on the assessment of physical function, we compared, in cancer and general population samples, the standard administration of PROMIS Physical Function items without a recall period to administrations with 24-hour and 7-day recall periods. We administered 31 items from the PROMIS Physical Function v2.0 item bank to 2400 respondents (n = 1001 with cancer; n = 1399 from the general population). Respondents were randomly assigned to one of three recall conditions (no recall, 24-hours, or 7-days) and one of two “reminder” conditions (with recall periods presented only at the start of the survey or with every item). We assessed items for potential differential item functioning (DIF) by recall time period. We then tested recall and reminder effects with analysis of variance controlling for demographics, English fluency, and co-morbidities. Based on conservative pre-set criteria, no items were flagged for recall time period-related DIF. Using analysis of variance, each condition was compared to the standard PROMIS administration for Physical Function (no recall period). There was no evidence of significant differences among groups in the cancer sample. In the general population sample, only the 24-hour recall condition with reminders was significantly different from the “no recall” PROMIS standard. At the item level, for both samples, the number of items with non-trivial effect size differences across conditions was minimal. Compared to no recall, the use of a recall period has little to no effect upon PROMIS physical function responses or scores. We recommend that PROMIS Physical Function be administered with the standard PROMIS “no recall” period.
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- 2019
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19. Development of the Initial Surveys for the All of Us Research Program
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Michael R. Elliott, Mona AuYoung, Christopher J. O'Donnell, Mark Begale, Kemberlee Bonnet, Sunil Kripalani, David Cella, Paul A. Harris, Jennifer E. Ayala, Robert M. Cronin, Nicholas Borselli, Steve Mikita, Stephanie L. Fowler, Michael Manganiello, Kenneth A. Wallston, Regina Andrade, Rebecca N Jerome, David M. Condon, Brandy Mapes, Elizabeth W. Karlson, Brian K. Ahmedani, Mick P. Couper, Kathleen M. Mazor, Joni L. Rutter, Kathryn Goggins, David G. Schlundt, Maria Lopez-Class, Fatima Munoz, Joshua C. Denny, and Rebecca Johnston
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Adult ,Male ,Research program ,Adolescent ,Epidemiology ,Computer science ,MEDLINE ,Pilot Projects ,Health records ,01 natural sciences ,Article ,Young Adult ,010104 statistics & probability ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Humans ,Translations ,Longitudinal Studies ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Precision Medicine ,0101 mathematics ,Longitudinal cohort ,Qualitative Research ,Wearable technology ,Aged ,Aged, 80 and over ,Medical education ,business.industry ,Extramural ,Middle Aged ,Precision medicine ,Health Surveys ,United States ,Female ,Factor Analysis, Statistical ,business - Abstract
BACKGROUND: The All of Us Research Program is building a national longitudinal cohort and collecting data from multiple information sources (e.g., biospecimens, electronic health records (EHRs), and mobile/wearable technologies) to advance precision medicine. Participant-provided information, collected via surveys, will complement and augment these information sources. We report the process used to develop and refine the initial three surveys for this program. METHODS: The All of Us survey development process included: (1) prioritization of domains for scientific needs, (2) examination of existing validated instruments, (3) content creation, (4) evaluation and refinement via cognitive interviews and online testing, (5) content review by key stakeholders, and (6) launch in the All of Us electronic participant portal. All content was translated into Spanish. RESULTS: We conducted cognitive interviews in English and Spanish with 169 participants, and 573 individuals completed online testing. Feedback led to over 40 item content changes. Lessons learned included: (1) validated survey instruments performed well in diverse populations reflective of All of Us; (2) parallel evaluation of multiple languages can ensure optimal survey deployment; (3) recruitment challenges in diverse populations required multiple strategies; and (4) key stakeholders improved integration of surveys into larger Program context. CONCLUSIONS: This efficient, iterative process led to successful testing, refinement, and launch of three All of Us surveys. Reuse of All of Us surveys, available at http://researchallofus.org, may facilitate large consortia targeting diverse populations in English and Spanish to capture participant-provided information to supplement other data, such as genetic, physical measurements, or data from EHRs.
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- 2019
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20. Personality States of the Union
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David M. Condon and Sara J. Weston
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General Psychology - Abstract
Fluctuations in the average daily personality of the United States capture both meaningful affective responses to world events (e.g., changes in anxiety or well-being) and broader psychological responses. We estimate the change in national personality in the months following the onset of the COVID-19 pandemic and investigate fluctuations in personality states during the year 2020 using data from an ongoing personality assessment project. We find significant and meaningful change in personality traits since the beginning of the pandemic, as well as evidence of instability in personality states. When evaluating changes from the first few months of 2020 to the period of social distancing related to COVID-19 restrictions, the social traits reflected an unexpected “deprivation” effect such that mean self-ratings increased in the wake of restricted opportunities for social interaction. Changes in mean levels of the affective traits were not significant over the same months, but they did differ significantly from the average levels of prior years when looking at shorter time intervals (rolling 7-day averages) around prominent national events. This instability may reflect meaningful fluctuations in national personality, as we find that daily personality states are associated with other indices of national health, including daily COVID-19 cases and the S&P index. Overall, the use of personality measures to capture responses to global events offers a more holistic picture of the U.S. psyche and of personality change at the national level.
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- 2021
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21. Contributors
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Saeed Abdullah, Ruth E. Appel, Jan Ketil Arnulf, Daniel Balliet, Emorie D. Beck, Lex Borghans, Ashley D. Brown, John L. Christensen, David M. Condon, Colin G. DeYoung, Kira O. Foley, Fabiola H. Gerpott, Gabriella M. Harari, P.D. Harms, Eric Heggestad, Christoph N. Herde, Joshua J. Jackson, David C. Jeong, Benjamin N. Johnson, Kai Rune Larsen, James M. LeBreton, Randy T. Lee, Kenneth N. Levy, Filip Lievens, Stacy Marsella, Sandra C. Matz, Lynn Carol Miller, Amanda N. Moeller, René Mõttus, Alisha M. Ness, John F. Rauthmann, Stephen J. Read, William Revelle, Adam Safron, Philipp Schäpers, Trudie Schils, Ryne A. Sherman, Yuichi Shoda, Andrew Slaughter, Isabel Thielmann, Edison Thomaz, Sumer S. Vaid, Dustin Wood, Nutchanon Yongsatianchot, Janie Yu, and Vivian Zayas
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- 2021
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22. A role for information theory in personality modeling, assessment, and judgment
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René Mõttus and David M. Condon
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Enthusiasm ,Cronbach's alpha ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Personality ,Cognition ,Psychological testing ,Personality Assessment Inventory ,Psychology ,Information theory ,Field (computer science) ,media_common ,Cognitive psychology - Abstract
Claude Shannon’s groundbreaking work on information theory (Shannon, 1948a) was published just as the field of psychological testing was reaching its potential. Many of the fundamental underpinnings of the psychological testing theory were proposed in this same era, and the application of these ideas over the ensuing decades has greatly informed our understanding across numerous psychological domains, including individual differences in personality, cognitive abilities, interests, and much more. While the prospect of integrating information theory into psychological assessment was initially received with great enthusiasm, it was quickly and definitively dismissed by Lee Cronbach (1955a), mainly on the grounds that it was incompatible with the practical demands of psychological testing (e.g., limited testing time, relatively small samples). In this chapter, we reconsider Cronbach’s rationale in light of recent technological advancements brought about by the “information age,” and propose that reintroducing information-theoretic approaches to psychological assessment can advance our knowledge of personality, person-perception, and personality assessment. We conclude by providing several examples of research applications that have already invoked an information theory approach to assessment.
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- 2021
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23. Descriptive, predictive and explanatory personality research: Different goals, different approaches, but a shared need to move beyond the Big Few traits
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René Mõttus, Dustin Wood, David M Condon, Mitja Back, Anna Baumert, Giulio Costantini, Sacha Epskamp, Samuel Greiff, Wendy Johnson, Aaron Lukaszewski, Aja Louise Murray, William Revelle, Aidan G.C. Wright, Tal Yarkoni, Matthias Ziegler, Johannes Zimmermann, Psychologische Methodenleer (Psychologie, FMG), Mottus, R, Wood, D, Condon, D, Back, M, Baumert, A, Costantini, G, Epskamp, S, Greiff, S, Johnson, W, Lukaszewski, A, Murray, A, Revelle, W, Wright, A, Yarkoni, T, Ziegler, M, and Zimmermann, J
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ddc:150 ,personality ,150 Psychologie ,hierarchy ,prediction ,explanation ,cause - Abstract
We argue that it is useful to distinguish between three key goals of personality science—description, prediction and explanation—and that attaining them often requires different priorities and methodological approaches. We put forward specific recommendations such as publishing findings with minimum a priori aggregation and exploring the limits of predictive models without being constrained by parsimony and intuitiveness but instead maximizing out-of-sample predictive accuracy. We argue that naturally occurring variance in many decontextualized and multidetermined constructs that interest personality scientists may not have individual causes, at least as this term is generally understood and in ways that are human-interpretable, never mind intervenable. If so, useful explanations are narratives that summarize many pieces of descriptive findings rather than models that target individual cause–effect associations. By meticulously studying specific and contextualized behaviours, thoughts, feelings and goals, however, individual causes of variance may ultimately be identifiable, although such causal explanations will likely be far more complex, phenomenon-specific and person-specific than anticipated thus far. Progress in all three areas—description, prediction and explanation—requires higher dimensional models than the currently dominant ‘Big Few’ and supplementing subjective trait-ratings with alternative sources of information such as informant-reports and behavioural measurements. Developing a new generation of psychometric tools thus provides many immediate research opportunities. © 2020 European Association of Personality Psychology
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- 2020
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24. EAPP / EAPA Expert Meeting, 6 to 8 September 2018, Edinburgh
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René Mõttus, David M Condon, Dustin Wood, Mitja Back, Anna Baumert, Giulio Costantini, Sacha Epskamp, Samuel Greiff, Wendy Johnson, Aaron Lukaszewski, Aja Louise Murray, William Revelle, Aidan G.C. Wright, Tal Yarkoni, Matthias Ziegler, and Johannes Zimmermann
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Engineering ,business.industry ,Library science ,business - Abstract
We argue that it is useful to distinguish between three key goals of personality science – description, prediction and explanation – and that attaining them often requires different priorities and methodological approaches. We put forward specific recommendations such as publishing findings with minimum a priori aggregation and exploring the limits of predictive models without being constrained by parsimony and intuitiveness but instead maximising out-of-sample predictive accuracy. We argue that naturally-occurring variance in many decontextualized and multi-determined constructs that interest personality scientists may not have individual causes, at least as this term is generally understood and in ways that are human-interpretable, never mind intervenable. If so, useful explanations are narratives that summarize many pieces of descriptive findings rather than models that target individual cause-effect associations. By meticulously studying specific and contextualized behaviours, thoughts, feelings and goals, however, individual causes of variance may ultimately be identifiable, although such causal explanations will likely be far more complex, phenomenon-specific and person-specific than anticipated thus far. Progress in all three areas – description, prediction, and explanation – requires higher-dimensional models than the currently-dominant “Big Few” and supplementing subjective trait-ratings with alternative sources of information such as informant-reports and behavioural measurements. Developing a new generation of psychometric tools thus provides many immediate research opportunities.
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- 2020
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25. The role of personality in shaping pandemic response: Systemic sociopolitical factors drive country differences
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Meghan Siritzky, David M. Condon, and Sara J. Weston
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050103 clinical psychology ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Social Psychology ,Coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) ,Public health ,media_common.quotation_subject ,05 social sciences ,Country differences ,050109 social psychology ,Clinical Psychology ,Politics ,Development economics ,Pandemic ,medicine ,Personality ,0501 psychology and cognitive sciences ,Polity ,Health behavior ,Psychology ,media_common - Abstract
The current study utilizes the current COVID-19 pandemic to highlight the importance of accounting for the influence of external political and economic factors in personality public-health research. We investigated the extent to which systemic factors modify the relationship between personality and pandemic response. Results shed doubt on the cross-cultural generalizability of common big-five factor models. Individual differences only predicted government compliance in autocratic countries and in countries with income inequality. Personality was only predictive of mental health outcomes under conditions of state fragility and autocracy. Finally, there was little evidence that the big five traits were associated with preventive behaviors. Our ability to use individual differences to understand policy-relevant outcomes changes based on environmental factors and must be assessed on a trait-by-trait basis, thus supporting the inclusion of systemic political and economic factors in individual differences models.
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
26. Laying personality BARE: Behavioral frequencies strengthen personality-criterion relationships
- Author
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Lorien Grey Elleman, David M Condon, and William Revelle
- Abstract
Personality consists of stable patterns of cognitions, emotions, and behaviors, yet personality psychologists rarely study behaviors. Even when examined, behaviors typically are considered to be validation criteria for traditional personality items. In the current study (N = 332,489), we conceptualize (self-reported, yearlong) behavioral frequencies as measures of personality. We investigate whether behavioral frequencies have incremental validity over traditional personality items in correlating personality with six outcome criteria. We use BISCUIT, a statistical learning technique, to find the optimal number of items for each criterion’s model, across three pools of items: traditional personality items (k = 696), behavioral frequencies (k = 425), and a combined pool. Compared to models using only traditional personality items, models using the combined pool are more strongly correlated to four criteria. We find mixed evidence of congruence between the type of criterion and the type of personality items that are most strongly correlated with it (e.g., behavioral criteria are most strongly correlated to behavioral frequencies). Findings suggest that behavioral frequencies are measures of personality that offer a unique effect in describing personality-criterion relationships beyond traditional personality items. We provide an updated, public-domain item pool of behavioral frequencies: the BARE (Behavioral Acts, Revised and Expanded) Inventory.
- Published
- 2020
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- View/download PDF
27. That takes the BISCUIT: A comparative study of predictive accuracy and parsimony of four statistical learning techniques in personality data, with data missingness conditions
- Author
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William Revelle, McDougald Sk, David M. Condon, and Lorien G. Elleman
- Subjects
Statistical learning ,business.industry ,media_common.quotation_subject ,bepress|Social and Behavioral Sciences|Psychology|Quantitative Psychology ,Machine learning ,computer.software_genre ,Missing data ,PsyArXiv|Social and Behavioral Sciences ,Text mining ,bepress|Social and Behavioral Sciences ,PsyArXiv|Social and Behavioral Sciences|Quantitative Methods|Statistical Methods ,Personality ,PsyArXiv|Social and Behavioral Sciences|Quantitative Methods ,Artificial intelligence ,business ,Psychology ,computer ,media_common - Abstract
The predictive accuracy of personality-criterion regression models may be improved with statistical learning (SL) techniques. This study introduced a novel SL technique, BISCUIT (Best Items Scale that is Cross-validated, Unit-weighted, Informative and Transparent). The predictive accuracy and parsimony of BISCUIT was compared with three established SL techniques (the lasso, elastic net, and random forest) and regression using two sets of scales, for five criteria, across five levels of data missingness. BISCUIT’s predictive accuracy was competitive with other SL techniques at higher levels of data missingness. BISCUIT most frequently produced the most parsimonious SL model. The elastic net and lasso dominated other techniques in terms of predictive accuracy with complete data and in conditions with up to 50% data missingness. In terms of predictive accuracy, regression using 27 narrow traits was an intermediate choice. For most criteria and levels of data missingness, regression using the Big Five had the worst predictive accuracy. Overall, loss in predictive accuracy due to data missingness was modest, even at 90% data missingness. Findings suggest that personality researchers should consider incorporating planned data missingness and SL techniques into their designs and analyses.
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
28. Patient and healthcare provider views on a patient-reported outcomes portal
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Rebecca N Jerome, Paul A. Harris, Douglas Conway, Daniel W. Byrne, David M. Condon, and Robert M. Cronin
- Subjects
Adult ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Adolescent ,020205 medical informatics ,Attitude of Health Personnel ,Health Personnel ,Dashboard (business) ,Health Informatics ,02 engineering and technology ,Anxiety ,Research and Applications ,Personalization ,Health Information Systems ,Young Adult ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Patient Portals ,0202 electrical engineering, electronic engineering, information engineering ,Humans ,Medicine ,Web application ,Patient Reported Outcome Measures ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Aged ,Community engagement ,Depression ,business.industry ,Patient portal ,Middle Aged ,Healthy Volunteers ,Workflow ,Family medicine ,Chronic Disease ,Female ,Self Report ,medicine.symptom ,business ,Attitude to Health ,Qualitative research - Abstract
Background Over the past decade, public interest in managing health-related information for personal understanding and self-improvement has rapidly expanded. This study explored aspects of how patient-provided health information could be obtained through an electronic portal and presented to inform and engage patients while also providing information for healthcare providers. Methods We invited participants using ResearchMatch from 2 cohorts: (1) self-reported healthy volunteers (no medical conditions) and (2) individuals with a self-reported diagnosis of anxiety and/or depression. Participants used a secure web application (dashboard) to complete the PROMIS® domain survey(s) and then complete a feedback survey. A community engagement studio with 5 healthcare providers assessed perspectives on the feasibility and features of a portal to collect and display patient provided health information. We used bivariate analyses and regression analyses to determine differences between cohorts. Results A total of 480 participants completed the study (239 healthy, 241 anxiety and/or depression). While participants from the tw2o cohorts had significantly different PROMIS scores (p Conclusions Our findings demonstrated a strong desire among healthy people, patients with chronic diseases, and healthcare providers for a self-assessment portal that can collect patient-reported outcome metrics and deliver personalized feedback.
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
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29. Reliability
- Author
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William Revelle and David M. Condon
- Subjects
05 social sciences ,050109 social psychology ,0501 psychology and cognitive sciences ,050105 experimental psychology - Published
- 2018
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30. Guest Editorial—'Green Open Access is ‘Just’ Publishing'
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David M. Condon
- Subjects
Publishing ,business.industry ,Political science ,Library science ,business ,Scholarly communication - Abstract
A shared experience among many graduate students is the dawning realization that the vaunted privilege of having one's scholarly work accepted for publication is also a fleecing. The exact terms of this fleecing depend on a number of different factors – so many, in fact, that it can get a bit confusing – but it's quite common for researchers to pay several thousand dollars to make their work available for others to read. And these are not the expenses incurred to complete their scholarly work. It's merely the cost of having one's work posted on the website of an academic publisher!
- Published
- 2020
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31. Call for Papers
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David M. Condon, Sacha Epskamp, René Mõttus, and Dustin Wood
- Subjects
media_common.quotation_subject ,Applied psychology ,Personality ,Joint (building) ,Psychological testing ,Psychology ,Applied Psychology ,media_common - Published
- 2018
- Full Text
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32. Does recall period matter? Comparing PROMIS
- Author
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David M, Condon, Robert, Chapman, Sara, Shaunfield, Michael A, Kallen, Jennifer L, Beaumont, Daniel, Eek, Debanjali, Mitra, Katy L, Benjamin, Kelly, McQuarrie, Jamae, Liu, James W, Shaw, Allison, Martin Nguyen, Karen, Keating, and David, Cella
- Subjects
Adult ,Male ,Neoplasms ,Surveys and Questionnaires ,Mental Recall ,Quality of Life ,Humans ,Female ,Patient Reported Outcome Measures ,Middle Aged ,Physical Functional Performance ,Article ,Demography - Abstract
PURPOSE: To evaluate the influence of recall periods on the assessment of physical function, we compared, in cancer and general population samples, the standard administration of PROMIS Physical Function items without a recall period to administrations with 24-hour and 7-day recall periods. METHODS: We administered 31 items from the PROMIS Physical Function v2.0 item bank to 2400 respondents (n = 1001 with cancer; n = 1399 from the general population). Respondents were randomly assigned to one of three recall conditions (no recall, 24-hours, or 7-days) and one of two “reminder” conditions (with recall periods presented only at the start of the survey or with every item). We assessed items for potential differential item functioning (DIF) by recall time period. We then tested recall and reminder effects with analysis of variance controlling for demographics, English fluency, and co-morbidities. RESULTS: Based on conservative pre-set criteria, no items were flagged for recall time period-related DIF. Using analysis of variance, each condition was compared to the standard PROMIS administration for Physical Function (no recall period). There was no evidence of significant differences among groups in the cancer sample. In the general population sample, only the 24-hour recall condition with reminders was significantly different from the “no recall” PROMIS standard. At the item level, for both samples, the number of items with non-trivial effect size differences across conditions was minimal. CONCLUSIONS: Compared to no recall, the use of a recall period has little to no effect upon PROMIS physical function responses or scores. We recommend that PROMIS Physical Function be administered with the standard PROMIS “no recall” period.
- Published
- 2019
33. The Four-Factor Imagination Scale (FFIS): A measure for assessing frequency, complexity, emotional valence, and directedness of imagination
- Author
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Darya Zabelina and David M Condon
- Abstract
Recent findings in psychological research have begun to illuminate cognitive and neural mechanisms of imagination and mental imagery, and have highlighted its essential role for a number of important outcomes, including outcomes relevant for the study of psychopathology and psychotherapy. Scientific study of imagination, however, has been constrained by the virtue of being framed mainly as an ability for mental imagery. Here we propose that imagination is a widespread phenomenon that we all engage in, and which affects a wide range of important outcomes beyond more commonly studied constructs like creativity. Thus, the Four-Factor Imagination Scale (FFIS) focuses on features of the imaginative process, and measures imagination in terms of individual differences in those features, including Frequency, Complexity, Emotional Valence, and Directedness of imagination. Study 1 consisted of construct elicitation and generation of a large pool of candidate survey items. Study 2 (N = 378) conducted exploratory quantitative analysis on the preliminary pool of candidate items in a larger sample, revealing four distinct factors of the designed items. Study 3 (N = 10,410) confirmed the structure of the preliminary items, and reported internal consistency and unidimensionality, as well as convergent and discriminant validity of the resultant scales. The FFIS confirms that imagination is multi-faceted in nature, and is better approached as a constellation of more narrowly measurable constructs.
- Published
- 2019
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34. Exploring the persome: The power of the item in understanding personality structure
- Author
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Elizabeth M. Dworak, William Revelle, and David M. Condon
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Information retrieval ,Data collection ,media_common.quotation_subject ,05 social sciences ,Analogy ,Sampling (statistics) ,050109 social psychology ,Covariance ,Missing data ,050105 experimental psychology ,Set (abstract data type) ,Personality ,0501 psychology and cognitive sciences ,Psychology ,General Psychology ,Synthetic Aperture Personality Assessment ,media_common - Abstract
We discuss methods of data collection and analysis that emphasize the power of individual personality items for predicting real world criteria (e.g., smoking, exercise, self-rated health). These methods are borrowed by analogy from radio astronomy and human genomics. Synthetic Aperture Personality Assessment (SAPA) applies a matrix sampling procedure that synthesizes very large covariance matrices through the application of massively missing at random data collection. These large covariance matrices can be applied, in turn, in Persome Wide Association Studies (PWAS) to form personality prediction scores for particular criteria. We use two open source data sets (N=4,000 and 126,884 with 135 and 696 items respectively) for demonstrations of both of these procedures. We compare these procedures to the more traditional use of “Big 5” or a larger set of narrower factors (the “little 27”). We argue that there is more information at the item level than is used when aggregating items to form factorially derived scales.
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
35. Using the International Cognitive Ability Resource as an open source tool to explore individual differences in cognitive ability
- Author
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William Revelle, Philip Doebler, Elizabeth M. Dworak, and David M. Condon
- Subjects
Open science ,Open source ,Resource (project management) ,05 social sciences ,Contrast (statistics) ,050109 social psychology ,0501 psychology and cognitive sciences ,Cognition ,Set (psychology) ,Psychology ,050105 experimental psychology ,General Psychology ,Cognitive psychology - Abstract
Although the measurement of intelligence is important, researchers sometimes avoid using them in their studies due to their history, cost, or burden on the researcher. To encourage the use of cognitive ability items in research, we discuss the development and validation of the International Cognitive Ability Resource (ICAR), a growing set of items from 19 different subdomains. We consider how these items might benefit open science in contrast to more established proprietary measures. A short summary of how these items have been used in outside studies is provided in addition to ways we would love to see the use of public-domain cognitive ability items grow.
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
36. The Four-Factor Imagination Scale (FFIS): a measure for assessing frequency, complexity, emotional valence, and directedness of imagination
- Author
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Darya L. Zabelina and David M. Condon
- Subjects
Adult ,Male ,Psychometrics ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Emotions ,Self-concept ,Individuality ,Experimental and Cognitive Psychology ,050105 experimental psychology ,Creativity ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Arts and Humanities (miscellaneous) ,Surveys and Questionnaires ,Developmental and Educational Psychology ,Humans ,0501 psychology and cognitive sciences ,media_common ,Psychological research ,05 social sciences ,Discriminant validity ,Reproducibility of Results ,Cognition ,General Medicine ,Self Concept ,Imagination ,Female ,Psychology ,Construct (philosophy) ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery ,Cognitive psychology ,Mental image - Abstract
Recent findings in psychological research have begun to illuminate cognitive and neural mechanisms of imagination and mental imagery, and have highlighted its essential role for a number of important outcomes, including outcomes relevant for the study of psychopathology and psychotherapy. Scientific study of imagination, however, has been constrained by the virtue of being framed mainly as an ability for mental imagery. Here we propose that imagination is a widespread phenomenon that we all engage in, and which affects a wide range of important outcomes beyond more commonly studied constructs like creativity. Thus, the Four-Factor Imagination Scale (FFIS) focuses on features of the imaginative process, and measures imagination in terms of individual differences in those features, including frequency, complexity, emotional valence, and directedness of imagination. Study 1 consisted of construct elicitation and generation of a large pool of candidate survey items. Study 2 (N = 378) conducted exploratory quantitative analysis on the preliminary pool of candidate items in a larger sample, revealing four distinct factors of the designed items. Study 3 (N = 10,410) confirmed the structure of the preliminary items, and reported internal consistency and unidimensionality, as well as convergent and discriminant validity of the resultant scales. The FFIS confirms that imagination is multi-faceted in nature, and is better approached as a constellation of more narrowly measurable constructs.
- Published
- 2018
37. A Call for Cross-Fertilization Among Personality and Personnel Selection Researchers
- Author
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Daniel V, Lezotte, David M, Condon, and Daniel K, Mroczek
- Subjects
Article - Abstract
Lievens (2017) makes a case for SJTs in personnel selection, a recommendation with which we agree. In particular, we like the emphasis on branching out from current methodologies and using new techniques such as SJTs not only in I/O or personnel selection research but also in basic personality research. Despite our enthusiasm, we point out some flaws, most notably lack a time dimension to SJTs.
- Published
- 2018
38. PROMIS
- Author
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David, Cella, Seung W, Choi, David M, Condon, Ben, Schalet, Ron D, Hays, Nan E, Rothrock, Susan, Yount, Karon F, Cook, Richard C, Gershon, Dagmar, Amtmann, Darren A, DeWalt, Paul A, Pilkonis, Arthur A, Stone, Kevin, Weinfurt, and Bryce B, Reeve
- Subjects
Adult ,Male ,Depression ,Pain ,Reproducibility of Results ,Anxiety ,Article ,Surveys and Questionnaires ,Quality of Life ,Humans ,Female ,Patient Reported Outcome Measures ,Self Report ,Sleep ,Fatigue - Abstract
BACKGROUND: There is a need for valid self-report measures of core health-related quality of life (HRQoL) domains. OBJECTIVE: To derive brief, reliable and valid health profile measures from the Patient Reported Outcomes Measurement Information System® (PROMIS®) item banks. METHODS: Literature review, investigator consensus process, item response theory (IRT) analysis, and expert review of scaling results from multiple PROMIS data sets. We developed 3 profile measures ranging in length from 29 to 57 questions. These profiles assess important HRQoL domains with highly informative subsets of items from respective item banks and yield reliable information across mild-to-severe levels of HRQoL experiences. Each instrument assesses the domains of pain interference, fatigue, depression, anxiety, sleep disturbance, physical function, and social function using 4-, 6-, and 8-item short forms for each domain, and an average pain intensity domain score, using a 0–10 numeric rating scale. RESULTS: With few exceptions, all domain short forms within the profile measures were highly reliable across at least 3 standard deviation (30 T-score) units and were strongly correlated with the full bank scores. Construct validity with ratings of general health and quality of life was demonstrated. Information to inform statistical power for clinical and general population samples is also provided. CONCLUSIONS: Although these profile measures have been used widely, with summary scoring routines published, description of their development, reliability, and initial validity has not been published until this article. Further evaluation of these measures and clinical applications are encouraged.
- Published
- 2018
39. Time to Move Beyond the Big Five?
- Author
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David M, Condon and Daniel K, Mroczek
- Subjects
Article - Published
- 2018
40. Sense of direction: General factor saturation and associations with the Big-Five traits
- Author
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David M. Condon, Mary Hegarty, Joshua A. Wilt, William Revelle, David H. Uttal, and Cheryl A. Cohen
- Subjects
Extraversion and introversion ,Scale (ratio) ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Cognition ,Conscientiousness ,Mental rotation ,Developmental psychology ,Personality ,Intellect ,Big Five personality traits ,Psychology ,Social psychology ,General Psychology ,media_common - Abstract
article i nfo The ability to locate and orient ourselves with respect to environmental space is known as sense of direction ("SOD"). While there is considerable evidence for the predictive utility of self-report measures of this psycholog- ical construct, relatively little research has investigated the psychometric properties of the self-report scale by which it is most commonly measured - the Santa Barbara Sense of Direction scale (SBSOD, Hegarty et al., 2002) - or the broader personality correlates. The present study evaluated the factor structure of the SBSOD fol- lowing administration to 12,155 individuals and situated it among prominent sources of individual differences, specifically the Big Five personality traits and intelligence. Findings suggest that the SBSOD scale has relatively high general factor saturation, and that a considerable portion of the variance in SBSOD scores is explained by other personality traits, including Conscientiousness (r = 0.33), Intellect (r = 0.27), Emotional Stability (r = 0.26), and Extraversion (r = 0.23). Cognitive ability was less highly correlated with SBSOD scores when mea- sured at the level of general intelligence (r = 0.11) and in terms of mental rotation ability (r = .07). Recommen- dations are given for revision of the SBSOD scale based on item-level analyses.
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
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41. A Comparison of Human Narrative Coding of Redemption and Automated Linguistic Analysis for Understanding Life Stories
- Author
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Sara J. Weston, Keith S. Cox, Joshua J. Jackson, and David M. Condon
- Subjects
education.field_of_study ,Social Psychology ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Personal Narratives as Topic ,05 social sciences ,Word count ,Population ,Life satisfaction ,050109 social psychology ,050105 experimental psychology ,Narrative inquiry ,Personality ,0501 psychology and cognitive sciences ,Narrative ,education ,Psychology ,Social psychology ,media_common ,Coding (social sciences) ,Cognitive psychology - Abstract
The majority of life narrative research is performed using trained human coders. In contrast, automated linguistic analysis is oft employed in the study of verbal behaviors. These two methodological approaches are directly compared to determine the utility of automated linguistic analysis for the study of life narratives. In a study of in-person interviews (N = 158) and a second study of life stories collected online (N = 242), redemption scores are compared to the output of the Linguistic Inquiry and Word Count (Pennebaker, Francis & Booth, 2001). Additionally, patterns of language are found using exploratory principal components analysis. In both studies, redemption scores are modestly correlated with some LIWC categories and unassociated with the components. Patterns of language do not replicate across samples, indicating that the structure of language does not extend to a broader population. Redemption scores and linguistic components are independent predictors of life satisfaction up to 3 years later. These studies converge on the finding that human-coded redemption and automated linguistic analysis are complementary and nonredundant methods of analyzing life narratives, and considerations for the study of life narratives are discussed.
- Published
- 2015
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42. Health and Situations
- Author
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Nicolas A. Brown, Daniel K. Mroczek, and David M. Condon
- Subjects
Health psychology ,Nursing ,Psychology ,Health outcomes - Abstract
Research has demonstrated that personality is consistently linked to important health outcomes such as longevity, health care utilization, and adherence to prescribed treatment of illness and disease. However, situational factors may amplify, block, or modify person-level characteristics that affect these outcomes. Therefore, the integration of situation and personality research may add predictive validity for important outcomes such as health behavior and health care utilization. This chapter discusses the importance of context in the joint study of personality and health. We introduce a roadmap for studying health and situations emphasizing the need for theoretical and measurement frameworks. Lastly, the chapter reviews relevant methodological considerations for studying health situations, including tools for assessing situations (e.g., experience sampling, wearable cameras), and recruiting from appropriate populations.
- Published
- 2017
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- View/download PDF
43. Development and Validation of the Comprehensive Health Activities Scale: A New Approach to Health Literacy Measurement
- Author
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Denise C. Park, William Revelle, Elizabeth A. H. Wilson, David M. Condon, Laura M. Curtis, David W. Baker, Michael S. Wolf, Katherine Waite, and Elizabeth A. Bojarski
- Subjects
Male ,Gerontology ,Predictive validity ,Health (social science) ,Psychometrics ,Applied psychology ,Health literacy ,Library and Information Sciences ,behavioral disciplines and activities ,Article ,Numeracy ,Item response theory ,Humans ,Cognitive skill ,Aged ,Chicago ,Communication ,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health ,Reproducibility of Results ,Construct validity ,Middle Aged ,Mental health ,Health Literacy ,Scale (social sciences) ,Female ,Educational Measurement ,Psychology - Abstract
Current health literacy measures have been criticized for solely measuring reading and numeracy skills when a broader set of skills is necessary for making informed health decisions, especially when information is often conveyed verbally and through multimedia video. The authors devised 9 health tasks and a corresponding 190-item assessment to more comprehensively measure health literacy skills. A sample of 826 participants between the ages of 55 and 74 years who were recruited from an academic general internal medicine practice and three federally qualified health centers in Chicago, Illinois, completed the assessment. Items were reduced using hierarchical factor analysis and item response theory resulting in the 45-item Comprehensive Health Activities Scale. All 45 items loaded on 1 general latent trait, and the resulting scale demonstrated high reliability and strong construct validity using measures of health literacy and global cognitive functioning. The predictive validity of the Comprehensive Health Activities Scale using self-reported general, physical, and mental health status was comparable to or better than widely used measures of health literacy, depending on the outcome. Despite comprehensively measuring health literacy skills, items in the Comprehensive Health Activities Scale supported 1 primary construct. With similar psychometric properties, current measures may be adequate, depending on the purpose of the assessment.
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
44. The international cognitive ability resource: Development and initial validation of a public-domain measure
- Author
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David M. Condon and William Revelle
- Subjects
Data collection ,Psychometrics ,Management science ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Concurrent validity ,Experimental and Cognitive Psychology ,Cognition ,Test validity ,Public domain ,Data science ,Arts and Humanities (miscellaneous) ,Discriminative model ,Developmental and Educational Psychology ,Psychology ,Sophistication ,media_common - Abstract
For all of its versatility and sophistication, the extant toolkit of cognitive ability measures lacks a public-domain method for large-scale, remote data collection. While the lack of copyright protection for such a measure poses a theoretical threat to test validity, the effective magnitude of this threat is unknown and can be offset by the use of modern test-development techniques. To the extent that validity can be maintained, the benefits of a public-domain resource are considerable for researchers, including: cost savings; greater control over test content; and the potential for more nuanced understanding of the correlational structure between constructs. The International Cognitive Ability Resource was developed to evaluate the prospects for such a public-domain measure and the psychometric properties of the first four item types were evaluated based on administrations to both an offline university sample and a large online sample. Concurrent and discriminative validity analyses suggest that the public-domain status of these item types did not compromise their validity despite administration to 97,000 participants. Further development and validation of extant and additional item types are recommended.
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
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45. P4-350: MOBILETOOLBOX FOR MOBILE MONITORING OF COGNITIVE CHANGE
- Author
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Maria Varela, Jonathan W. King, Richard Gershon, Dorene M. Rentz, Cindy J. Nowinski, Michael R. Kellen, Lara M. Mangravite, David M. Condon, Michael W. Weiner, Larsson Omberg, Abhi Pratrap, Aaron J. Kaat, and Molly V. Wagster
- Subjects
Psychiatry and Mental health ,Cellular and Molecular Neuroscience ,Developmental Neuroscience ,Epidemiology ,Cognitive change ,Health Policy ,Neurology (clinical) ,Geriatrics and Gerontology ,Psychology ,Cognitive psychology - Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
46. Web- and Phone-based Data Collection using Planned Missing Designs
- Author
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William Revelle, David M. Condon, Joshua Wilt, Jason A. French, Ashley Brown, and Lorien G. Elleman
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
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47. A SAPA Project Update: On the Structure of phrased Self-Report Personality Items
- Author
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William Revelle, Ellen M. Roney, and David M. Condon
- Subjects
050103 clinical psychology ,media_common.quotation_subject ,lcsh:BF1-990 ,Sample (statistics) ,Big Five personality traits and culture ,Social and Behavioral Sciences ,Self-report inventory ,Personality, personality structure, temperament, Big Five ,Personality and Social Contexts ,Personality ,Psychology ,0501 psychology and cognitive sciences ,PsyArXiv|Social and Behavioral Sciences|Social and Personality Psychology ,Psychographic ,media_common ,PsyArXiv|Social and Behavioral Sciences| Social and Personality Psychology ,05 social sciences ,Alternative five model of personality ,FOS: Psychology ,PsyArXiv|Social and Behavioral Sciences ,lcsh:Psychology ,bepress|Social and Behavioral Sciences ,Personality Psychology ,Temperament ,bepress|Social and Behavioral Sciences|Psychology|Personality and Social Contexts ,Personality Assessment Inventory ,Social psychology - Abstract
Two large samples were collected to evaluate the structure of traits in the temperament domain. In both samples, participants were administered random subsets of public-domain personality items from a larger pool of approximately 700 items. These data broadly cover the most widely used, public-domain measures of personality (though this breadth is not likely free of theoretical bias). When combined with a third, previously-shared dataset that used the same methodological design, the sample includes more than 125,000 participants from more than 220 countries and regions. Re-use potential includes many types of structural, correlational, and network analyses of personality and a wide range of demographic and psychographic constructs. The data are available in both rdata and csv formats.
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
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48. The Roles of Time and Change in Situations
- Author
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Daniel K, Mroczek and David M, Condon
- Subjects
Article - Abstract
Rauthmann, Sherman and Funder have made a landmark contribution to situation research in the target article of this issue. However, we propose that their work overlooks the need to incorporate a developmental perspective. This includes the separate but related issues of time and change. Situations often unfold over long periods of time, can bleed together, and are not time-delimited in the way traditional laboratory experiments define them. Moreover, individuals systematically change over time (lifespan development) and their reactions to situations, as well as their personality-situation transactions, develop in tandem.
- Published
- 2016
49. Cross-sectional validation of the PROMIS-Preference scoring system
- Author
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Mark S. Roberts, Janel Hanmer, Baruch Fischhoff, Lan Yu, Joel Tsevat, David M. Condon, David Cella, Paul A. Pilkonis, Ron D. Hays, David Feeny, Barry Dewitt, Dennis A. Revicki, Rachel Hess, and Luo, Nan
- Subjects
Male ,Cross-sectional study ,Surveys ,Geographical locations ,0302 clinical medicine ,Quality of life ,Statistics ,Medicine and Health Sciences ,80 and over ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Computer Networks ,Aged, 80 and over ,education.field_of_study ,Multidisciplinary ,Applied Mathematics ,Simulation and Modeling ,030503 health policy & services ,Middle Aged ,humanities ,Preference ,3. Good health ,Convergent validity ,Research Design ,Physical Sciences ,Ordinary least squares ,Medicine ,Female ,0305 other medical science ,Psychology ,Algorithms ,Research Article ,Adult ,Census ,Computer and Information Sciences ,Adolescent ,General Science & Technology ,Science ,Population ,and over ,Research and Analysis Methods ,Young Adult ,03 medical and health sciences ,Clinical Research ,Mental Health and Psychiatry ,Humans ,Patient Reported Outcome Measures ,education ,Aged ,Estimation ,Internet ,Survey Research ,Construct validity ,United States ,Health Care ,Cross-Sectional Studies ,Good Health and Well Being ,Age Groups ,North America ,Quality of Life ,Population Groupings ,People and places ,Mathematics - Abstract
Author(s): Hanmer, Janel; Dewitt, Barry; Yu, Lan; Tsevat, Joel; Roberts, Mark; Revicki, Dennis; Pilkonis, Paul A; Hess, Rachel; Hays, Ron D; Fischhoff, Baruch; Feeny, David; Condon, David; Cella, David | Abstract: ObjectivesThe PROMIS-Preference (PROPr) score is a recently developed summary score for the Patient-Reported Outcomes Measurement Information System (PROMIS). PROPr is a preference-based scoring system for seven PROMIS domains created using multiplicative multi-attribute utility theory. It serves as a generic, societal, preference-based summary scoring system of health-related quality of life. This manuscript evaluates construct validity of PROPr in two large samples from the US general population.MethodsWe utilized 2 online panel surveys, the PROPr Estimation Survey and the Profiles-Health Utilities Index (HUI) Survey. Both included the PROPr measure, patient demographic information, self-reported chronic conditions, and other preference-based summary scores: the EuroQol-5D (EQ-5D-5L) and HUI in the PROPr Estimation Survey and the HUI in the Profiles-HUI Survey. The HUI was scored as both the Mark 2 and the Mark 3. Known-groups validity was evaluated using age- and gender-stratified mean scores and health condition impact estimates. Condition impact estimates were created using ordinary least squares regression in which a summary score was regressed on age, gender, and a single health condition. The coefficient for the health condition is the estimated effect on the preference score of having a condition vs. not having it. Convergent validity was evaluated using Pearson correlations between PROPr and other summary scores.ResultsThe sample consisted of 983 respondents from the PROPr Estimation Survey and 3,000 from the Profiles-HUI survey. Age- and gender-stratified mean PROPr scores were lower than EQ-5D and HUI scores, with fewer subjects having scores corresponding to perfect health on the PROPr. In the PROPr Estimation survey, all 11 condition impact estimates were statistically significant using PROPr, 8 were statistically significant by the EQ-5D, 7 were statistically significant by HUI Mark 2, and 9 were statistically significant by HUI Mark 3. In the Profiles-HUI survey, all 21 condition impact estimates were statistically significant using summary scores from all three scoring systems. In these samples, the correlations between PROPr and the other summary measures ranged from 0.67 to 0.70.ConclusionsThese results provide evidence of construct validity for PROPr using samples from the US general population.
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- 2018
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50. Selected Personality Data from the SAPA-Project: On the Structure of Phrased Self-Report Items
- Author
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William Revelle and David M. Condon
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Agreeableness ,personality structure ,media_common.quotation_subject ,lcsh:BF1-990 ,Personality, temperament, personality structure, Big Five ,Alternative five model of personality ,temperament ,Big Five personality traits and culture ,16. Peace & justice ,Hierarchical structure of the Big Five ,Big Five ,lcsh:Psychology ,Facet (psychology) ,Psychology ,Personality ,Big Five personality traits ,Social psychology ,Synthetic Aperture Personality Assessment ,media_common - Abstract
These data were collected to evaluate the structure of personality constructs in the temperament domain. In the context of modern personality theory, these constructs are typically construed in terms of the Big Five (Conscientiousness, Agreeableness, Neuroticism, Openness, and Extraversion) though several additional constructs were included here. Approximately 24,000 individuals were administered random subsets of 696 items from 92 public-domain personality scales using the Synthetic Aperture Personality Assessment method between December 8, 2013 and July 26, 2014. The data are available in rdata format and are accompanied by documentation stored as a text file. Re-use potential include many types of structural and correlational analyses of personality.
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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