1. Is environmental sensitivity a unique trait? A multi-sample study on the association between sensitivity, personality, and psychological adjustment
- Author
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Lionetti, F, Dumpfrey, R, Richetin, J, Fasolo, M, Nocentini, A, Penolazzi, B, Pluess, M, Santona, A, Spinelli, M, Preti, E, Lionetti F., Dumpfrey R. S. C., Richetin J., Fasolo M., Nocentini A., Penolazzi B., Pluess M., Santona A., Spinelli M., Preti E., Lionetti, F, Dumpfrey, R, Richetin, J, Fasolo, M, Nocentini, A, Penolazzi, B, Pluess, M, Santona, A, Spinelli, M, Preti, E, Lionetti F., Dumpfrey R. S. C., Richetin J., Fasolo M., Nocentini A., Penolazzi B., Pluess M., Santona A., Spinelli M., and Preti E.
- Abstract
We aimed to investigate the extent to which Environmental Sensitivity (ES), as captured by the Highly Sensitive Person, 12-item scale (HSP-12), is distinguishable from traditional personality traits, contributes to psychological adjustment over and above personality, and if this contribution depends on the rearing environment. We also explored the HSP-12 psychometric properties and invariance across countries (UK and Italy) and samples (university and general population). Across multiple adult samples (N = 4459), we provided evidence that ES can be reliably assessed with the HSP-12 across countries and groups. We also showed that ES is distinguishable from established personality traits and is associated with lower well-being and negative affect, beyond personality. An environment perceived as caring played a buffering role.
- Published
- 2024