2019
DOI: 10.1016/j.paid.2019.02.013
|View full text |Cite
|
Sign up to set email alerts
|

A dynamic systems approach to personality: The Personality Dynamics (PersDyn) model

Abstract: In the present paper, we offer an integrative approach to personality that combines withinperson and between-person differences. By drawing on the principles of dynamic systems theory, we present Personality Dynamics model -a novel framework that captures people's typical pattern of changes in personality states using three model parameters: baseline personality, reflecting the stable set point around which one's states fluctuate, personality variability, or the extent to which one's personality states fluctua… Show more

Help me understand this report

Search citation statements

Order By: Relevance

Paper Sections

Select...
2
1
1
1

Citation Types

3
88
0
1

Year Published

2019
2019
2020
2020

Publication Types

Select...
6
2
1

Relationship

2
7

Authors

Journals

citations
Cited by 76 publications
(101 citation statements)
references
References 48 publications
3
88
0
1
Order By: Relevance
“…To this end, we draw on the recently developed Personality Dynamics (PersDyn) model, a model that captures individual differences in the momentary expressions of personality traits using three building blocks: (1) one’s baseline level on the personality dimension [trait baseline], (2) the extent to which one exhibits variability around this baseline [trait variability], and (3) the swiftness with which individuals return to their baseline once they deviated from it [trait attractor strength]. A more detailed account of the PersDyn model can be found in Table and in Sosnowska, Kuppens, De Fruyt and Hofmans ().…”
Section: The Elements Of the Personality Dynamics Modelmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…To this end, we draw on the recently developed Personality Dynamics (PersDyn) model, a model that captures individual differences in the momentary expressions of personality traits using three building blocks: (1) one’s baseline level on the personality dimension [trait baseline], (2) the extent to which one exhibits variability around this baseline [trait variability], and (3) the swiftness with which individuals return to their baseline once they deviated from it [trait attractor strength]. A more detailed account of the PersDyn model can be found in Table and in Sosnowska, Kuppens, De Fruyt and Hofmans ().…”
Section: The Elements Of the Personality Dynamics Modelmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…A number of dynamic system approaches focusing on the closely related fields of personality dynamics (Cervone, 2005;Fajkowska, 2015;Jeronimus, 2019;Nowak, Vallacher, & Zochowski, 2005;Pervin, 2001;Read et al, 2010;Richardson, Dale, & Marsh, 2014;Sosnowska, Kuppens, De Fruyt, & Hofmans, 2019;Vallacher, Michaels, & Nowak, this volume), affective dynamics (Hollenstein et al, 2013;Kuppens, Oravecz, & Tuerlinckx, 2010;Kuppens, & Verduyn, 2017), and social interaction dynamics (Hollenstein & Lewis, 2006;Gottman, Murray, Swanson, Tyson, & Swanson, 2003;Pennings et al, 2014) have been introduced in recent years. Some of these approaches already provide mathematically formalized generic models of how personality systems stabilize and change and that show clear links to the social interaction dynamics outlined in this chapter.…”
Section: Personality and Social Interaction 49mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Most current applications in personality psychology that can be summarized under the broad umbrella of dynamic system approaches, however, do not provide fully fledged-out formalized models but focus on deriving resulting system-like parameters such as variability PERSONALITY AND SOCIAL INTERACTION 54 (the range or amplitude of state fluctuations), inertia (the degree with which a state carries over from one moment to the next), and attractor force (the swiftness with which state deviations from one's average state are pulled back to this average) from intensive longitudinal within-person or within-dyad data (e.g., Sosnowska et al, 2019). These current efforts to describe personality via dynamic system parameters are, however, short on explaining how individual and dyadic differences in these parameters develop and what they exactly reflect.…”
Section: Personality and Social Interaction 49mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Other investigations (e.g., Dunlop, 2015;Geukes & Back, 2017;Geukes, van Zalk, & Back, 2018;Revelle & Condon, 2015;Sosnowska, Kuppens, De Fruyt, & Hofmans, 2019) go beyond state manifestations of broad traits, and instead address a range of state-like variables (incl. momentary goals, affects, experiences, behaviors, and evaluations) as well as the dynamic interactions that unfold between these variables.…”
Section: Subjectifying the Personality State: Theoretical Underpinninmentioning
confidence: 99%