2021
DOI: 10.31234/osf.io/bzkwd
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Age Differences in the Big Five Personality Domains, Facets and Nuances: A Replication across the life span

Abstract: This replication and extension of Mõttus and Rozgonjuk (2019) compared the extents of age-related information captured by different levels of the personality trait hierarchy (domains, facets and nuances, indexed by individual items) in several samples (N = 51,524) of different age ranges and cultural backgrounds, and tested with different instruments. Across samples and measures, lower trait hierarchy levels (especially nuances) tended to contain substantially more age-sensitive information than higher levels;… Show more

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Cited by 5 publications
(7 citation statements)
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“…Our results underline that nuance-level analyses are an important supplement to higher level analyses when the goal is prediction (Hang et al, 2021;Mõttus & Rozgonjuk, 2019) even though the incremental predictive value of nuances may depend on the psychopathology factor that is predicted. However, nuance-level analyses also offer an opportunity to answer inconsistencies in the literature, for instance, in terms of the association between personality traits and life outcomes, which could have been due to personality instruments sampling different nuances (Mõttus, 2016).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 64%
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“…Our results underline that nuance-level analyses are an important supplement to higher level analyses when the goal is prediction (Hang et al, 2021;Mõttus & Rozgonjuk, 2019) even though the incremental predictive value of nuances may depend on the psychopathology factor that is predicted. However, nuance-level analyses also offer an opportunity to answer inconsistencies in the literature, for instance, in terms of the association between personality traits and life outcomes, which could have been due to personality instruments sampling different nuances (Mõttus, 2016).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 64%
“…To date, personality– p ‐factor associations have generally been investigated at the level of broad personality domains such as the Big Five: neuroticism, extraversion, openness, agreeableness and conscientiousness, with neuroticism usually sharing the most prominent links with mental health problems (Kotov et al, 2010) as well as co‐occurrence of disorders (Khan et al, 2005). But some have also began to examine the psychopathology's with facets, given that facets within the same domain often show different, even opposite associations with the same outcomes (Mõttus et al, 2019; Vainik et al, 2019), allowing facets to explain considerably more variation in them (Hang et al, 2021). However, studies into psychopathology associations with facets have mostly been limited to personality disorders and antisocial behaviour (Samuel & Widiger, 2008; Vize et al, 2018), or internalising problems (Khoo et al, 2019; Naragon‐Gaine & Watson, 2014; Walton et al, 2018), and have not considered the generalised risk for mental health issues captured by the p factor.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Lower levels of the personality hierarchy (facets and nuances) usually contain unique personality variance above and beyond domains (Jang et al, 1998). For example, facets show varied developmental age trajectories compared to their domains (Mõttus et al, 2015; Mõttus & Rozgonjuk, 2021; Soto et al, 2011; Terracciano et al, 2006), and nuances also show age trends different from their facets (Hang et al, 2021; McCrae, 2015; Mõttus et al, 2015; Mõttus, Soto, & Slobodskaya, 2017).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Besides potentially a more refined description of the population‐level patterns of personality development (Hang et al, 2021), nuance‐level analyses allow us to study systematic variations between personality traits in their developmental trends and intersections with other trait‐level features such as social expectations for them (Mõttus et al, 2020; Mõttus & Rozgonjuk, 2021). For example, Hang et al (2022) capitalized on variations between traits to investigate whether social expectations and ability to catch up with these expectations (self‐regulatory ability to adapt to social expectations) can explain the personality changes during childhood and adolescence.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%