2008
DOI: 10.1016/j.jrp.2008.07.011
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Survey and behavioral measurements of interpersonal trust

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Cited by 276 publications
(220 citation statements)
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References 25 publications
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“…Specifically, dispositional trust was associated positively with Agreeableness (more agreeable people were more trusting) and Extraversion (more extraverted people were more trusting), and negatively with Neuroticism (more neurotic, less emotionally stable people were less trusting). Furthermore, Evans and Revelle (2008) found that dispositional interpersonal trust predicted participant behavior in an economic simulation called the Investment Game. This simulation involves participants exchanging funds with an unseen partner (reminiscent of the way scam victims may send money to the fraudsters).…”
Section: Personalitymentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Specifically, dispositional trust was associated positively with Agreeableness (more agreeable people were more trusting) and Extraversion (more extraverted people were more trusting), and negatively with Neuroticism (more neurotic, less emotionally stable people were less trusting). Furthermore, Evans and Revelle (2008) found that dispositional interpersonal trust predicted participant behavior in an economic simulation called the Investment Game. This simulation involves participants exchanging funds with an unseen partner (reminiscent of the way scam victims may send money to the fraudsters).…”
Section: Personalitymentioning
confidence: 99%
“…This is a beginning, but a full-fledged integration will require a better understanding of all aspects of the ABCDs. researcher is to identify the consistencies and differences within and between individuals (what one feels, thinks, wants, and does) and eventually to try to explain them in terms of a set of testable hypotheses (why one feels, thinks, wants, and does; Revelle, 2007).…”
Section: Overviewmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…To what extent are these two essential concepts represented in standard measures of personality? In a two-part study, Evans & Revelle (2007) examined the factorial structure and correlations with Big 5 measures using SAPA technology, and then validated their scales using an experimental procedure known as the Investment Game (Berg, Dickhaut, & McCabe, 1995;Bohnet & Croson, 2004). With N = 8,183, Trust and Trustworthiness correlated highly with each other (.50) but did show differential patterns of correlations with Big 5 scales: Trust correlated positively with Agreeableness (.65), and Extraversion (.58), and negatively with Neuroticism (−.61).…”
Section: Study 3: Measurement Of Trust and Trustworthinessmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…While there are studies that associate personality traits with cheating behaviours in different interpersonal contexts (Orzeck and Lung, 2005;Evans and Revelle, 2008;Wilks et al, 2016), within the numerous studies that have examined personality traits as predictors of overall Internet use (Mark and Ganzach, 2014), there are very few that focus on ethical behaviours in the use (Karim et al, 2009).…”
Section: Big Five Personality Traits As Antecedent Of Cyber Plagiarismmentioning
confidence: 99%