Age differences in Personality Traits Across Cultures: Self-Report and Observer Perceptives

Authors

MCCRAE Robert R. COSTA Paul T. HŘEBÍČKOVÁ Martina URBÁNEK Tomáš MARTIN Thomas A. ORYOL Valery E. RUKAVISHNIKOV Alexey A. SENIN Ivan G.

Year of publication 2004
Type Article in Periodical
Magazine / Source European Journal of Personality
MU Faculty or unit

Faculty of Arts

Citation
Field Psychology
Keywords personality traits; age differences; cross-culture
Description Using self-report measures, longitudinal studies in the US and cross-sectional studies from many cultures suggest that the broad factors of Neuroticism, Extraversion, and Openness to Experience decline from adolescence to adulthood, whereas Agreeableness and Conscientiousness increase. Data are inconsistent on the rate of change during adulthood, and on the generalizability of self-report findings to informant ratings. We analysed cross-sectional data from self-reports and informant ratings on the Revised NEO Personality Inventory in Czech (N = 705) and Russian (N = 800) samples. Some curvilinear effects were found, chiefly in the Czech sample; informant data generally replicated self-reports, although the effects were weaker. Although many of the details are not yet clear, there appear to be pan-cultural trends in personality development that are consistent with the hypothesis of intrinsic maturation.

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