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Personality Traits Below Facets: The Consensual Validity, Longitudinal Stability, Heritability, and Utility of Personality Nuances

It has been argued that facets do not represent the bottom of the personality hierarchy-even more specific personality characteristics, nuances, could be useful for describing and understanding individuals and their differences. Combining 2 samples of German twins, we assessed the consensual validit...

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Published in:Journal of personality and social psychology 2017-03, Vol.112 (3), p.474-490
Main Authors: Mõttus, René, Kandler, Christian, Bleidorn, Wiebke, Riemann, Rainer, McCrae, Robert R
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container_start_page 474
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creator Mõttus, René
Kandler, Christian
Bleidorn, Wiebke
Riemann, Rainer
McCrae, Robert R
description It has been argued that facets do not represent the bottom of the personality hierarchy-even more specific personality characteristics, nuances, could be useful for describing and understanding individuals and their differences. Combining 2 samples of German twins, we assessed the consensual validity (correlations across different observers), rank-order stability, and heritability of nuances. Personality nuances were operationalized as the 240 items of the Revised NEO Personality Inventory (NEO-PI-R). Their attributes were examined by analyzing item residuals, controlling for the variance of the facet the item had been assigned to and all other facets. Most nuances demonstrated significant (p < .0002) cross-method agreement and rank-order stability. A substantial proportion of them (48% in self-reports, 20% in informant ratings, and 50% in combined ratings) demonstrated a significant (p < .0002) component of additive genetic variance, whereas evidence for environmental influences shared by twins was modest. Applying a procedure to estimate stability and heritability of true scores of item residuals yielded estimates comparable with those of higher-order personality traits, with median estimates of rank-order stability and heritability being .77 and .52, respectively. Few nuances demonstrated robust associations with age and gender, but many showed incremental, conceptually meaningful, and replicable (across methods and/or samples) predictive validity for a range of interest domains and body mass index. We argue that these narrow personality characteristics constitute a valid level of the personality hierarchy. They may be especially useful for providing a deep and contextualized description of the individual, but also for the prediction of specific outcomes.
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source APA PsycARTICLES; Applied Social Sciences Index & Abstracts (ASSIA); International Bibliography of the Social Sciences (IBSS); Sociological Abstracts
subjects Adolescent
Adult
Aged
Aged, 80 and over
Correlation analysis
Female
Genetics
Heritability
Human
Human Development - physiology
Humans
Individual Differences
Longitudinal Studies
Male
Middle Aged
Personality
Personality - genetics
Personality - physiology
Personality psychology
Personality Tests - standards
Personality Traits
Prediction
Quantitative psychology
Ratings & rankings
Reproducibility of Results
Social psychology
Validity
Young Adult
title Personality Traits Below Facets: The Consensual Validity, Longitudinal Stability, Heritability, and Utility of Personality Nuances
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