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      Toward a structure- and process-integrated view of personality: Traits as density distributions of states.

      Journal of Personality and Social Psychology
      American Psychological Association (APA)

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          Abstract

          Three experience-sampling studies explored the distributions of Big-Five-relevant states (behavior) across 2 to 3 weeks of everyday life. Within-person variability was high, such that the typical individual regularly and routinely manifested nearly all levels of all traits in his or her everyday behavior. Second, individual differences in central tendencies of behavioral distributions were almost perfectly stable. Third, amount of behavioral variability (and skew and kurtosis) were revealed as stable individual differences. Finally, amount of within-person variability in extraversion was shown to reflect individual differences in reactivity to extraversion-relevant situational cues. Thus, decontextualized and noncontingent Big-Five content is highly useful for descriptions of individuals' density distributions as wholes. Simultaneously, contextualized and contingent personality units (e.g., conditional traits, goals) are needed for describing the considerable within-person variation.

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          Person × Situation interactions Choice of situations and congruence response models

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            Author and article information

            Journal
            Journal of Personality and Social Psychology
            Journal of Personality and Social Psychology
            American Psychological Association (APA)
            1939-1315
            0022-3514
            2001
            2001
            : 80
            : 6
            : 1011-1027
            Article
            10.1037/0022-3514.80.6.1011
            11414368
            3bf45c33-3be4-4c76-a30f-d8954277954a
            © 2001
            History

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