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      American State Gun Law Strength and State Resident Differences in Neuroticism Levels

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          Abstract

          Relations between state gun law strength and state-aggregated levels of Republican leaning, gun ownership, and resident Big Five neuroticism (based on 619,397 residents nationally) were determined in a state-level analysis of the 50 American states using multiple regression strategies with state socioeconomic status, white population percent, and urban population percent statistically controlled. In a standard hierarchical model with state gun law strength as the criterion, the three demographic variables accounted for 44.4% of the variance and the Big Five accounted for another 21.9%. When the Big Five entered stepwise after the demographics, neuroticism was the sole significant personality predictor, accounting for another 13.4% of the variance. Greater state gun law strength was associated with higher state resident neuroticism. Further hierarchical regression analyses showed that state Republican leaning and gun ownership could account separately and jointly for significant variance in state gun law strength but not with state resident neuroticism controlled.

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          Most cited references47

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          A very brief measure of the Big-Five personality domains

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            Ecological Correlations and the Behavior of Individuals

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              An alternative "description of personality": the big-five factor structure.

              In the 45 years since Cattell used English trait terms to begin the formulation of his "description of personality," a number of investigators have proposed an alternative structure based on 5 orthogonal factors. The generality of this 5-factor model is here demonstrated across unusually comprehensive sets of trait terms. In the first of 3 studies, 1,431 trait adjectives grouped into 75 clusters were analyzed; virtually identical structures emerged in 10 replications, each based on a different factor-analytic procedure. A 2nd study of 479 common terms grouped into 133 synonym clusters revealed the same structure in 2 samples of self-ratings and in 2 samples of peer ratings. None of the factors beyond the 5th generalized across the samples. In the 3rd study, analyses of 100 clusters derived from 339 trait terms suggest their potential utility as Big-Five markers in future studies.
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                JSPP
                J Soc Polit Psych
                Journal of Social and Political Psychology
                J. Soc. Polit. Psych.
                PsychOpen
                2195-3325
                07 April 2016
                : 4
                : 1
                : 91-113
                Affiliations
                [a ]Department of Psychology, Cape Breton University, Sydney, Nova Scotia, Canada
                [2]Jacobs University Bremen, Bremen, Germany
                Author notes
                [* ]Department of Psychology, Cape Breton University, 1250 Grand Lake Road, Sydney, Nova Scotia, Canada. stewart_mccann@ 123456cbu.ca
                Article
                jspp.v4i1.562
                10.5964/jspp.v4i1.562
                e138a6f7-a76c-4b66-8f28-c95c98bd37ec

                This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.

                History
                : 18 July 2015
                : 10 February 2016
                Product
                Self URI (journal-page): https://journals.psychopen.eu/
                Categories
                Original Research Reports

                Psychology
                partisanship,neuroticism,American states,gun ownership,Big Five,gun laws,Republican
                Psychology
                partisanship, neuroticism, American states, gun ownership, Big Five, gun laws, Republican

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