Cyniak-Cieciura, Maria, Popiel, Agnieszka, Zawadzki, Bogdan, Cremeans-Smith, Julie K., Alessandri, Guido, Bielak, Patryk, Camino, Victoria, Cha, Eun Jung, Cho, Yunkyung, Dobrowolski, Paweł, Fajkowska, Małgorzata, Filosa, Lorenzo, Fruehstorfer, David B., Galarregui, Marina, Goldfarb, Rocío, Hyun, Myoung-Ho, Kalinina, Zhanna, Keegan, Eduardo, Mambetalina, Aliya, and McHugh, Louise
AbstractThe goal was to create a brief temperament inventory grounded in the Regulative Theory of Temperament (FCB-TMI-CC), with a user-friendly, online applicability for studies in different cultures. As the regulative role of temperament is strongly revealed under meaningful stress, the study was planned within the time of the COVID-19 pandemic. To ensure high diversity in terms of culture, economic and environmental conditions, data from nine countries (Poland, United States of America, Italy, Japan, Argentina, South Korea, Ireland, United Kingdom and Kazakhstan) were utilized (min. N = 200 per country). Validation data were gathered on the level of COVID-19 stressors, posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD), depression, anxiety and stress symptoms, and Big Five personality traits. Multigroup confirmatory factor analysis served as the basis for the inventory’s construction. The final culture-common version includes 37 items (5–6 in each of the 7 scales) and covers the core aspects of temperament dimensions. Temperament structure was confirmed to be equivalent across measured cultures. The measurement is invariant at the level of factor loadings and the reliability (internal consistency) and theoretical validity of the scales were at least acceptable. Therefore, the FCB-TMI-CC may serve as a valuable tool for studying temperament across diverse cultures and facilitate cross-cultural comparisons. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]