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Is Healthy Neuroticism Associated with Health Behaviors? A Coordinated Integrative Data Analysis.

Authors :
Graham EK
Weston SJ
Turiano NA
Aschwanden D
Booth T
Harrison F
James BD
Lewis NA
Makkar SR
Mueller S
Wisniewski KM
Yoneda T
Zhaoyang R
Spiro A
Willis S
Schaie KW
Sliwinski M
Lipton RA
Katz MJ
Deary IJ
Zelinski EM
Bennett DA
Sachdev PS
Brodaty H
Trollor JN
Ames D
Wright MJ
Gerstorf D
Allemand M
Drewelies J
Wagner GG
Muniz-Terrera G
Piccinin AM
Hofer SM
Mroczek DK
Source :
Collabra. Psychology [Collabra Psychol] 2020; Vol. 6 (1). Date of Electronic Publication: 2020 Jul 21.
Publication Year :
2020

Abstract

Current literature suggests that neuroticism is positively associated with maladaptive life choices, likelihood of disease, and mortality. However, recent research has identified circumstances under which neuroticism is associated with positive outcomes. The current project examined whether "healthy neuroticism", defined as the interaction of neuroticism and conscientiousness, was associated with the following health behaviors: smoking, alcohol consumption, and physical activity. Using a pre-registered multi-study coordinated integrative data analysis (IDA) approach, we investigated whether "healthy neuroticism" predicted the odds of engaging in each of the aforementioned activities. Each study estimated identical models, using the same covariates and data transformations, enabling optimal comparability of results. These results were then meta-analyzed in order to estimate an average (N-weighted) effect and to ascertain the extent of heterogeneity in the effects. Overall, these results suggest that neuroticism alone was not related to health behaviors, while individuals higher in conscientiousness were less likely to be smokers or drinkers, and more likely to engage in physical activity. In terms of the healthy neuroticism interaction of neuroticism and conscientiousness, significant interactions for smoking and physical activity suggest that the association between neuroticism and health behaviors was smaller among those high in conscientiousness. These findings lend credence to the idea that healthy neuroticism may be linked to certain health behaviors and that these effects are generalizable across several heterogeneous samples.<br />Competing Interests: Competing interests: No competing interests exist.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
2474-7394
Volume :
6
Issue :
1
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
Collabra. Psychology
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
33354649
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1525/collabra.266