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The Relationship Between Personality and Self-Report Abilities

Authors :
Philip A. Vernon
Kerry L. Jang
Andrew M. Johnson
Julie Aitken Schermer
Source :
Journal of Individual Differences. 32:47-53
Publication Year :
2011
Publisher :
Hogrefe Publishing Group, 2011.

Abstract

The relationship between self-report abilities and personality was examined at both the phenotypic (zero-order) level as well as at the genetic and environmental levels. Twins and siblings (N = 516) completed self-report ability and personality questionnaires. A factor analysis of the ability questions revealed 10 factors, including politics, interpersonal relationships, practical tasks, intellectual pursuits, academic skills, entrepreneur/business, domestic skills, vocal abilities, and creativity. Five personality factors were examined, including extraversion, conscientiousness, dependence, aggression, and openness. At the phenotypic level, the correlations between the ability factor scores and personality factor scores ranged from 0 to .60 (between political abilities and extraversion). The relationship between the two areas at the genetic level was found to range between –.01 and .60; the environmental correlations ranged from –.01 to .48. The results suggest that some of the self-report ability scores are related to self-report personality, and that some of these observed relationships may have a common genetic basis while others are from a common environmental factor.

Details

ISSN :
21512299 and 16140001
Volume :
32
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Journal of Individual Differences
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........ee5dfb106a5856c1d850789d3e977a60
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1027/1614-0001/a000035