Back to Search Start Over

Alcohol Involvement and the Five-Factor Model of Personality: A Meta-Analysis

Authors :
Malouff, John M.
Thorsteinsson, Einar B.
Rooke, Sally E.
Source :
Journal of Drug Education. 2007 37(3):277-294.
Publication Year :
2007

Abstract

The purpose of this meta-analysis was to quantify the relationship between the Five-Factor Model of personality and alcohol involvement and to identify moderators of the relationship. The meta-analysis included 20 studies, 119 effect sizes, and 7,886 participants. Possible moderators examined included: five-factor rating type (self vs. other); study time-frame (cross sectional vs. longitudinal); sample type (treatment vs. non-treatment); type of alcohol involvement measure used; gender of the participants; and age of the participants. The meta-analysis showed alcohol involvement was associated with low conscientiousness, low agreeableness, and high neuroticism, a personality profile that: a) fits on the low end of a superordinate personality dimension that has been called self-control; and b) makes treatment difficult. Several significant moderators of effect size were found, including the following: studies of individuals in treatment for alcohol problems showed a more negative pattern of personality traits than did other studies; crosssectional studies, but not longitudinal studies, showed a significant effect for agreeableness, perhaps suggesting that low agreeableness may have a different causal link to alcohol involvement from the other factors; mixed-sex samples tended to have lower effect sizes than single-sex samples, suggesting that mixing sexes in data analysis may obscure effects. (Contains 6 tables.)

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
0047-2379
Volume :
37
Issue :
3
Database :
ERIC
Journal :
Journal of Drug Education
Publication Type :
Report
Accession number :
EJ775828
Document Type :
Information Analyses<br />Journal Articles