Personality dynamics at work: The effects of form, time, and context of variability
Author(s) -
Nadin Beckmann,
Damian P. Birney,
Amirali Minbashian,
Jens F. Beckmann
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
european journal of personality
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 2.839
H-Index - 84
eISSN - 1099-0984
pISSN - 0890-2070
DOI - 10.1177/08902070211017341
Subject(s) - psychology , experience sampling method , personality , conscientiousness , trait , context (archaeology) , big five personality traits , neuroticism , developmental psychology , cognition , social psychology , sample (material) , predictive power , extraversion and introversion , paleontology , philosophy , chemistry , chromatography , epistemology , neuroscience , biology , computer science , programming language
The study aimed to investigate the status of within-person state variability in neuroticism and conscientiousness as individual differences constructs by exploring their (a) temporal stability, (b) cross-context consistency, (c) empirical links to selected antecedents, and (d) empirical links to longer term trait variability. Employing a sample of professionals ( N = 346) from Australian organisations, personality state data together with situation appraisals were collected using experience sampling methodology in field and repeatedly in lab-like settings. Data on personality traits, cognitive ability, and motivational mindsets were collected at baseline and after two years. Contingent (situation contingencies) and non-contingent (relative SD) state variability indices were relatively stable over time and across contexts. Only a small number of predictive effects of state variability were observed, and these differed across contexts. Cognitive ability appeared to be associated with state variability under lab-like conditions. There was limited evidence of links between short-term state and long-term trait variability, except for a small effect for neuroticism. Some evidence of positive manifold was found for non-contingent variability. Systematic efforts are required to further elucidate the complex pattern of results regarding the antecedents, correlates and outcomes of individual differences in state variability.
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