Sad but true? - How induced emotional states differentially bias self-rated Big Five personality traits
Querengässer J, Schindler S (2014)
BMC Psychology 2(1): 14.
Zeitschriftenaufsatz
| Veröffentlicht | Englisch
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Autor*in
Querengässer, Jan;
Schindler, SebastianUniBi
Einrichtung
Abstract / Bemerkung
Background
The Big Five are seen as stable personality traits. This study hypothesized that their measurement via self-ratings is differentially biased by participants’ emotions. The relationship between habitual emotions and personality should be mirrored in a patterned influence of emotional states upon personality scores.
Methods
We experimentally induced emotional states and compared baseline Big Five scores of ninety-eight German participants (67 female; mean age 22.2) to their scores after the induction of happiness or sadness. Manipulation checks included the induced emotion’s intensity and durability.
Results
The expected differential effect could be detected for neuroticism and extraversion and as a trend for agreeableness. Post-hoc analyses showed that only sadness led to increased neuroticism and decreased extraversion scores. Oppositely, happiness did not decrease neuroticism, but there was a trend for an elevation on extraversion scores.
Conclusion
Results suggest a specific effect of sadness on self-reported personality traits, particularly on neuroticism. Sadness may trigger different self-concepts in susceptible people, biasing perceived personality. This bias could be minimised by tracking participants’ emotional states prior to personality measurement.
Erscheinungsjahr
2014
Zeitschriftentitel
BMC Psychology
Band
2
Ausgabe
1
Art.-Nr.
14
ISSN
2050-7283
Finanzierungs-Informationen
Open-Access-Publikationskosten wurden durch die Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft und die Universität Bielefeld gefördert.
Page URI
https://pub.uni-bielefeld.de/record/2685103
Zitieren
Querengässer J, Schindler S. Sad but true? - How induced emotional states differentially bias self-rated Big Five personality traits. BMC Psychology. 2014;2(1): 14.
Querengässer, J., & Schindler, S. (2014). Sad but true? - How induced emotional states differentially bias self-rated Big Five personality traits. BMC Psychology, 2(1), 14. doi:10.1186/2050-7283-2-14
Querengässer, Jan, and Schindler, Sebastian. 2014. “Sad but true? - How induced emotional states differentially bias self-rated Big Five personality traits”. BMC Psychology 2 (1): 14.
Querengässer, J., and Schindler, S. (2014). Sad but true? - How induced emotional states differentially bias self-rated Big Five personality traits. BMC Psychology 2:14.
Querengässer, J., & Schindler, S., 2014. Sad but true? - How induced emotional states differentially bias self-rated Big Five personality traits. BMC Psychology, 2(1): 14.
J. Querengässer and S. Schindler, “Sad but true? - How induced emotional states differentially bias self-rated Big Five personality traits”, BMC Psychology, vol. 2, 2014, : 14.
Querengässer, J., Schindler, S.: Sad but true? - How induced emotional states differentially bias self-rated Big Five personality traits. BMC Psychology. 2, : 14 (2014).
Querengässer, Jan, and Schindler, Sebastian. “Sad but true? - How induced emotional states differentially bias self-rated Big Five personality traits”. BMC Psychology 2.1 (2014): 14.
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Open Access
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