Authors
Nick Haslam, Brock Bastian, Christopher Fox, Jennifer Whelan
Publication date
2007/6/1
Journal
Personality and Individual Differences
Volume
42
Issue
8
Pages
1621-1631
Publisher
Pergamon
Description
Lay conceptions of personality change and continuity were examined in a sample of 112 undergraduates. Participants rated their personal change over 5 years (past or future), the change they perceived to be normative over 10-year age spans between 15 and 65, their beliefs about whether personality is fixed or malleable (“lay theories”) and their beliefs about the causes of personality change and continuity. Beliefs about normative personality change generally corresponded to research evidence on adult trajectories of the Big Five factors, with some age bias, whereas recalled and anticipated personal change tended to be more positive than these norms. Participants tended to endorse environmental causes more for personality change than for continuity. Lay theories were not consistently associated with these causal beliefs, or with beliefs about personal and normative change.
Total citations
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Scholar articles
N Haslam, B Bastian, C Fox, J Whelan - Personality and Individual Differences, 2007