Authors
Angelina R Sutin, Luigi Ferrucci, Alan B Zonderman, Antonio Terracciano
Publication date
2011/7/11
Journal
Journal of Personality and Social Psychology
Publisher
American Psychological Association
Description
Personality traits contribute to health outcomes, in part through their association with major controllable risk factors, such as obesity. Body weight, in turn, reflects our behaviors and lifestyle and contributes to the way we perceive ourselves and others. In this study, the authors use data from a large (N= 1,988) longitudinal study that spanned more than 50 years to examine how personality traits are associated with multiple measures of adiposity and with fluctuations in body mass index (BMI). Using 14,531 anthropometric assessments, the authors modeled the trajectory of BMI across adulthood and tested whether personality predicted its rate of change. Measured concurrently, participants higher on Neuroticism or Extraversion or lower on Conscientiousness had higher BMI; these associations replicated across body fat, waist, and hip circumference. The strongest association was found for the impulsivity facet …
Total citations
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Scholar articles
AR Sutin, L Ferrucci, AB Zonderman, A Terracciano - Journal of personality and social psychology, 2011