McCrae Robert R, Terracciano Antonio
Gerontology Research Center, National Institute on Aging, National Institutes of Health, Department of Health and Human Services, Baltimore, MD 21224-6825, USA.
J Pers Soc Psychol. 2005 Mar;88(3):547-61. doi: 10.1037/0022-3514.88.3.547.
To test hypotheses about the universality of personality traits, college students in 50 cultures identified an adult or college-aged man or woman whom they knew well and rated the 11,985 targets using the 3rd-person version of the Revised NEO Personality Inventory. Factor analyses within cultures showed that the normative American self-report structure was clearly replicated in most cultures and was recognizable in all. Sex differences replicated earlier self-report results, with the most pronounced differences in Western cultures. Cross-sectional age differences for 3 factors followed the pattern identified in self-reports, with moderate rates of change during college age and slower changes after age 40. With a few exceptions, these data support the hypothesis that features of personality traits are common to all human groups.
为了检验关于人格特质普遍性的假设,来自50种文化背景的大学生们找出了一位他们熟悉的成年人或大学生年龄段的男性或女性,并使用修订版大五人格量表的第三人称版本对这11985名对象进行了评分。文化内部的因素分析表明,美国标准的自我报告结构在大多数文化中都得到了清晰的重现,并且在所有文化中都可识别。性别差异重现了早期自我报告的结果,在西方文化中差异最为显著。三个因素的横断面年龄差异遵循了自我报告中确定的模式,在大学年龄段变化适中,40岁以后变化较慢。除了少数例外,这些数据支持了人格特质特征对所有人类群体来说都是共有的这一假设。