All Stories

  1. A More Complete Picture of Personality
  2. Psychologically Adjusted Persons Are Less Aware of How They Are Perceived by Others
  3. Measurement invariance within and between individuals: a distinct problem in testing the equivalence of intra- and inter-individual model structures
  4. Effects of Communication Between Judges on Consensus and Accuracy in Judgments of People’s Intelligence
  5. Positive Self–regard and Claim to Leadership: Two Fundamental Forms of Self–evaluation
  6. Do men vary more than women in personality? A study in 51 cultures
  7. Sex Differences in Variability in Personality: A Study in Four Samples
  8. Vocabulary for describing disliked persons is more differentiated than vocabulary for describing liked persons
  9. Not All Authorships Are Created Equal
  10. Person Perception, Dispositional Inferences, and Social Judgment
  11. Temperament and Attentional Bias in Vocal Emotional Stroop Tasks
  12. Person-Fit to the Five Factor Model of Personality
  13. Why Mate Choices are not as Reciprocal as we Assume: The Role of Personality, Flirting and Physical Attractiveness
  14. Personality and lexical decision times for evaluative words
  15. How people see others is different from how people see themselves: A replicable pattern across cultures.
  16. Extraversion is accurately perceived after a 50-ms exposure to a face
  17. More May Be Better but There May Be Too Much: Optimal Trait Level and Self‐Enhancement Bias
  18. Effects of self‐enhancement on agreement on personality profiles
  19. Commentary: Falsifiability is the Main Issue
  20. Temperament and early information processing: Temperament-related attentional bias in emotional Stroop tasks
  21. Well‐being and the accessibility of pleasant and unpleasant concepts
  22. Processing of pleasant, unpleasant, and neutral words in a lateralised emotional Stroop task
  23. Genetic and Environmental Influences on Person × Situation Profiles
  24. Personality, Emotionality, and Risk Prediction
  25. Persönlichkeitspsychologie: Stand und Perspektiven
  26. Beware of individual differences
  27. Resilients, Overcontrollers, and Undercontrollers: The replicability of the three personality prototypes across informants
  28. Thin Slices of Behavior as Cues of Personality and Intelligence.
  29. COMMENTARIES
  30. Sociability and Positive Emotionality: Genetic and Environmental Contributions to the Covariation Between Different Facets of Extraversion
  31. German Observational Study of Adult Twins (GOSAT): A Multimodal Investigation of Personality, Temperament and Cognitive Ability
  32. German Observational Study of Adult Twins (GOSAT): A Multimodal Investigation of Personality, Temperament and Cognitive Ability
  33. Genetic and environmental influences on objectively assessed activity in adults
  34. Similarity of childhood experiences and personality resemblance in monozygotic and dizygotic twins: a test of the equal environments assumption
  35. Self-Reported Similarity of Treatment in Childhood Measure
  36. Personality Disorders in Offenders: Categorical Versus Dimensional Approaches
  37. Carving personality description at its joints: Confirmation of three replicable personality prototypes for both children and adults
  38. Carving personality description at its joints: Confirmation of three replicable personality prototypes for both children and adults
  39. Genetic and environmental influences on observed personality: Evidence from the German Observational Study of Adult Twins.
  40. Genetic and Environmental Influences on Two Measures of Speed of Information Processing and their Relation to Psychometric Intelligence: Evidence from the German Observational Study of Adult Twins
  41. Deception and Deception Detection: The Role of Cross‐Modal Inconsistency
  42. Genetic and environmental sources of consistency and variability in positive and negative mood
  43. The Big Five as States: How Useful Is the Five-Factor Model to Describe Intraindividual Variations over Time?
  44. Editorial
  45. Editorial
  46. Observable Attributesas Manifestations and Cues ofPersonality and Intelligence
  47. Consensus and Self‐Other Agreement for Trait Inferences from Minimal Information
  48. Convergence of stranger ratings of personality and intelligence with self-ratings, partner ratings, and measured intelligence.
  49. Effects of information content and evaluative extremity on positivity and negativity biases.
  50. To Predict Some of the People More of the Time
  51. Social desirability scales as moderator and suppressor variables
  52. Inferring Act Frequencies and Traits from Behavior Observations
  53. Editorial
  54. Implicit Personality Theory and the Five‐Factor Model
  55. The cross-modal consistency of personality: Inferring strangers' traits from visual or acoustic information
  56. Trait inferences: Sources of validity at zero acquaintance.
  57. Age preferences: The crucial studies have yet to be done
  58. Situation cognition and coherence in personality. Barbara Krahé. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, 1990. 207 pp
  59. Breadth, bandwidth, and fidelity of personality‐descriptive categories
  60. Proximity to central tendency and usefulness in attaining goals as predictors of prototypicality for behaviour‐descriptive categories
  61. Evidence of a correlation between wearing glasses and personality
  62. Personality psychology: Recent trends and emerging directions. David M. Buss and Nancy Cantor (Eds). Springer, New York and Berlin, 1989, 352 pp.
  63. Traits as ideal-based and goal-derived social categories.
  64. Comparing exploratory and confirmatory factor analysis: A study on the 5-factor model of personality
  65. Effect of Motherhood on Environmentalistic Explanations of Behavior
  66. Descriptive consistency and social desirability in self‐and peer reports
  67. Semantic mediation or spurious correlation? A reply to Semin and Krahé's critique of Epstein and Teraspulsky
  68. The multiple classification of acts and the big five factors of personality
  69. Consistency in personality. A methodological frame work. Daniel J. Ozer, Springer, Berlin. 1986. 79 pp
  70. Fact and Fiction in Implicit Personality Theory
  71. Retrospective estimates of act frequencies: How accurately do they reflect reality?
  72. Toward an understanding of trait interrelations: Acts as instances for several traits.
  73. The Trait Concept: Current Theoretical Considerations, Empirical Facts, and Implications for Personality Inventory Construction
  74. Current Theoretical Considerations of the Trait Concept: Empirical Facts, and Implications for Personality Inventory Construction
  75. The control of social desirability in personality inventories: A study using the principal-factor deletion technique