Unbound MEDLINE

Self-reported extremely adverse life events and longitudinal changes in five-factor model personality traits in an urban sample. Journal of traumatic stress [J Trauma Stress] Journal article

 
TitleSelf-reported extremely adverse life events and longitudinal changes in five-factor model personality traits in an urban sample.
Author(s)Löckenhoff CE, Terracciano A, Patriciu NS, Eaton WW, Costa PT 
InstitutionLaboratory of Personality and Cognition, National Institute on Aging, NIH, DHHS, Baltimore, MD.
SourceJ Trauma Stress 2009 Feb 19; 22(1):53-59.
AbstractThis study examined longitudinal personality change in response to extremely adverse life events in a sample (N = 458) drawn from the East Baltimore Epidemiologic Catchment Area study. Five-factor model personality traits were assessed twice over an average interval of 8 years. Twenty-five percent of the participants reported an extremely horrifying or frightening event within 2 years before the second personality assessment. Relative to the rest of the sample, they showed increases in neuroticism, decreases in the compliance facet of agreeableness, and decreases in openness to values. Baseline personality was unrelated to future events, but among participants who reported extreme events, lower extraversion and/or conscientiousness at baseline as well as longitudinal increases in neuroticism predicted lower mental health at follow-up.
LanguageENG
Pub Type(s)JOURNAL ARTICLE
PubMed ID19230009