The present study was designed to situate the eight scales of the Francis Psychological Type Scales within the three dimensional psychological space defined by the abbreviated Eysenck Personality Questionnaire Revised (EPQR-A), drawing on data provided by 2,769 clergy and churchgoing participants. The data support the concurrent validity of the Extraversion and Introversion Scales of the Francis Psychological Type Scales against the Eysenck Extraversion Scale. The data also illustrates how all the scales of the Francis Psychological Type Scales may be nuanced by correlations with the Eysenckian dimensions of extraversion, neuroticism, and psychoticism and with the Eysenckian Lie Scale
The aim of this study was to test the factorial structure and validity of the Francis Psychological ...
The Australian National Church Life Survey draws on psychological type theory to facilitate insights...
Psychological type theory and temperament theory provide lenses through which the distinctive appeal...
The present study was designed to situate the eight scales of the Francis Psychological Type Scales ...
The present study was designed to situate the eight scales of the Francis Psychological Type Scales ...
The Francis Psychological Type Scales were developed during the early 2000s to operationalize the fo...
The Francis Psychological Type Scales were developed during the early 2000s to operationalize the fo...
The Francis Psychological Type Scales (FPTS) were developed to operationalise psychological type the...
This study responds to the challenge offered by Meunier (2012) to explore how psychological type the...
The Francis Psychological Type and Emotional Temperament Scales (FPTETS) were developed from the Fra...
The Francis Psychological Type Scales were designed to provide a fresh conceptualisation and operati...
This study employs psychological type theory and tests the hypothesis that some psychological types ...
The present study draws on data provided by 263 adults attending seven services held in Methodist ch...
The Francis Psychological Type Scales (FPTS) were developed to operationalise psychological type the...
The two models of personality proposed by the Keirsey Temperament Sorter (KTS) and by the short-form...
The aim of this study was to test the factorial structure and validity of the Francis Psychological ...
The Australian National Church Life Survey draws on psychological type theory to facilitate insights...
Psychological type theory and temperament theory provide lenses through which the distinctive appeal...
The present study was designed to situate the eight scales of the Francis Psychological Type Scales ...
The present study was designed to situate the eight scales of the Francis Psychological Type Scales ...
The Francis Psychological Type Scales were developed during the early 2000s to operationalize the fo...
The Francis Psychological Type Scales were developed during the early 2000s to operationalize the fo...
The Francis Psychological Type Scales (FPTS) were developed to operationalise psychological type the...
This study responds to the challenge offered by Meunier (2012) to explore how psychological type the...
The Francis Psychological Type and Emotional Temperament Scales (FPTETS) were developed from the Fra...
The Francis Psychological Type Scales were designed to provide a fresh conceptualisation and operati...
This study employs psychological type theory and tests the hypothesis that some psychological types ...
The present study draws on data provided by 263 adults attending seven services held in Methodist ch...
The Francis Psychological Type Scales (FPTS) were developed to operationalise psychological type the...
The two models of personality proposed by the Keirsey Temperament Sorter (KTS) and by the short-form...
The aim of this study was to test the factorial structure and validity of the Francis Psychological ...
The Australian National Church Life Survey draws on psychological type theory to facilitate insights...
Psychological type theory and temperament theory provide lenses through which the distinctive appeal...