In one currently dominant view on personality, personality dimensions (e.g. extraversion) are causes of human behaviour, and personality inventory items (e.g. 'I like to go to parties' and 'I like people') are measurements of these dimensions. In this view, responses to extraversion items correlate because they measure the same latent dimension. In this paper, we challenge this way of thinking and offer an alternative perspective on personality as a system of connected affective, cognitive and behavioural components. We hypothesize that these components do not hang together because they measure the same underlying dimension; they do so because they depend on one another directly for causal, homeostatic or logical reasons (e.g. if one does n...
Contains fulltext : 196249.pdf (publisher's version ) (Open Access)Personality fac...
Some commentators wholeheartedly disagreed with the central tenet of the network perspective on pers...
The Five Factor Model (FFM) is the most widely used personality model; it proposes a hierarchical st...
In one currently dominant view on personality, personality dimensions (e.g. extraversion) are causes...
The paper explores the relationship between personality characteristics, sense of community and the ...
Previous work has examined how specific personality dimensions are associated with social network ch...
Previous work has examined how specific personality dimensions are associated with social network ch...
In this paper, we expand previous research on the psychological foundations of social behavior by ev...
It has long been understood that a multitude of biological systems, from genetics, to brain networks...
Personality neuroscience involves the use of neuroscience methods to study individual differences in...
Traditionally, personality has been conceptualized in terms of dimensions of human experience - habi...
In principle, units of personality may be of two varieties: dimensional variables, which involve con...
In recent years, functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) has been widely used in studies that e...
INTRODUCTION: Human personality is described preferentially in terms of factors (dimensions) found u...
<div><h3>Introduction</h3><p>Human personality is described preferentially in terms of factors (dime...
Contains fulltext : 196249.pdf (publisher's version ) (Open Access)Personality fac...
Some commentators wholeheartedly disagreed with the central tenet of the network perspective on pers...
The Five Factor Model (FFM) is the most widely used personality model; it proposes a hierarchical st...
In one currently dominant view on personality, personality dimensions (e.g. extraversion) are causes...
The paper explores the relationship between personality characteristics, sense of community and the ...
Previous work has examined how specific personality dimensions are associated with social network ch...
Previous work has examined how specific personality dimensions are associated with social network ch...
In this paper, we expand previous research on the psychological foundations of social behavior by ev...
It has long been understood that a multitude of biological systems, from genetics, to brain networks...
Personality neuroscience involves the use of neuroscience methods to study individual differences in...
Traditionally, personality has been conceptualized in terms of dimensions of human experience - habi...
In principle, units of personality may be of two varieties: dimensional variables, which involve con...
In recent years, functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) has been widely used in studies that e...
INTRODUCTION: Human personality is described preferentially in terms of factors (dimensions) found u...
<div><h3>Introduction</h3><p>Human personality is described preferentially in terms of factors (dime...
Contains fulltext : 196249.pdf (publisher's version ) (Open Access)Personality fac...
Some commentators wholeheartedly disagreed with the central tenet of the network perspective on pers...
The Five Factor Model (FFM) is the most widely used personality model; it proposes a hierarchical st...