ebook img

The SAGE Handbook of Personality Theory and Assessment, Volume 2: Personality Measurement PDF

741 Pages·2008·4.67 MB·English
Save to my drive
Quick download
Download
Most books are stored in the elastic cloud where traffic is expensive. For this reason, we have a limit on daily download.

Preview The SAGE Handbook of Personality Theory and Assessment, Volume 2: Personality Measurement

9781412946520-FM-Vol2 5/27/08 1:12 PM Page i The SAGE Handbook of Personality Theory and Assessment 9781412946520-FM-Vol2 5/27/08 1:12 PM Page ii 9781412946520-FM-Vol2 5/27/08 1:12 PM Page iii The SAGE Handbook of Personality Theory and Assessment Edited by Gregory J. Boyle Gerald Matthews Donald H. Saklofske SAGE Los Angeles • London • New Delhi • Singapore 9781412946520-FM-Vol2 5/27/08 1:12 PM Page iv Chapter 1 Introduction and editorial arrangement © Gregory J. Boyle, Gerald Matthews and Donald H. Saklofske 2008 Chapter 2 © Gerard Saucier 2008 Nicole Wilson and Yuichi Shoda Chapter 3 © Fons J.R. van de Vijver 2008 and Dianne A. van Hemert 2008 Chapter 19 © Ephrem Fernandez Chapter 4 © Chris J. Jackson 2008 2008 Chapter 5 © Douglas P. Boer, Chapter 20 © Leonard M. Horowitz, Nicola J. Starkey and Andrea M. Bulent Turan, Kelly R. Wilson Hodgetts 2008 and Pavel Zolotsev 2008 Chapter 6 © Andrew L. Comrey 2008 Chapter 21 © Susan E. Rivers, Chapter 7 © Heather E.P. Cattell Marc A. Brackett and Peter and Alan D. Mead 2008 Salovey 2008 Chapter 8 © Gregory J. Boyle and Chapter 22 © Richard D. Roberts, Keith Barton 2008 Ralf Schulze and Carolyn Chapter 9 © In the Public MacCann 2008 Domain. Paul T. Costa, Jr. and Chapter 23 © Ryan Y. Hong and Robert R. McCrae 2008 Sampo V. Paunonen 2008 Chapter 10 © Adrian Furnham, Chapter 24 © Konrad Schnabel, Sybil B.G. Eysenck and Jens B. Asendorpf and Anthony Donald H. Saklofske 2008 G. Greenwald 2008 Chapter 11 © Marvin Zuckerman Chapter 25 © James M. Schuerger 2008 2008 Chapter 12 © Michael C. Ashton Chapter 26 © Ellen W. Rowe, and Kibeom Lee 2008 Alyssa M. Perna and Chapter 13 © Auke Tellegen and Randy W. Kamphaus 2008 Niels G. Waller 2008 Chapter 27 © Mark A. Blais and Chapter 14 © John J. Furedy 2008 Matthew R. Baity 2008 Chapter 15 © Eco de Geus and Chapter 28 © Edward Helmes 2008 David L. Neumann 2008 Chapter 29 © W. John Livesley and Chapter 16 © Eliza Congdon and Roseann M. Larstone 2008 Turhan Canli 2008 Chapter 30 © Leslie C. Morey and Chapter 17 © Jan Strelau and Suman Ambwani 2008 Bogdan Zawadzki 2008 Chapter 31 © Samuel E. Krug 2008 Chapter 18 © Vivian Zayas, Donna Chapter 32 © Theodore Millon D. Whitsett, Jenna J.Y. Lee, 2008 First published 2008 Apart from any fair dealing for the purposes of research or private study, or criticism or review, as permitted under the Copyright, Designs and Patents Act, 1988, this publication may be reproduced, stored or transmitted in any form, or by any means, only with the prior permission in writing of the publishers, or in the case of reprographic reproduction, in accordance with the terms of licences issued by the Copyright Licensing Agency. Enquiries concerning reproduction outside those terms should be sent to the publishers. SAGE Publications Ltd SAGE Publications Inc. 1 Oliver’s Yard 2455 Teller Road 55 City Road Thousand Oaks, London EC1Y 1SP California 91320 SAGE Publications India Pvt Ltd SAGE Publications Asia-Pacific Pte Ltd B 1/I 1 Mohan Cooperative 33 Pekin Street #02-01 Industrial Area Far East Square Mathura Road Singapore 048763 New Delhi 110 044 Library of Congress Control Number: 2007943494 British Library Cataloguing in Publication data A catalogue record for this book is available from the British Library ISBN 978-1-4129-4652-0 Typeset by Cepha Imaging Pvt. Ltd., Bangalore, India Printed in Great Britain by The Cromwell Press Ltd, Trowbridge, Wiltshire Printed on paper from sustainable resources 9781412946520-FM-Vol2 5/27/08 1:12 PM Page v Dedications Two of the greatest and most prolific contributors to the science of human personality during the 20th century were Raymond B. Cattell, PhD, DSc., and Hans J. Eysenck, PhD, DSc. While Professor Cattell pursued his academic career in prestigious USA universities (Harvard, Clark, Illinois), Professor Eysenck undertook his lifelong work at the Institute of Psychiatry, University of London. So prominent were these two men, that their work is now enshrined in the Cattellian and Eysenckian Schools of Psychology, respectively. Cattell concentrated on primary factors, while Eysenck focused on broader secondary dimensions. Indeed, at the second-order 16PF level, the degree of communality between the Eysenckian and Cattellian factors is striking! ‘The Cattell and Eysenck constructs and theories should be seen, not as mutually contradictory, but as complementary and mutually supportive.’ Eysenck (1984). Cattell and the theory of Personality. Multivariate Behavioral Research, 19(2–3): 323–336. Both Ray Cattell and Hans Eysenck were our mentors and friends. Both men gave freely of their time, and their kindness and generosity was abundant. Our own academic careers were facili- tated by the intellectual support and moral encouragement of both these great men who made a profound and lasting contribution to personality research and testing. Each was an exemplary scientist, humanitarian and mentor, qualities that all three editors respect and aspire to. We will remain forever indebted to both Ray Cattell and Hans Eysenck. This book is also dedicated to: My parents, my wife and family – GJB Diana – GM Frances and Harold, my parents – DHS 9781412946520-FM-Vol2 5/27/08 1:12 PM Page vi 9781412946520-FM-Vol2 5/27/08 1:12 PM Page vii Contents Vol 2 Handbook of Personality Theory and Assessment: Personality Measurement and Testing Notes on Contributors xiii 1 Personality Measurement and Testing: An Overview 1 Gregory J. Boyle, Gerald Matthews and Donald H. Saklofske PART I GENERAL METHODOLOGICAL ISSUES 27 2 Measures of the Personality Factors Found Recurrently in Human Lexicons 29 Gerard Saucier 3 Cross-Cultural Personality Assessment 55 Fons J.R. van de Vijver and Dianne A. van Hemert 4 Measurement Issues Concerning a Personality Model Spanning Temperament, Character, and Experience 73 Chris J. Jackson PART II MULTIDIMENSIONAL PERSONALITY INSTRUMENTS 95 5 The California Psychological Inventory – 434- and 260-item Editions 97 Douglas P. Boer, Nicola J. Starkey and Andrea M. Hodgetts 6 The Comrey Personality Scales 113 Andrew L. Comrey 7 The Sixteen Personality Factor Questionnaire (16PF) 135 Heather E.P. Cattell and Alan D. Mead 8 Contribution of Cattellian Personality Instruments 160 Gregory J. Boyle and Keith Barton 9 The Revised NEO Personality Inventory (NEO-PI-R) 179 Paul T. Costa, Jr. and Robert R. McCrae 9781412946520-FM-Vol2 5/27/08 1:12 PM Page viii viii CONTENTS 10 The Eysenck Personality Measures: Fifty Years of Scale Development 199 Adrian Furnham, Sybil B.G. Eysenck and Donald H. Saklofske 11 Zuckerman–Kuhlman Personality Questionnaire (ZKPQ): An Operational Definition of the Alternative Five Factorial Model of Personality 219 Marvin Zuckerman 12 The HEXACO Model of Personality Structure 239 Michael C. Ashton and Kibeom Lee 13 Exploring Personality Through Test Construction: Development of the Multidimensional Personality Questionnaire 261 Auke Tellegen and Niels G. Waller PART III ASSESSMENT OF BIOLOGICALLY BASED TRAITS 293 14 Psychophysiological Window on Personality: Pragmatic and Philosophical Considerations 295 John J. Furedy 15 Psychophysiological Measurement of Personality 313 Eco de Geus and David L. Neumann 16 Genomic Imaging of Personality: Towards a Molecular Neurobiology of Impulsivity 334 Eliza Congdon and Turhan Canli 17 Temperament From a Psychometric Perspective: Theory and Measurement 352 Jan Strelau and Bogdan Zawadzki PART IV ASSESSMENT OF SELF-REGULATIVE TRAITS 375 18 From Situation Assessment to Personality: Building a Social-Cognitive Model of a Person 377 Vivian Zayas, Donna D. Whitsett, Jenna J.Y. Lee, Nicole Wilson and Yuichi Shoda 19 The Angry Personality: A Representation on Six Dimensions of Anger Expression 402 Ephrem Fernandez 20 Interpersonal Theory and the Measurement of Interpersonal Constructs 420 Leonard M. Horowitz, Bulent Turan, Kelly R. Wilson and Pavel Zolotsev 21 Measuring Emotional Intelligence as a Mental Ability in Adults and Children 440 Susan E. Rivers, Marc A. Brackett and Peter Salovey 22 The Measurement of Emotional Intelligence: A Decade of Progress? 461 Richard D. Roberts, Ralf Schulze and Carolyn MacCann 9781412946520-FM-Vol2 5/27/08 1:12 PM Page ix CONTENTS ix PART V IMPLICIT, PROJECTIVE AND OBJECTIVE MEASURES OF PERSONALITY 483 23 The Nonverbal Personality Questionnaire and the Five-Factor Nonverbal Personality Questionnaire 485 Ryan Y. Hong and Sampo V. Paunonen 24 Using Implicit Association Tests for the Assessment of Implicit Personality Self-Concept 508 Konrad Schnabel, Jens B. Asendorpf and Anthony G. Greenwald 25 The Objective-Analytic Test Battery 529 James M. Schuerger 26 Behavioral Measures of Personality in Children 547 Ellen W. Rowe, Alyssa M. Perna and Randy W. Kamphaus 27 The Projective Assessment of Personality Structure and Pathology 566 Mark A. Blais and Matthew R. Baity PART VI ABNORMAL PERSONALITY TRAIT INSTRUMENTS 587 28 Modern Applications of the MMPI/MMPI-2 in Assessment 589 Edward Helmes 29 The Dimensional Assessment of Personality Pathology (DAPP) 608 W. John Livesley and Roseann M. Larstone 30 The Personality Assessment Inventory 626 Leslie C. Morey and Suman Ambwani 31 The Assessment of Clinical Disorders within Raymond Cattell’s Personality Model 646 Samuel E. Krug 32 The Logic and Methodology of the Millon Inventories 663 Theodore Millon Subject Index 685 Name Index 705 9781412946520-FM-Vol2 5/27/08 1:12 PM Page x x CONTENTS Vol 1 Handbook of Personality Theory and Assessment: Personality Theories and Models Notes on Contributors xiii 1 Personality Theories and Models: An Overview 1 Gregory J. Boyle, Gerald Matthews and Donald H. Saklofske PART I EXPLANATORY MODELS FOR PERSONALITY 31 2 Psychophysiological and Biochemical Correlates of Personality 33 Robert M. Stelmack and Thomas H. Rammsayer 3 Personality and Information Processing: A Cognitive-Adaptive Theory 56 Gerald Matthews 4 Explanatory Models of Personality: Social-Cognitive Theories and the Knowledge-and-Appraisal Model of Personality Architecture 80 Daniel Cervone 5 Developmental Perspectives 101 Jens B. Asendorpf 6 Personality: Cross-Cultural Perspectives 124 Chi-Yue Chiu, Young-Hoon Kim and Wendy W.N. Wan 7 Behavioral Genetic Studies of Personality: An Introduction and Review of the Results of 50+ Years of Research 145 Andrew M. Johnson, Philip A. Vernon and Amanda R. Feiler 8 Evolutionary Perspectives on Personality Psychology 174 Richard L. Michalski and Todd K. Shackelford 9 Modern Personality Theories: What Have We Gained? What Have We Lost? 190 John B. Campbell PART II COMPREHENSIVE TRAIT MODELS 213 10 Eysenck’s Model of Individual Differences 215 Kieron P. O’Connor 11 J.A. Gray’s Reinforcement Sensitivity Theory (RST) of Personality 239 Alan D. Pickering and Philip J. Corr 12 Simplifying the Cattellian Psychometric Model 257 Gregory J. Boyle 13 Empirical and Theoretical Status of the Five-Factor Model of Personality Traits 273 Robert R. McCrae and Paul T. Costa, Jr.

See more

The list of books you might like

Most books are stored in the elastic cloud where traffic is expensive. For this reason, we have a limit on daily download.