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Temperament and Personality in Adolescents

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Title: Temperament and Personality in Adolescents


1
Temperament and Personality in Adolescents Ruth
Spence, Matthew Owens, Ian Goodyer
Background
  • During the transition from childhood to
    adolescence there is a dramatic rise in the
    incidence of mental health issues.
  • There is evidence to suggest that temperament and
    personality are linked to the formation and
    persistence these problems.
  • Elucidating the associations between
    dispositional factors and mental health will help
    tailor treatments and identify vulnerable
    individuals who may benefit from early
    interventions.

Conclusions Future Directions
  • Temperament is very stable over adolescence and
    an identical structure can be found at 14 and 17
    years
  • Temperament and personality traits are related to
    each other and the results support the use of a
    developmental model that includes traits from
    both domains
  • Self-report measures of depressive and anxiety
    symptoms will be added to this developmental
    model to explore bi-directional influences
    between psychopathology and personality
    formation.
  • The results of this future work will also be used
    to investigate the ways in which temperament and
    personality influence adolescent service use and
    engagement.

Temperament
Emotionality
Activity
Sociability
Shyness
Aims
  • Form an integrated model of adolescent
    temperament and personality by using structural
    equation modelling
  • Measure temperament using the Parent version of
    the EAS Temperament Survey for Children (EAS
    Buss Plomin, 1984) at 14 and 17 years
  • Measure personality using the self report NEO
    Five Factor Inventory (NEO FFI Costa McCrae,
    1992) at 19 years of age
  • Use path analysis to test how temperament might
    predict later personality

Structure of temperament at age 14 and 17 years
14 yrs
17 yrs
19 yrs
Neuroticism
Personality
Emotionality
Emotionality
.38
.68
Extraversion
Activity
Activity
.86
-.28
Openness
Extraversion
Openness
Agreeableness
Conscientiousness
Neuroticism
.37
Methods and Measures
  • This study used data from ROOTS a longitudinal
    prospective study of mental and physical health
    outcomes over the adolescent years (Goodyer et
    al., 2009)
  • 1208 14 year olds were recruited from
    Cambridgeshire secondary schools in the UK
  • Primary caregivers filled out the EAS Temperament
    Survey (Buss Plomin, 1984) when adolescents
    were age 14 and again at 17 years old. This
    measures temperament along four dimensions
    Emotionality, Activity, Sociability and Shyness
  • The adolescents were sent the NEO Five Factor
    Inventory (Costa McCrae, 1992) at age 19 years.
    This is a five factor measure of personality
    Neuroticism, Extraversion, Openness to
    Experience, Agreeableness and Conscientiousness
  • Structural Equation Modelling was used to assess
    the relationships between temperament and
    personality traits

Sociability
Sociability
.25
.68
.14
Agreeableness
Structure of Personality at age 19 years
-.32
Shyness
Shyness
.85
  • Of the original 1208, 1074 were followed up at
    age 17 (88.9), and 470 returned the personality
    questionnaires (38.9) at age 19
  • Path Analysis showed that temperament was very
    stable over time, with temperament at age 14
    being very predictive of temperament at age 17.
    Path coefficients ranged from .68 for
    Emotionality and Sociability to .86 for Activity
  • Pathway coefficients demonstrated positive
    relationship between Emotionality and Neuroticism
    (.38), Activity and Conscientiousness (.37),
    Sociability and Extraversion (.25) and
    Agreeableness (.14). There was a negative
    relationship between Activity and Openness (-.28)
    and Shyness and Extraversion (-.32)
  • Temperament explained 21 of the variance in
    Neuroticism, 32 of Extraversion, 12.9 of
    Openness to Experience, 4.4 Agreeableness and
    13.3 of Conscientiousness

Findings
Conscientiousness
Note all path coefficients are significant at
plt.05
Pathways from Temperament measured at age14 and
17 to Personality measured at 19 years
References
  • Buss, A. H., Plomin, R. (1984). Temperament
    Early developing personality traits. Hillsdale,
    NJ Lawrence Erlbaum Assosciates, Inc.
  • Costa, P. T., McCrae, R. R. (1992). Revised NEO
    Personality Inventory (NEO-PI-R) and NEO Five
    Factor Inventory (NEO-FFI) professional manual.
    Odessa, FL. Psychological Assessment Resources
  • Goodyer, I. M., Croudace, T., Dunn, V., Herbert,
    J., Jones, P. B. (2009). Cohort profile Risk
    patterns and processes for psychopathology
    emerging during adolescence The ROOTS project.
    International Journal of Epidemiology, 1-9
  • Nigg, J. T. (2006). Temperament and developmental
    psychopathology. Journal of Child Psychology and
    Psychiatry, 47(3), 395-422.
  • Shiner, R. L., Caspi, A. (2003). Personality
    differences in childhood and adolescence
    measurement, development, and consequences.
    Journal of Child Psychology and Psychiatry,
    44(1), 2-32.
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