0000000000532543

AUTHOR

Jüri Allik

showing 6 related works from this author

Narcissism and the Strategic Pursuit of Short-Term Mating:Universal Links across 11 World Regions of the International Sexuality Description Project-2

2017

Previous studies have documented links between sub-clinical narcissism and the active pursuit of short-term mating strategies (e.g., unrestricted sociosexuality, marital infidelity, mate poaching). Nearly all of these investigations have relied solely on samples from Western cultures. In the current study, responsesfrom a cross-cultural survey of 30,470 people across 53 nations spanning 11 world regions (North America, Central/South America, Northern Europe, Western Europe, Eastern Europe, Southern Europe, Middle East, Africa, Oceania, Southeast Asia, and East Asia) were used to evaluate whether narcissism (as measured by the Narcissistic Personality Inventory; NPI) was universally associat…

Social PsychologyEducational Psychology05 social sciences*Cross Cultural Differences *Human Mate Selection *Narcissism *Personality Traits Sexual Intercourse (Human)050109 social psychology050105 experimental psychologysexualityClinical Psychology5. Gender equalityNarcissism ; sexuality ; personality ; cross-cultural psychologypersonalitycross-cultural psychologyNarcissism0501 psychology and cognitive sciencesPsychologyApplied Psychology
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Mechanisms of the national character stereotype: How people in six neighbouring countries of Russia describe themselves and the typical Russian

2009

Altogether, 1448 individuals from six neighbouring countries of Russia in the Baltic Sea region (Finland, Estonia, Latvia, Lithuania, Poland and Belarus) described a ‘typical’ member of their own nation and a ‘typical’ Russian, as well as rated their own personality, using the National Character Survey (NCS). Results suggest that national character stereotypes are widely shared, temporally stable and moderately related to assessed personality traits, if all assessments are made using the same measurement instrument. In all studied countries, agreement between national auto‐stereotypes and assessed personality was positive and in half of the samples statistically significant. Although membe…

Social Psychologymedia_common.quotation_subject05 social sciences050109 social psychologyStereotype050105 experimental psychologyAgreementCharacter (mathematics)Baltic seaPersonality0501 psychology and cognitive sciencesBig Five personality traitsPsychologySocial psychologymedia_commonEuropean Journal of Personality
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RESOLVING AMBIGUITIES IN ORIENTATION, MOTION, AND DEPTH DOMAINS

1992

Three different perceptual systems—orientation, motion, and depth—can recover a global perceptual organization from spatially correlated random multielement patterns. In all three cases the global structure composed of random elements is evaluated by mechanisms performing measurements in the energy domain within appropriately defined local space—time areas. The selective increase in energy of one fraction of the elements may dramatically change the whole perceptual organization of the stimulus. In specially devised patterns one and the same element can belong to two or more separate perceptual organizations, the perceptual salience of one of which can be reinforced by a luminance increment…

MaleVision Disparitymedia_common.quotation_subjectDecision MakingExperimental and Cognitive PsychologyStimulus (physiology)Luminance050105 experimental psychologyMotion03 medical and health sciences0302 clinical medicineArtificial IntelligenceOrientationPerceptionHumans0501 psychology and cognitive sciencesGlobal structuremedia_commonDepth PerceptionCommunicationbusiness.industry05 social sciencesSpace perceptionPattern recognitionAmbiguityPerceptual salienceSensory SystemsOphthalmologyPattern Recognition VisualStimulus luminanceSpace PerceptionVisual PerceptionFemaleArtificial intelligencebusinessPsychology030217 neurology & neurosurgery
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A Big Five personality inventory in two non‐Indo‐European languages

1995

In this study we report on two successful replications of a five‐factor personality inventory in two non‐Indo‐European languages, Estonian and Finnish, which both belong to the group of Uralic languages. Costa and McCrae's (1985) NEO Personality Inventory was adapted to these two languages. By all relevant psychometric parameters neither developed construct differs from the original construct: the reliabilities of only 11 per cent for the Estonian and 36 per cent for the Finnish subscale were lower than those of the respective NEO‐PI scales. The factor structure of both Estonian and Finnish inventories was very close to the five‐factor structure of the NEO‐PI, accounting for 71.7 per cent …

Social PsychologyPsychometrics05 social sciencesIndo-European languages050109 social psychologyBig Five personality traits and cultureEstonian050105 experimental psychologylanguage.human_languagelanguage0501 psychology and cognitive sciencesBig Five personality traitsPersonality Assessment InventoryPsychologySocial psychologyEuropean Journal of Personality
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Size invariance in visual number discrimination

1991

This study deals with the observer's ability to discriminate the numerosity of two random dot-patterns irrespective of their relative size. One of these two patterns was a reference one that was always composed of 32 dots randomly distributed within a K x K invisible square window (K = 1.92 degrees). The second one was the test pattern with one of the five magnifications (K = 0.64 degrees, 1.28 degrees, 1.92 degrees, 2.56 degrees, 3.20 degrees) and the relative number of dots varied on 11 levels (N = -15, -12, -9, -6, -3, 0, 3, 6, 9, 12, or 15 dots). The observer's task was to indicate which of the two patterns contained more dots. The results show that the stimulus size, as an irrelevant s…

AdultMagnificationExperimental and Cognitive PsychologyStimulus (physiology)Discrimination LearningArts and Humanities (miscellaneous)OrientationPsychophysicsDevelopmental and Educational PsychologyPsychophysicsHumansAttentionDiscrimination learningSize PerceptionMathematicsCommunicationbusiness.industryNumerosity adaptation effectPattern recognitionGeneral MedicineObserver (special relativity)Invariant (physics)Pattern Recognition VisualSize PerceptionArtificial intelligencebusinessPsychological Research
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Harmonization of Neuroticism and Extraversion phenotypes across inventories and cohorts in the Genetics of Personality Consortium:an application of I…

2014

Mega- or meta-analytic studies (e.g. genome-wide association studies) are increasingly used in behavior genetics. An issue in such studies is that phenotypes are often measured by different instruments across study cohorts, requiring harmonization of measures so that more powerful fixed effect meta-analyses can be employed. Within the Genetics of Personality Consortium, we demonstrate for two clinically relevant personality traits, Neuroticism and Extraversion, how Item-Response Theory (IRT) can be applied to map item data from different inventories to the same underlying constructs. Personality item data were analyzed in >160,000 individuals from 23 cohorts across Europe, USA and Australia…

DIMENSIONSDISORDERS515 PsychologyeducationPersonality AssessmentGenome-wide association studiesExtraversion PsychologicalNEO-PI5-FACTOR MODELGeneticsHumansGenetics(clinical)Ecology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsOriginal ResearchNeuroticismMeasurementNeurodevelopmental disorders Donders Center for Medical Neuroscience [Radboudumc 7]Models StatisticalOther Research Radboud Institute for Health Sciences [Radboudumc 0]GENOME-WIDE METAANALYSISTEMPERAMENTASSOCIATIONAnxiety Disorders3142 Public health care science environmental and occupational healthMeta-analysisPhenotypeMEASUREMENT INVARIANCECLONINGERSUrological cancers Radboud Institute for Health Sciences [Radboudumc 15]REPLICATIONDevelopmental PsychopathologyItem-Response TheoryConsortiumGenome-Wide Association StudyPersonality
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