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RESEARCH PRODUCT
Personality types during transition to young adulthood: how are they related to life situation and well-being?
Sointu LeikasKatariina Salmela-aroKatariina Salmela-arosubject
Predictive validityLongitudinal studySocial PsychologyAdolescentPersonality Inventorymedia_common.quotation_subjectPersonality development050109 social psychologyBig Five personality traits and culturePersonal SatisfactionDevelopmental psychologyLife Change EventsYoung AdultSurveys and QuestionnairesAdaptation PsychologicalDevelopmental and Educational PsychologyPersonalityHumans0501 psychology and cognitive sciencesLongitudinal StudiesBig Five personality traitsYoung adult10. No inequalityta515Finlandmedia_commonPsychiatric Status Rating ScalesDepression05 social sciencesAdolescent DevelopmentResilience PsychologicalSelf ConceptPsychiatry and Mental healthPediatrics Perinatology and Child HealthWell-beingPsychology050104 developmental & child psychologyPersonalitydescription
Abstract The present longitudinal study examined personality types, their change, and their relations with life outcomes and well-being in a sample of young Finns ( N = 493) that was followed from age 15 to 23. The Big Five traits were measured at ages 20 and 23, and four personality types – Resilients, Overcontrollers, Anti-Resilients, and “Averages” – emerged at both time points. Those with higher initial well-being were more likely to be later classified as Resilients, whereas those with low and decreasing well-being were more likely to be classified as Anti-Resilients. At age 23, Anti-Resilients were less likely to have reached normative educational goals than others, and more likely to be unemployed than others, but Overcontrollers were less likely to be in a romantic relationship than others. The results question the universality of the three-type structure, but support the predictive validity of personality types.
year | journal | country | edition | language |
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2014-02-12 | Journal of adolescence |