Comparative validity of Brief to Medium-Length Big Five and Big Six Personality Questionnaires.

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Version: Final published version
Serval ID
serval:BIB_5F5C65A4C1A1
Type
Article: article from journal or magazin.
Collection
Publications
Title
Comparative validity of Brief to Medium-Length Big Five and Big Six Personality Questionnaires.
Journal
Psychological Assessment
Author(s)
Thalmayer Amber Gayle, Saucier Gerard, Eigenhuis Annemarie
ISSN
1939-134X
1040-3590
Publication state
Published
Issued date
2011
Peer-reviewed
Oui
Volume
23
Number
4
Pages
995-1009
Language
english
Abstract
A general consensus on the Big Five model of personality attributes has been highly generative for the field of personality psychology. Many important psychological and life outcome correlates with Big Five trait dimensions have been established. But researchers must choose between multiple Big Five inven- tories when conducting a study and are faced with a variety of options as to inventory length. Furthermore, a 6-factor model has been proposed to extend and update the Big Five model, in part by adding a dimension of Honesty/Humility or Honesty/Propriety. In this study, 3 popular brief to medium-length Big Five measures (NEO Five Factor Inventory, Big Five Inventory [BFI], and Interna- tional Personality Item Pool), and 3 six-factor measures (HEXACO Personality Inventory, Questionnaire Big Six Scales, and a 6-factor version of the BFI) were placed in competition to best predict important student life outcomes. The effect of test length was investigated by comparing brief versions of most measures (subsets of items) with original versions. Personality questionnaires were administered to undergraduate students (N 227). Participants’ college transcripts and student conduct records were obtained 6–9 months after data was collected. Six-factor inventories demonstrated better predictive ability for life outcomes than did some Big Five inventories. Additional behavioral observations made on participants, including their Facebook profiles and cell-phone text usage, were predicted similarly by Big Five and 6-factor measures. A brief version of the BFI performed surprisingly well; across inventory platforms, increasing test length had little effect on predictive validity. Comparative validity of the models and measures in terms of outcome prediction and parsimony is discussed.
Keywords
inventories, psychometrics, psychological assessment, test validity, five factor personality model
Create date
13/12/2016 12:40
Last modification date
20/08/2019 15:17
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