articleJournal of Personality and Social PsychologyMay 1, 2003Closed access

Development of personality in early and middle adulthood: Set like plaster or persistent change?

University of California, Berkeley

PubMed
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Abstract

Different theories make different predictions about how mean levels of personality traits change in adulthood. The biological view of the Five-factor theory proposes the plaster hypothesis: All personality traits stop changing by age 30. In contrast, contextualist perspectives propose that changes should be more varied and should persist throughout adulthood. This study compared these perspectives in a large (N = 132,515) sample of adults aged 21-60 who completed a Big Five personality measure on the Internet. Conscientiousness and Agreeableness increased throughout early and middle adulthood at varying rates; Neuroticism declined among women but did not change among men. The variety in patterns of change…

Citation impact

1,210
total citations
FWCI
36.24
Percentile
100%
References
88
Citations per year

Authors

4

Topics & keywords

Keywords
  • Agreeableness
  • Psychology
  • Neuroticism
  • Conscientiousness
  • Big Five personality traits
  • Personality
  • Hierarchical structure of the Big Five
  • Developmental psychology
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