Journal article

Personality Maturation Around the World: A Cross-Cultural Examination of Social-Investment Theory

W Bleidorn, TA Klimstra, JJA Denissen, PJ Rentfrow, J Potter, SD Gosling

Psychological Science | Published : 2013

Abstract

During early adulthood, individuals from different cultures across the world tend to become more agreeable, more conscientious, and less neurotic. Two leading theories offer different explanations for these pervasive age trends: Five-factor theory proposes that personality maturation is largely determined by genetic factors, whereas social-investment theory proposes that personality maturation in early adulthood is largely the result of normative life transitions to adult roles. In the research reported here, we conducted the first systematic cross-cultural test of these theories using data from a large Internet-based sample of young adults from 62 nations (N = 884,328). We found strong evid..

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University of Melbourne Researchers