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Revised NEO Personality Inventory

The Revised NEO Personality Inventory (NEO PI-R) is a personality inventory that assesses an individual on five dimensions of personality. These are the same dimensions found in the Big Five personality traits. These traits are openness to experience, conscientiousness, extraversion(-introversion), agreeableness, and neuroticism. In addition, the NEO PI-R also reports on six subcategories of each Big Five personality trait (called facets).

Historically, development of the Revised NEO PI-R began in 1978 when Costa and McCrae published a personality inventory.[1] The researchers later published three updated versions of their personality inventory in 1985,[2] 1992,[3] and 2005.[4] These were called the NEO PI (Neuroticism, Extraversion, Openness Personality Inventory), NEO PI-R (or Revised NEO PI), and NEO PI-3, respectively. The revised inventories feature updated vocabulary that could be understood by adults of any education level, as well as children.

The inventories have both longer and shorter versions, with the full NEO PI-R consisting of 240 items and providing detailed facet scores. By contrast, the shorter NEO-FFI (NEO Five-Factor Inventory) comprised 60 items (12 per trait). The test was originally developed for use with adult men and women without overt psychopathology. It has also been found to be valid for use with children.

Personality dimensions edit

A table of the personality dimensions measured by the NEO PI-R, including facets, is as follows:

Neuroticism Extraversion Openness to experience Agreeableness Conscientiousness
Anxiety Warmth/

Kindness[5]

Fantasy/

Imagination[5]/

Trust (in Others[5])/ Competence/

Self-efficacy[5]/

Hostility/

Anger[5]/

Gregariousness Aesthetics/

Artistic Interest[5]/

Straightforwardness/

Morality[5]/

Order(liness)[5]/

Organizing[5]

Depression Assertiveness Feelings/

Emotionality[5]

Altruism Dutifulness/

Sense of Duty/Obligation[5]

Self-consciousness Activity (Level[5])/

Lively Temperament[6]

Actions/

Adventurousness[5]/Exploration[6]

Compliance/

Cooperation[5]

Achievement Striving
Impulsiveness/

Immoderation[5]

Excitement Seeking Ideas/

Intellectual Interest[5]/Curiosity[6]

Modesty Self-Discipline/

Willpower[5]

Vulnerability to Stress/

Fear[5]/Learned helplessness[5]

Positive Emotion/

Cheerfulness[5]/Vivacity[6]

Values/

Psychological liberalism[5]/Tolerance to ambiguity[5]

Tendermindedness/

Sympathy[5]

Deliberation/

Cautiousness[5]

Forms and administration edit

In the most recent publication, there are two forms for the NEO, self-report (form S) and observer-report (form R) versions. Both forms consist of 240 items (descriptions of behavior) answered on a five-point Likert scale. Finally, there is a 60-item inventory, the NEO FFI. There are paper and computer versions of both forms.

The manual reports that administration of the full version should take between 30 and 40 minutes. Costa and McCrae reported that an individual should not be evaluated if more than 40 items are missing. They also state that despite the fact that the assessment is "balanced" to control for the effects of acquiescence and nay-saying, that if more than 150 responses, or fewer than 50 responses, are "agree" or "strongly agree," the results should be interpreted with caution.

Scores can be reported to most test-takers on "Your NEO Summary," which provides a brief explanation of the assessment, and gives the individuals domain levels and a strengths-based description of three levels (high, medium, and low) in each domain. For example, low N reads "Secure, hardy, and generally relaxed even under stressful conditions," whereas high N reads "Sensitive, emotional, and prone to experience feelings that are upsetting." For profile interpretation, facet and domain scores are reported in T scores and are recorded visually as compared to the appropriate norming group.[2]

Reliability edit

The internal consistency of the NEO scales was assessed on 1,539 individuals.[7] The internal consistency of the NEO PI-R was high, at: N = .92, E = .89, O = .87, A = .86, C = .90. The internal consistency of the facet scales ranged from .56 to .81. The internal consistency of the NEO PI-3 was consistent with that of the NEO PI-R, with α ranging from .89 to .93 for the five domains. Internal consistency coefficient from the facets, with each facet scale comprising fewer items than each of the Big Five scales, were necessarily smaller, ranging from .54 to .83.[7]

For the NEO FFI (the 60 item domain only version) the internal consistencies reported in the manual were: N = .79, E = .79, O = .80, A = .75, C = .83. In the literature, the NEO FFI is used more often, with investigators using the NEO PI-R usually using the items from just the domains they are interested in. Sherry et al. (2007) found internal consistencies for the FFI to be as follows: N = .85, E = .80, O = .68, A = .75, C = .83.[8]

The NEO has been translated into many languages. The internal consistency coefficients of the domain scores of a translation of the NEO that has been used in the Philippines are satisfactory. The alphas for the domain scores range from .78 to .90,[9] with facet alphas having a median of .61.[10] Observer-ratings NEO PI-R data from 49 different cultures was used as criterion in a recent study which tested whether individuals' perceptions of the "national character" of a culture accurately reflected the personality of the members of that culture (it did not).[11]

The test-retest reliability of the NEO PI-R has also been found to be satisfactory. The test-retest reliability of an early version of the NEO after 3 months was: N = .87, E = .91, O = .86.[12] The test-retest reliability for over 6 years, as reported in the NEO PI-R manual, was the following: N = .83, E = .82, O = .83, A = .63, C = .79. Costa and McCrae pointed out that these findings not only demonstrate good reliability of the domain scores, but also their stability (among individuals over the age of 30). Scores measured six years apart varied only marginally more than scores measured a few months apart.[3]

The psychometric properties of NEO PI-R scales have been found to generalize across ages, cultures, and methods of measurement.[13]

Effect of age edit

Although individual differences (rank-order) tend to be relatively stable in adulthood, there are maturational changes in personality that are common to most people (mean-level changes). Most cross-sectional and longitudinal studies suggest that neuroticism, extraversion, and openness tend to decline, whereas agreeableness and conscientiousness tend to increase during adulthood.[14] A meta-analysis of 92 personality studies that used several different inventories (among them NEO PI-R) found that social dominance, conscientiousness, and emotional stability increased with age, especially in the age span of 20 to 40.[15]

Validity edit

Costa and McCrae reported in the NEO manual research findings regarding the convergent and discriminant validity of the inventory. Examples of these findings include the following:

  • For the Myers-Briggs Type Indicator, Introversion is correlated with the NEO facet Warmth at −0.61, and with the NEO facet Gregariousness at −0.59. Intuition is correlated with the NEO facet Fantasy at 0.43 and with the NEO facet Aesthetics at 0.56. Feeling is correlated with the NEO facet Tender-mindedness at 0.39.
  • For the Self-Directed Search (a personality inventory developed by John L. Holland for careers work), Artistic is correlated with the NEO facet Aesthetic at 0.56, Investigative is correlated with the NEO facet Ideas at 0.43, and Social is correlated with the NEO facet Tender-mindedness at 0.36.

A number of studies evaluated the criterion validity of the NEO. For example, Conard (2005) found that Conscientiousness significantly predicted the GPA of college students, over and above using SAT scores alone.[16] In a study conducted in Seville, Spain, Cano-Garcia and his colleagues (2005) found that, using a Spanish version of the inventory, dimensions of the NEO correlated with teacher burnout. Neuroticism was related to the "emotional exhaustion" dimension of burnout, and Agreeableness, with the "personal accomplishment" burnout dimension.[17] Finally, Korukonda (2007) found that Neuroticism was positively related to computer anxiety; Openness and Agreeableness were negatively related to computer anxiety.[18]

Adaptations in other languages edit

The NEO-PI-R has been extensively used across cultures. As per the information on the Psychological Assessment Resources (PAR) website (PAR is the publisher of the NEO-PI-R), the NEO-PI-R has been translated into 40 languages. These languages are Afrikaans, Albanian, Arabic, Bulgarian, Chinese, Croatian, Estonian, Filipino, Finnish, Hebrew, Hindi, Hmong, Hungarian, Icelandic, Indonesian, Italian, Japanese, Kannada, Korean, Latvian, Lithuanian, Malay, Marathi, Persian, Peruvian, Polish, Portuguese, Romanian, Russian, Serbian, Slovene, Sotho, Spanish, Taiwanese, Thai, Tigrignan, Turkish, Urdu, Vietnamese, and Xhosa.

Critiques edit

Critical reviews of the NEO PI-R were published in the 12th edition of the Mental Measurements Yearbook (MMY). The NEO-Pi-R (which only measures 57% of the known trait variance in the normal personality sphere alone) has been severely criticized both in terms of its factor analytic/construct validity and its psychometric properties.[19][20] Widiger criticized the NEO for not controlling for social desirability bias.[21] He argued that test developers cannot assume participants will be honest, especially in settings where it benefits people to present themselves in a better light (e.g., forensic or personnel settings). Ben-Porath and Waller pointed out that the NEO Inventories could be improved with the addition of controls for dishonesty and social desirability.[22]

Juni, in another review of the NEO PI-R for the MMY, praised the NEO PI-R for including both self- and other-report scales, making it easier for psychologists to corroborate information provided by a client or research participant.[21] However, Juni criticized the NEO PI-R for its conceptualization using the Five Factor Model (FFM) of personality. Juni argued that the existence of the FFM was phenomenological and atheoretical, the model gaining popularity as a result of the influence of the authors (McCrae and Costa) in the psychological community. The NEO PI-R has also been criticized because of its market-oriented, proprietary nature.[23] In response to the expense involved in using proprietary personality inventories such as the NEO, other researchers have contributed to the development of the International Personality Item Pool (IPIP); IPIP items and scales are available free of charge.[24]

NEO PI-R was also criticised for being possibly too complex to understand for less educated or less intelligent individuals.[25]

Alternative versions edit

A shortened version of NEO PI-R has been published. The shortened version is the NEO Five-Factor Inventory (NEO-FFI). It comprises 60 items and is designed to take 10 to 15 minutes to complete; by contrast, the NEO PI-R takes 45 to 60 minutes to complete. The NEO-FFI was revised in 2004.[26] With the publication of the NEO PI-3 in 2005, a revised version of the NEO-FFI was also published.[7] The revision of the NEO-FFI involved the replacement of 15 of the 60 items. The revised edition is thought to be more suitable for younger individuals.[7] The new version had a stronger factor structure and increased reliability.[7]

Public domain inventories that correlate well with NEO PI-R have been published using items from the International Personality Item Pool and are collectively known as the "IPIP-NEO". Lewis Goldberg published a 300-question version of the 30-facet scale in 1999.[27] John Johnson and Maples et al. have developed a few 120-question versions based on IPIP questions.[28][29]

Very short (5 items each) IPIP-based analogues to the NEO PI-R scales are also part of the Analog for Multiple Broadband Inventories,[30] an inventory designed to approximate a large number of different personality scales with a minimal number of items.

Cross-cultural research edit

Evidence of the NEO scales' stability in different countries and cultures can be considered evidence of its validity. A great deal of cross-cultural research has been carried out on the Five-Factor Model of Personality. Much of the research has relied on the NEO PI-R and the shorter NEO-FFI. McCrae and Allik (2002)[31] edited a book consisting of papers bearing on cross-cultural research on the FFM. Research from China,[32][33] Estonia, Finland,[34] the Philippines, France,[35] German-speaking countries,[36] India,[37] Portugal,[38] Russia,[39] South Korea,[40] Turkey,[41] Vietnam,[42] and Zimbabwe[43] have shown the FFM to be robust across cultures.

Rolland, on the basis of the data from a number of countries, asserted that the neuroticism, openness, and conscientiousness dimensions are cross-culturally valid.[44] Rolland further advanced the view that the extraversion and agreeableness dimensions are more sensitive to cultural context. Age differences in the five-factors of personality across the adult life span are parallel in samples from Germany, Italy, Portugal, Croatia, and South Korea.[45] Data examined from many different countries have shown that the age and gender differences in those countries resembled differences found in U.S. samples.[46] An intercultural factor analysis yielded a close approximation to the five-factor model.

McCrae, Terracciano et al. (2005) further reported data from 51 cultures. Their study found a cross-cultural equivalency between NEO PI-R five factors and facets.[47]

With the recent development of the NEO PI-3, cross-cultural research will likely begin to compare the newer version with the NEO PI-R. Piedmont and Braganza (2015) compared the NEO PI-R to the NEO PI-3 using an adult sample from India.[48] They used an English version of the NEO PI-3 in order to measure its utility in individuals who speak English as a second language. Piedmont and Braganza found that the NEO PI-3 had slightly higher item/total correlations and better test-retest reliability than the NEO PI-R. They suggested that the NEO PI-3 has the potential to be utilized with those who do not speak English as their first language.

Brain and genetics edit

The NEO PI-R has been used in research pertaining to both (a) genotype and personality and (b) brain and personality. Such studies, however, have not always been conclusive. For example, one study found some evidence for an association between NEO PI-R facets and polymorphism in the tyrosine hydroxylase gene,[49] while another study could not confirm the finding.[50]

In a study published in Science, Lesch et al. (1996) found a relationship between the serotonin transporter gene regulatory region (5-HTTLPR) and the neuroticism subscale. Individuals with a shorter allele had higher neuroticism scores than individuals with the longer allele. The effect was significant for heterozygotes and even stronger for people homozygous for the shorter allele. Although the finding is important, this specific gene contributes to only 4% of the phenotypic variation in neuroticism. The authors concluded that "if other genes were hypothesized to contribute similar gene dosage effects to anxiety, approximately 10 to 15 genes might be predicted to be involved."[51]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Costa, Paul T.; McCrae, Robert R. (1978). "Objective Personality Assessment". The Clinical Psychology of Aging. Springer US. pp. 119–143. ISBN 978-1-4684-3342-5.
  2. ^ a b Costa, Paul T.; McCrae, Robert R. (1985). "The NEO personality inventory manual". Odessa, FL: Psychological Assessment Resources. {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
  3. ^ a b Costa, P. T., Jr., & McCrae, R. R. (1992). NEO PI-R professional manual. Odessa, FL: Psychological Assessment Resources, Inc.
  4. ^ McCrae, Robert R.; Costa, Jr., Paul T.; Martin, Thomas A. (June 2005). "The NEO–PI–3: A More Readable Revised NEO Personality Inventory". Journal of Personality Assessment. 84 (3): 261–270. doi:10.1207/s15327752jpa8403_05.
  5. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x "Short Form for the IPIP-NEO (International Personality Item Pool Representation of the NEO PI-R)". 26 November 2019.
  6. ^ a b c d Gosling SD, John OP (1999). "Personality Dimensions in Nonhuman Animals: A Cross-Species Review" (PDF). Current Directions in Psychological Science. 8 (3): 69–75. doi:10.1111/1467-8721.00017. S2CID 145716504.
  7. ^ a b c d e McCrae, R. R., & Costa, P. T., Jr., (2010). NEO Inventories: Professional manual. Lutz, FL: Psychological Assessment Resources, Inc.
  8. ^ Sherry, S. B.; Hewitt, P. L.; Flett, G. L.; Lee-Baggley, D. L.; Hall, P. A. (2007). "Trait perfectionism and perfectionistic self-presentation in personality pathology". Personality and Individual Differences. 42 (3): 477–490. doi:10.1016/j.paid.2006.07.026.
  9. ^ Church, A. T.; Katigbak, M. S. (2002). "Indigenization of psychology in the Philippines". International Journal of Psychology. 37 (3): 129–148. doi:10.1080/00207590143000315.
  10. ^ Katigbak, M. S.; Church, A. T.; Guanzon-Lapeña, M. A.; Carlota, A. J.; Del, G. H. (2002). "Are indigenous personality dimensions culture specific? Philippine inventories and the five-factor model". Journal of Personality and Social Psychology. 82 (1): 89–101. doi:10.1037/0022-3514.82.1.89. PMID 11811638.
  11. ^ Terracciano, A.; Abdel-Khalek, A. M.; Adám, N.; Adamovová, L.; Ahn, CK; Ahn, HN; Alansari, BM; Alcalay, L; Allik, J; Angleitner, A; Avia, MD; Ayearst, LE; Barbaranelli, C; Beer, A; Borg-Cunen, MA; Bratko, D; Brunner-Sciarra, M; Budzinski, L; Camart, N; Dahourou, D; De Fruyt, F; De Lima, MP; Del Pilar, GE; Diener, E; Falzon, R; Fernando, K; Ficková, E; Fischer, R; Flores-Mendoza, C; Ghayur, MA (2005). "National Character Does Not Reflect Mean Personality Trait Levels in 49 Cultures". Science. 310 (5745): 96–100. Bibcode:2005Sci...310...96T. doi:10.1126/science.1117199. PMC 2775052. PMID 16210536.
  12. ^ McCrae, R. R.; Costa, P. T. (1983). "Joint factors in self-reports and ratings: Neuroticism, extraversion and openness to experience". Personality and Individual Differences. 4 (3): 245–255. doi:10.1016/0191-8869(83)90146-0.
  13. ^ McCrae R. R.; Kurtz J. E.; Yamagata S.; Terracciano A. (2011). "Internal consistency, retest reliability, and their implications for personality scale validity". Pers Soc Psychol Rev. 15 (1): 28–50. doi:10.1177/1088868310366253. PMC 2927808. PMID 20435807.
  14. ^ Paul T. Costa, Jr. & Robert R. McCrae (2006). "Age Changes in Personality and Their Origins: Comment on Roberts, Walton, and Viechtbauer (2006)" (PDF). Psychological Bulletin. 132 (1): 26–28. doi:10.1037/0033-2909.132.1.26. PMID 16435955.
  15. ^ Brent W. Roberts; Kate E. Walton; Wolfgang Viechtbauer (January 2006). "Patterns of Mean-Level Change in Personality Traits Across the Life Course: A Meta-Analysis of Longitudinal Studies" (PDF). Psychological Bulletin. 132 (1): 1–25. doi:10.1037/0033-2909.132.1.1. PMID 16435954.
  16. ^ Conard, M. A. (2006). "Aptitude is not enough: How personality and behavior predict academic performance". Journal of Research in Personality. 40 (3): 339–346. doi:10.1016/j.jrp.2004.10.003.
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  18. ^ Appa Rao Korukonda (2007). "Differences that do matter: A dialectic analysis of individual characteristics and personality dimensions contributing to computer anxiety". Computers in Human Behavior. 23 (4): 1921–1942. doi:10.1016/j.chb.2006.02.003.
  19. ^ Boyle, G.J., Stankov, L., & Cattell, R.B. (1995). Measurement and statistical models in the study of personality and intelligence. In D.H. Saklofske & M. Zeidner (Eds.), International Handbook of Personality and Intelligence (pp. 417-446). New York: Plenum. ISBN 0-306-44749-5
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  21. ^ a b Widiger, Thomas A. (1995). "Review of the Revised NEO Personality Inventory". In Conoley, Jane Close; Impara, James C. (eds.). The Twelfth Mental Measurements Yearbook. Lincoln, NE: Buros Institute of Mental Measurements. ISBN 0-910674-40-X. Retrieved from Mental Measurements Yearbook database.
  22. ^ Ben-Porath Y. S.; Waller N. G. (1992). "Five big issues in clinical personality assessment: A rejoinder to Costa and McCrae". Psychological Assessment. 4 (1): 23–25. doi:10.1037/1040-3590.4.1.23.
  23. ^ Murphy Paul, A. (2004). The cult of personality: How personality tests are leading us to miseducate our children, mismanage our companies, and misunderstand ourselves. New York: Simon and Schuster.
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  25. ^ Knežević, Goran; Radović, Borislav; Opačić, Goran (1997). "Evaluacija "Big Five" modela ličnosti kroz analizu inventara ličnosti NEO PI-R". Psihologija. 30: 37–38.
  26. ^ Mccrae, R. R., & Costa, P. T. (February 2004). "A contemplated revision of the NEO Five-Factor Inventory". Personality and Individual Differences. 36 (3): 587–596. doi:10.1016/S0191-8869(03)00118-1.{{cite journal}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  27. ^ Lewis R. Goldberg (1999). Mervielde, I.; Deary, I.; De Fruyt, F.; Ostendorf, F. (eds.). "A broad-bandwidth, public domain, personality inventory measuring the lower-level facets of several five-factor models" (PDF). Personality Psychology in Europe. 7: 14–17.
  28. ^ Johnson, John A. (August 2014). "Measuring thirty facets of the Five Factor Model with a 120-item public domain inventory: Development of the IPIP-NEO-120". Journal of Research in Personality. 51: 78–89. doi:10.1016/j.jrp.2014.05.003.
  29. ^ Maples, JL; Guan, L; Carter, NT; Miller, JD (December 2014). "A test of the International Personality Item Pool representation of the Revised NEO Personality Inventory and development of a 120-item IPIP-based measure of the five-factor model". Psychological Assessment. 26 (4): 1070–84. doi:10.1037/pas0000004. PMID 24932643.
  30. ^ Yarkoni, Tal (2010-04-01). "The abbreviation of personality, or how to measure 200 personality scales with 200 items". Journal of Research in Personality. 44 (2): 180–198. doi:10.1016/j.jrp.2010.01.002. ISSN 0092-6566. PMC 2858332. PMID 20419061.
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  32. ^ McCrae, R. R.; Costa, P. T.; Yik, M. S. M. (1996). "Universal aspects of Chinese personality structure". In Bond, M. H. (ed.). The handbook of Chinese psychology. Hong Kong: Oxford University Press.
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  36. ^ Angleitner, A.; Ostendorf, F. (July 2000). "The FFM: A comparison of German speaking countries (Austria, Former East and West Germany, and Switzerland)". {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help) Paper presented at the XXVIIth International Congress of Psychology, Stockholm, Sweden
  37. ^ Lodhi, P. H.; Deo, S.; Belhekar, V. M. (2002). "The Five-Factor model of personality in Indian context: measurement and correlates". In McCrae, R. R.; Allik, J. (eds.). The Five-Factor model of personality across cultures. NY: Kluwer Academic Publisher. pp. 227–248.
  38. ^ Lima, M. P. (2002). "Personality and culture: The Portuguese case". In McCrae, R. R.; Allik, J. (eds.). The Five-Factor model of personality across cultures. NY: Kluwer Academic Publisher. pp. 249–260.
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  41. ^ Gülgöz (2002). "Five-Factor Model and NEO PI-R in Turkey". In McCrae, R. R.; Allik, J. (eds.). The Five-Factor model of personality across cultures. NY: Kluwer Academic Publisher. pp. 175–196.
  42. ^ Leininger, A. (2002). "Vietnamese American personality and acculturation: An exploration between personality traits and cultural goals". In McCrae, R. R.; Allik, J. (eds.). The Five-Factor model of personality across cultures. NY: Kluwer Academic Publisher. pp. 197–227.
  43. ^ Piedmont, R. L.; Bain, E.; McCrae, R. R.; Costa, P. T. Jr. (2002). "The applicability of Five Factor Model in sub Saharan culture: The NEO PI-R in Shona". In McCrae, R. R.; Allik, J. (eds.). The Five-Factor model of personality across cultures. NY: Kluwer Academic Publisher. pp. 155–174.
  44. ^ Rolland, J. P. (2000, July). Cross-cultural validity of the five factor model of personality. Paper presented at the XXVIIth International Congress of Psychology, Stockholm, Sweden.
  45. ^ McCrae, R. R.; Costa, P. T. Jr.; Pedroso De Lima, M. P.; Simões, A.; Ostendorf, F.; Angleitner, A.; Marusić, I.; Bratko, D.; Caprara, G. V.; Barbaranelli, Claudio; Chae, Joon-Ho; Piedmont, Ralph L.; et al. (1999). "Age differences in personality across the adult life span: Parallels in five cultures". Developmental Psychology. 35 (2): 466–477. doi:10.1037/0012-1649.35.2.466. PMID 10082017.
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  47. ^ McCrae, R. R.; Terracciano, A. (2005). "Personality Profiles of Cultures: Aggregate Personality Traits" (PDF). Journal of Personality and Social Psychology. 89 (3): 407–425. doi:10.1037/0022-3514.89.3.407. PMID 16248722.
  48. ^ Piedmont, Ralph L.; Braganza, Dinesh J. (2015). "Psychometric evaluation of responses to the NEO PI-3 in a multi-ethnic sample of adults in India". Psychological Assessment. 27 (4): 1253–1263. doi:10.1037/pas0000135. PMID 25938339.
  49. ^ Persson M.-L. Wasserman D.; G. Jonsson E.; Bergman H.; Terenius L.; Gyllander A.; Neiman J.; Geijer T. (July 2000). "Search for the influence of the tyrosine hydroxylase (TCAT)n repeat polymorphism on personality traits". Psychiatry Research. 95 (1): 1–8. doi:10.1016/S0165-1781(00)00160-8. PMID 10904118. S2CID 10631696.
  50. ^ Mamoru Tochigi, Takeshi Otowa, Hiroyuki Hibino, Chieko Kato, Toshiyuki Otani, Tadashi Umekage, Takeshi Utsumi, Nobumasa Kato, Tsukasa Sasaki (March 2006). "Combined analysis of association between personality traits and three functional polymorphisms in the tyrosine hydroxylase, monoamine oxidase A and catechol-O-meethyltransferase genes". Neuroscience Research. 54 (3): 180–185. doi:10.1016/j.neures.2005.11.003. PMID 16360899. S2CID 29304977.{{cite journal}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
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External links edit

  • PI-R Product Page for publisher of NEO PI-R
  • International Item Pool, an alternative and free source of items available for research on personality

revised, personality, inventory, personality, inventory, that, assesses, individual, five, dimensions, personality, these, same, dimensions, found, five, personality, traits, these, traits, openness, experience, conscientiousness, extraversion, introversion, a. The Revised NEO Personality Inventory NEO PI R is a personality inventory that assesses an individual on five dimensions of personality These are the same dimensions found in the Big Five personality traits These traits are openness to experience conscientiousness extraversion introversion agreeableness and neuroticism In addition the NEO PI R also reports on six subcategories of each Big Five personality trait called facets Historically development of the Revised NEO PI R began in 1978 when Costa and McCrae published a personality inventory 1 The researchers later published three updated versions of their personality inventory in 1985 2 1992 3 and 2005 4 These were called the NEO PI Neuroticism Extraversion Openness Personality Inventory NEO PI R or Revised NEO PI and NEO PI 3 respectively The revised inventories feature updated vocabulary that could be understood by adults of any education level as well as children The inventories have both longer and shorter versions with the full NEO PI R consisting of 240 items and providing detailed facet scores By contrast the shorter NEO FFI NEO Five Factor Inventory comprised 60 items 12 per trait The test was originally developed for use with adult men and women without overt psychopathology It has also been found to be valid for use with children Contents 1 Personality dimensions 2 Forms and administration 3 Reliability 4 Effect of age 5 Validity 6 Adaptations in other languages 7 Critiques 8 Alternative versions 9 Cross cultural research 10 Brain and genetics 11 See also 12 References 13 External linksPersonality dimensions editA table of the personality dimensions measured by the NEO PI R including facets is as follows Neuroticism Extraversion Openness to experience Agreeableness ConscientiousnessAnxiety Warmth Kindness 5 Fantasy Imagination 5 Trust in Others 5 Competence Self efficacy 5 Hostility Anger 5 Gregariousness Aesthetics Artistic Interest 5 Straightforwardness Morality 5 Order liness 5 Organizing 5 Depression Assertiveness Feelings Emotionality 5 Altruism Dutifulness Sense of Duty Obligation 5 Self consciousness Activity Level 5 Lively Temperament 6 Actions Adventurousness 5 Exploration 6 Compliance Cooperation 5 Achievement StrivingImpulsiveness Immoderation 5 Excitement Seeking Ideas Intellectual Interest 5 Curiosity 6 Modesty Self Discipline Willpower 5 Vulnerability to Stress Fear 5 Learned helplessness 5 Positive Emotion Cheerfulness 5 Vivacity 6 Values Psychological liberalism 5 Tolerance to ambiguity 5 Tendermindedness Sympathy 5 Deliberation Cautiousness 5 Forms and administration editIn the most recent publication there are two forms for the NEO self report form S and observer report form R versions Both forms consist of 240 items descriptions of behavior answered on a five point Likert scale Finally there is a 60 item inventory the NEO FFI There are paper and computer versions of both forms The manual reports that administration of the full version should take between 30 and 40 minutes Costa and McCrae reported that an individual should not be evaluated if more than 40 items are missing They also state that despite the fact that the assessment is balanced to control for the effects of acquiescence and nay saying that if more than 150 responses or fewer than 50 responses are agree or strongly agree the results should be interpreted with caution Scores can be reported to most test takers on Your NEO Summary which provides a brief explanation of the assessment and gives the individuals domain levels and a strengths based description of three levels high medium and low in each domain For example low N reads Secure hardy and generally relaxed even under stressful conditions whereas high N reads Sensitive emotional and prone to experience feelings that are upsetting For profile interpretation facet and domain scores are reported in T scores and are recorded visually as compared to the appropriate norming group 2 Reliability editThe internal consistency of the NEO scales was assessed on 1 539 individuals 7 The internal consistency of the NEO PI R was high at N 92 E 89 O 87 A 86 C 90 The internal consistency of the facet scales ranged from 56 to 81 The internal consistency of the NEO PI 3 was consistent with that of the NEO PI R with a ranging from 89 to 93 for the five domains Internal consistency coefficient from the facets with each facet scale comprising fewer items than each of the Big Five scales were necessarily smaller ranging from 54 to 83 7 For the NEO FFI the 60 item domain only version the internal consistencies reported in the manual were N 79 E 79 O 80 A 75 C 83 In the literature the NEO FFI is used more often with investigators using the NEO PI R usually using the items from just the domains they are interested in Sherry et al 2007 found internal consistencies for the FFI to be as follows N 85 E 80 O 68 A 75 C 83 8 The NEO has been translated into many languages The internal consistency coefficients of the domain scores of a translation of the NEO that has been used in the Philippines are satisfactory The alphas for the domain scores range from 78 to 90 9 with facet alphas having a median of 61 10 Observer ratings NEO PI R data from 49 different cultures was used as criterion in a recent study which tested whether individuals perceptions of the national character of a culture accurately reflected the personality of the members of that culture it did not 11 The test retest reliability of the NEO PI R has also been found to be satisfactory The test retest reliability of an early version of the NEO after 3 months was N 87 E 91 O 86 12 The test retest reliability for over 6 years as reported in the NEO PI R manual was the following N 83 E 82 O 83 A 63 C 79 Costa and McCrae pointed out that these findings not only demonstrate good reliability of the domain scores but also their stability among individuals over the age of 30 Scores measured six years apart varied only marginally more than scores measured a few months apart 3 The psychometric properties of NEO PI R scales have been found to generalize across ages cultures and methods of measurement 13 Effect of age editAlthough individual differences rank order tend to be relatively stable in adulthood there are maturational changes in personality that are common to most people mean level changes Most cross sectional and longitudinal studies suggest that neuroticism extraversion and openness tend to decline whereas agreeableness and conscientiousness tend to increase during adulthood 14 A meta analysis of 92 personality studies that used several different inventories among them NEO PI R found that social dominance conscientiousness and emotional stability increased with age especially in the age span of 20 to 40 15 Validity editCosta and McCrae reported in the NEO manual research findings regarding the convergent and discriminant validity of the inventory Examples of these findings include the following For the Myers Briggs Type Indicator Introversion is correlated with the NEO facet Warmth at 0 61 and with the NEO facet Gregariousness at 0 59 Intuition is correlated with the NEO facet Fantasy at 0 43 and with the NEO facet Aesthetics at 0 56 Feeling is correlated with the NEO facet Tender mindedness at 0 39 For the Self Directed Search a personality inventory developed by John L Holland for careers work Artistic is correlated with the NEO facet Aesthetic at 0 56 Investigative is correlated with the NEO facet Ideas at 0 43 and Social is correlated with the NEO facet Tender mindedness at 0 36 A number of studies evaluated the criterion validity of the NEO For example Conard 2005 found that Conscientiousness significantly predicted the GPA of college students over and above using SAT scores alone 16 In a study conducted in Seville Spain Cano Garcia and his colleagues 2005 found that using a Spanish version of the inventory dimensions of the NEO correlated with teacher burnout Neuroticism was related to the emotional exhaustion dimension of burnout and Agreeableness with the personal accomplishment burnout dimension 17 Finally Korukonda 2007 found that Neuroticism was positively related to computer anxiety Openness and Agreeableness were negatively related to computer anxiety 18 Adaptations in other languages editThe NEO PI R has been extensively used across cultures As per the information on the Psychological Assessment Resources PAR website PAR is the publisher of the NEO PI R the NEO PI R has been translated into 40 languages These languages are Afrikaans Albanian Arabic Bulgarian Chinese Croatian Estonian Filipino Finnish Hebrew Hindi Hmong Hungarian Icelandic Indonesian Italian Japanese Kannada Korean Latvian Lithuanian Malay Marathi Persian Peruvian Polish Portuguese Romanian Russian Serbian Slovene Sotho Spanish Taiwanese Thai Tigrignan Turkish Urdu Vietnamese and Xhosa Critiques editCritical reviews of the NEO PI R were published in the 12th edition of the Mental Measurements Yearbook MMY The NEO Pi R which only measures 57 of the known trait variance in the normal personality sphere alone has been severely criticized both in terms of its factor analytic construct validity and its psychometric properties 19 20 Widiger criticized the NEO for not controlling for social desirability bias 21 He argued that test developers cannot assume participants will be honest especially in settings where it benefits people to present themselves in a better light e g forensic or personnel settings Ben Porath and Waller pointed out that the NEO Inventories could be improved with the addition of controls for dishonesty and social desirability 22 Juni in another review of the NEO PI R for the MMY praised the NEO PI R for including both self and other report scales making it easier for psychologists to corroborate information provided by a client or research participant 21 However Juni criticized the NEO PI R for its conceptualization using the Five Factor Model FFM of personality Juni argued that the existence of the FFM was phenomenological and atheoretical the model gaining popularity as a result of the influence of the authors McCrae and Costa in the psychological community The NEO PI R has also been criticized because of its market oriented proprietary nature 23 In response to the expense involved in using proprietary personality inventories such as the NEO other researchers have contributed to the development of the International Personality Item Pool IPIP IPIP items and scales are available free of charge 24 NEO PI R was also criticised for being possibly too complex to understand for less educated or less intelligent individuals 25 Alternative versions editA shortened version of NEO PI R has been published The shortened version is the NEO Five Factor Inventory NEO FFI It comprises 60 items and is designed to take 10 to 15 minutes to complete by contrast the NEO PI R takes 45 to 60 minutes to complete The NEO FFI was revised in 2004 26 With the publication of the NEO PI 3 in 2005 a revised version of the NEO FFI was also published 7 The revision of the NEO FFI involved the replacement of 15 of the 60 items The revised edition is thought to be more suitable for younger individuals 7 The new version had a stronger factor structure and increased reliability 7 Public domain inventories that correlate well with NEO PI R have been published using items from the International Personality Item Pool and are collectively known as the IPIP NEO Lewis Goldberg published a 300 question version of the 30 facet scale in 1999 27 John Johnson and Maples et al have developed a few 120 question versions based on IPIP questions 28 29 Very short 5 items each IPIP based analogues to the NEO PI R scales are also part of the Analog for Multiple Broadband Inventories 30 an inventory designed to approximate a large number of different personality scales with a minimal number of items Cross cultural research editEvidence of the NEO scales stability in different countries and cultures can be considered evidence of its validity A great deal of cross cultural research has been carried out on the Five Factor Model of Personality Much of the research has relied on the NEO PI R and the shorter NEO FFI McCrae and Allik 2002 31 edited a book consisting of papers bearing on cross cultural research on the FFM Research from China 32 33 Estonia Finland 34 the Philippines France 35 German speaking countries 36 India 37 Portugal 38 Russia 39 South Korea 40 Turkey 41 Vietnam 42 and Zimbabwe 43 have shown the FFM to be robust across cultures Rolland on the basis of the data from a number of countries asserted that the neuroticism openness and conscientiousness dimensions are cross culturally valid 44 Rolland further advanced the view that the extraversion and agreeableness dimensions are more sensitive to cultural context Age differences in the five factors of personality across the adult life span are parallel in samples from Germany Italy Portugal Croatia and South Korea 45 Data examined from many different countries have shown that the age and gender differences in those countries resembled differences found in U S samples 46 An intercultural factor analysis yielded a close approximation to the five factor model McCrae Terracciano et al 2005 further reported data from 51 cultures Their study found a cross cultural equivalency between NEO PI R five factors and facets 47 With the recent development of the NEO PI 3 cross cultural research will likely begin to compare the newer version with the NEO PI R Piedmont and Braganza 2015 compared the NEO PI R to the NEO PI 3 using an adult sample from India 48 They used an English version of the NEO PI 3 in order to measure its utility in individuals who speak English as a second language Piedmont and Braganza found that the NEO PI 3 had slightly higher item total correlations and better test retest reliability than the NEO PI R They suggested that the NEO PI 3 has the potential to be utilized with those who do not speak English as their first language Brain and genetics editThe NEO PI R has been used in research pertaining to both a genotype and personality and b brain and personality Such studies however have not always been conclusive For example one study found some evidence for an association between NEO PI R facets and polymorphism in the tyrosine hydroxylase gene 49 while another study could not confirm the finding 50 In a study published in Science Lesch et al 1996 found a relationship between the serotonin transporter gene regulatory region 5 HTTLPR and the neuroticism subscale Individuals with a shorter allele had higher neuroticism scores than individuals with the longer allele The effect was significant for heterozygotes and even stronger for people homozygous for the shorter allele Although the finding is important this specific gene contributes to only 4 of the phenotypic variation in neuroticism The authors concluded that if other genes were hypothesized to contribute similar gene dosage effects to anxiety approximately 10 to 15 genes might be predicted to be involved 51 See also editPsychological testing Psychometrics Minnesota Multiphasic Personality Inventory 16PF Questionnaire Synthetic Aperture Personality AssessmentReferences edit Costa Paul T McCrae Robert R 1978 Objective Personality Assessment The Clinical Psychology of Aging Springer US pp 119 143 ISBN 978 1 4684 3342 5 a b Costa Paul T McCrae Robert R 1985 The NEO personality inventory manual Odessa FL Psychological Assessment Resources a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help a b Costa P T Jr amp McCrae R R 1992 NEO PI R professional manual Odessa FL Psychological Assessment Resources Inc McCrae Robert R Costa Jr Paul T Martin Thomas A June 2005 The NEO PI 3 A More Readable Revised NEO Personality Inventory Journal of Personality Assessment 84 3 261 270 doi 10 1207 s15327752jpa8403 05 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x Short Form for the IPIP NEO International Personality Item Pool Representation of the NEO PI R 26 November 2019 a b c d Gosling SD John OP 1999 Personality Dimensions in Nonhuman Animals A Cross Species Review PDF Current Directions in Psychological Science 8 3 69 75 doi 10 1111 1467 8721 00017 S2CID 145716504 a b c d e McCrae R R amp Costa P T Jr 2010 NEO Inventories Professional manual Lutz FL Psychological Assessment Resources Inc Sherry S B Hewitt P L Flett G L Lee Baggley D L Hall P A 2007 Trait perfectionism and perfectionistic self presentation in personality pathology Personality and Individual Differences 42 3 477 490 doi 10 1016 j paid 2006 07 026 Church A T Katigbak M S 2002 Indigenization of psychology in the Philippines International Journal of Psychology 37 3 129 148 doi 10 1080 00207590143000315 Katigbak M S Church A T Guanzon Lapena M A Carlota A J Del G H 2002 Are indigenous personality dimensions culture specific Philippine inventories and the five factor model Journal of Personality and Social Psychology 82 1 89 101 doi 10 1037 0022 3514 82 1 89 PMID 11811638 Terracciano A Abdel Khalek A M Adam N Adamovova L Ahn CK Ahn HN Alansari BM Alcalay L Allik J Angleitner A Avia MD Ayearst LE Barbaranelli C Beer A Borg Cunen MA Bratko D Brunner Sciarra M Budzinski L Camart N Dahourou D De Fruyt F De Lima MP Del Pilar GE Diener E Falzon R Fernando K Fickova E Fischer R Flores Mendoza C Ghayur MA 2005 National Character Does Not Reflect Mean Personality Trait Levels in 49 Cultures Science 310 5745 96 100 Bibcode 2005Sci 310 96T doi 10 1126 science 1117199 PMC 2775052 PMID 16210536 McCrae R R Costa P T 1983 Joint factors in self reports and ratings Neuroticism extraversion and openness to experience Personality and Individual Differences 4 3 245 255 doi 10 1016 0191 8869 83 90146 0 McCrae R R Kurtz J E Yamagata S Terracciano A 2011 Internal consistency retest reliability and their implications for personality scale validity Pers Soc Psychol Rev 15 1 28 50 doi 10 1177 1088868310366253 PMC 2927808 PMID 20435807 Paul T Costa Jr amp Robert R McCrae 2006 Age Changes in Personality and Their Origins Comment on Roberts Walton and Viechtbauer 2006 PDF Psychological Bulletin 132 1 26 28 doi 10 1037 0033 2909 132 1 26 PMID 16435955 Brent W Roberts Kate E Walton Wolfgang Viechtbauer January 2006 Patterns of Mean Level Change in Personality Traits Across the Life Course A Meta Analysis of Longitudinal Studies PDF Psychological Bulletin 132 1 1 25 doi 10 1037 0033 2909 132 1 1 PMID 16435954 Conard M A 2006 Aptitude is not enough How personality and behavior predict academic performance Journal of Research in Personality 40 3 339 346 doi 10 1016 j jrp 2004 10 003 Francisco Javier Cano Garcia Eva Maria Padilla Munoz amp Miguel Angel Carrasco Ortiz 2005 Personality and contextual variables in teacher burnout PDF Personality and Individual Differences 38 4 929 940 doi 10 1016 j paid 2004 06 018 hdl 11441 56856 Archived from the original PDF on 2010 08 21 Appa Rao Korukonda 2007 Differences that do matter A dialectic analysis of individual characteristics and personality dimensions contributing to computer anxiety Computers in Human Behavior 23 4 1921 1942 doi 10 1016 j chb 2006 02 003 Boyle G J Stankov L amp Cattell R B 1995 Measurement and statistical models in the study of personality and intelligence In D H Saklofske amp M Zeidner Eds International Handbook of Personality and Intelligence pp 417 446 New York Plenum ISBN 0 306 44749 5 Boyle G J 2008 Critique of Five Factor Model FFM In G J Boyle G Matthews amp D H Saklofske Eds The SAGE Handbook of Personality Theory and Assessment Vol 1 Personality Theories and Models Los Angeles CA Sage Publishers ISBN 9 781412 946513 a b Widiger Thomas A 1995 Review of the Revised NEO Personality Inventory In Conoley Jane Close Impara James C eds The Twelfth Mental Measurements Yearbook Lincoln NE Buros Institute of Mental Measurements ISBN 0 910674 40 X Retrieved from Mental Measurements Yearbook database Ben Porath Y S Waller N G 1992 Five big issues in clinical personality assessment A rejoinder to Costa and McCrae Psychological Assessment 4 1 23 25 doi 10 1037 1040 3590 4 1 23 Murphy Paul A 2004 The cult of personality How personality tests are leading us to miseducate our children mismanage our companies and misunderstand ourselves New York Simon and Schuster Goldberg Lewis 1999 A broad bandwidth public domain personality inventory measuring the lower level facets of several five factor models PDF Personality Psychology in Europe Tilburg The Netherlands Tilburg University Press 7 7 28 via Lewis R Goldberg Personality Research Online Full Text Archive Knezevic Goran Radovic Borislav Opacic Goran 1997 Evaluacija Big Five modela licnosti kroz analizu inventara licnosti NEO PI R Psihologija 30 37 38 Mccrae R R amp Costa P T February 2004 A contemplated revision of the NEO Five Factor Inventory Personality and Individual Differences 36 3 587 596 doi 10 1016 S0191 8869 03 00118 1 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Lewis R Goldberg 1999 Mervielde I Deary I De Fruyt F Ostendorf F eds A broad bandwidth public domain personality inventory measuring the lower level facets of several five factor models PDF Personality Psychology in Europe 7 14 17 Johnson John A August 2014 Measuring thirty facets of the Five Factor Model with a 120 item public domain inventory Development of the IPIP NEO 120 Journal of Research in Personality 51 78 89 doi 10 1016 j jrp 2014 05 003 Maples JL Guan L Carter NT Miller JD December 2014 A test of the International Personality Item Pool representation of the Revised NEO Personality Inventory and development of a 120 item IPIP based measure of the five factor model Psychological Assessment 26 4 1070 84 doi 10 1037 pas0000004 PMID 24932643 Yarkoni Tal 2010 04 01 The abbreviation of personality or how to measure 200 personality scales with 200 items Journal of Research in Personality 44 2 180 198 doi 10 1016 j jrp 2010 01 002 ISSN 0092 6566 PMC 2858332 PMID 20419061 McCrae R R amp Allik J Eds 2002 The Five Factor model of personality across cultures N Y Kluwer Academic Publisher McCrae R R Costa P T Yik M S M 1996 Universal aspects of Chinese personality structure In Bond M H ed The handbook of Chinese psychology Hong Kong Oxford University Press Yik M S M Bond M H 1993 Exploring the dimensions of Chinese person perception with indigenous and imported constructs Creating a culturally balanced scale International Journal of Psychology 28 75 95 doi 10 1080 00207599308246919 Pulver A Allik J Pulkkinen L Hamalainen M 1995 The Big Five Personality Inventory in two non Indo European languages European Journal of Personality 9 2 109 124 doi 10 1002 per 2410090205 S2CID 143831077 McCrae R R Costa P T Jr Del Pilar G H Rolland J P Parker W D 1998 Cross cultural assessment of the five factor model The revised NEO Personality Inventory Journal of Cross Cultural Psychology 29 171 188 doi 10 1177 0022022198291009 S2CID 145375858 Angleitner A Ostendorf F July 2000 The FFM A comparison of German speaking countries Austria Former East and West Germany and Switzerland a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help Paper presented at the XXVIIth International Congress of Psychology Stockholm Sweden Lodhi P H Deo S Belhekar V M 2002 The Five Factor model of personality in Indian context measurement and correlates In McCrae R R Allik J eds The Five Factor model of personality across cultures NY Kluwer Academic Publisher pp 227 248 Lima M P 2002 Personality and culture The Portuguese case In McCrae R R Allik J eds The Five Factor model of personality across cultures NY Kluwer Academic Publisher pp 249 260 Martin T A Oryol V E Rukavishnikov A A Senin I G July 2000 Applications of the Russian NEO PI R a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help Paper presented at the XXVIIth International Congress of Psychology Stockholm Sweden Piedmont R L Chae J H 1997 Cross cultural generalizability of the five factor model of personality Development and validation of the NEO PI R for Koreans Journal of Cross Cultural Psychology 28 2 131 155 doi 10 1177 0022022197282001 S2CID 145053137 Gulgoz 2002 Five Factor Model and NEO PI R in Turkey In McCrae R R Allik J eds The Five Factor model of personality across cultures NY Kluwer Academic Publisher pp 175 196 Leininger A 2002 Vietnamese American personality and acculturation An exploration between personality traits and cultural goals In McCrae R R Allik J eds The Five Factor model of personality across cultures NY Kluwer Academic Publisher pp 197 227 Piedmont R L Bain E McCrae R R Costa P T Jr 2002 The applicability of Five Factor Model in sub Saharan culture The NEO PI R in Shona In McCrae R R Allik J eds The Five Factor model of personality across cultures NY Kluwer Academic Publisher pp 155 174 Rolland J P 2000 July Cross cultural validity of the five factor model of personality Paper presented at the XXVIIth International Congress of Psychology Stockholm Sweden McCrae R R Costa P T Jr Pedroso De Lima M P Simoes A Ostendorf F Angleitner A Marusic I Bratko D Caprara G V Barbaranelli Claudio Chae Joon Ho Piedmont Ralph L et al 1999 Age differences in personality across the adult life span Parallels in five cultures Developmental Psychology 35 2 466 477 doi 10 1037 0012 1649 35 2 466 PMID 10082017 McCrae R R 2001 Trait psychology and culture exploring intercultural comparisons Journal of Personality 69 6 819 846 doi 10 1111 1467 6494 696166 PMID 11767820 McCrae R R Terracciano A 2005 Personality Profiles of Cultures Aggregate Personality Traits PDF Journal of Personality and Social Psychology 89 3 407 425 doi 10 1037 0022 3514 89 3 407 PMID 16248722 Piedmont Ralph L Braganza Dinesh J 2015 Psychometric evaluation of responses to the NEO PI 3 in a multi ethnic sample of adults in India Psychological Assessment 27 4 1253 1263 doi 10 1037 pas0000135 PMID 25938339 Persson M L Wasserman D G Jonsson E Bergman H Terenius L Gyllander A Neiman J Geijer T July 2000 Search for the influence of the tyrosine hydroxylase TCAT n repeat polymorphism on personality traits Psychiatry Research 95 1 1 8 doi 10 1016 S0165 1781 00 00160 8 PMID 10904118 S2CID 10631696 Mamoru Tochigi Takeshi Otowa Hiroyuki Hibino Chieko Kato Toshiyuki Otani Tadashi Umekage Takeshi Utsumi Nobumasa Kato Tsukasa Sasaki March 2006 Combined analysis of association between personality traits and three functional polymorphisms in the tyrosine hydroxylase monoamine oxidase A and catechol O meethyltransferase genes Neuroscience Research 54 3 180 185 doi 10 1016 j neures 2005 11 003 PMID 16360899 S2CID 29304977 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Lesch K P Bengel D Heils A Sabol S Greenberg B Petri S Benjamin C Hamer D amp Murphy D 1996 Association of Anxiety Related Traits with a Polymorphism in the Serotonin Transporter Gene Regulatory Region Science 274 5292 1527 1530 Bibcode 1996Sci 274 1527L doi 10 1126 science 274 5292 1527 PMID 8929413 S2CID 35503987 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link External links editPI R Product Page for publisher of NEO PI R International Item Pool an alternative and free source of items available for research on personality Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Revised NEO Personality Inventory amp oldid 1184181739, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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