Journal
FRONTIERS IN PSYCHOLOGY
Volume 14, Issue -, Pages -Publisher
FRONTIERS MEDIA SA
DOI: 10.3389/fpsyg.2023.1077851
Keywords
culture; personality; Five-Factor Theory; characteristic adaptations; basic traits; convergent and discriminant validity
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Culture-and-personality studies were once important in social science and have recently been revived as personality-and-culture studies. This article discusses conceptual issues and methodological challenges related to understanding the relationship between culture and personality. It also reviews research on how culture shapes personality traits and considers alternative explanations. The article concludes by proposing testable hypotheses based on Five-Factor Theory and the assumption that observed cross-cultural differences in personality traits are valid.
Culture-and-personality studies were central to social science in the early 20th century and have recently been revived (as personality-and-culture studies) by trait and cross-cultural psychologists. In this article we comment on conceptual issues, including the nature of traits and the nature of the personality-and-culture relationship, and we describe methodological challenges in understanding associations between features of culture and aspects of personality. We give an overview of research hypothesizing the shaping of personality traits by culture, reviewing studies of indigenous traits, acculturation and sojourner effects, birth cohorts, social role changes, and ideological interventions. We also consider the possibility that aggregate traits affect culture, through psychological means and gene flow. In all these cases we highlight alternative explanations and the need for designs and analyses that strengthen the interpretation of observations. We offer a set of testable hypotheses based on the premises that personality is adequately described by Five-Factor Theory, and that observed differences in aggregate personality traits across cultures are veridical. It is clear that culture has dramatic effects on the thoughts, feelings, and behaviors from which we infer traits, but it is not yet clear whether, how, and in what degree culture shapes traits themselves.
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