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A Coordinated Analysis of Big-Five Trait Change Across 16 Longitudinal Samples
- Eileen K Graham
- Denis Gerstorf
- Tomiko Yoneda
- Andrea Piccinin
- Tom Booth
- Christopher Beam
- Andrew Petkus
- Joshua P. Rutsohn
- Ryne Estabrook
- Mindy Katz
- Nicholas A. Turiano
- Ulman Lindenberger
- Jacqui Smith
- Johanna Drewelies
- Gert Wagner
- Nancy Pedersen
- Mathias Allemand
- Avron Spiro
- Dorly Deeg
- Boo Johansson
- Martin Sliwinski
- Richard Lipton
- K. Warner Schaie
- Sherry Willis
- Ian Deary
- Scott M. Hofer
- Dan Mroczek
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Description: This study assessed change in the Big Five personality traits. We conducted a coordinated integrative data analysis (IDA) using data from 16 studies including over 60,000 respondents to examine trajectories of change in the traits of neuroticism, extraversion, openness, conscientiousness, and agreeableness. Coordinating models across multiple study sites, we fit nearly identical multi-level linear growth curve models to assess and compare the extent of trait change over time. Quadratic change was assessed in 8 studies with four or more measurement occasions. Across studies, the linear trajectory models revealed stability for agreeableness and decreases for the other four five traits. The non-linear trajectories suggest a U-shaped curve for neuroticism, and an inverted-U for extraversion. Meta-analytic summaries indicate that the fixed effects are heterogeneous, and that the variability in traits is partially explained by baseline age and country of origin. We conclude from our study that neuroticism, extraversion, conscientiousness, and openness go down over time, while agreeableness remains relatively stable.