PDA

View Full Version : Personality Is Not Set By 30; It Can Change Throughout Life



tanya
10-06-2007, 06:55 PM
I was looking at 'Beech's profile and wondering.... will he always like the stuff on his list and googled the subject and found this...


Do peoples' personalities change after 30? They can, according to researchers who examined 132,515 adults age 21-60 on the personality traits known as the "Big Five": conscientiousness, agreeableness, neuroticism, openness and extraversion. These findings are reported in the May issue of the Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, published by the American Psychological Association (APA).

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
From this large sample of volunteers recruited and examined over the Internet, lead researchers Sanjay Srivastava, Ph.D., and Oliver P. John, Ph.D., working at the University of California at Berkeley, found that certain changes do occur in middle adulthood. Conscientiousness increased throughout the age range studied, with the biggest increases in a person's 20s; this trait is defined as being organized, planful, and disciplined, and past research has linked it to work performance and work commitments. Agreeableness increased the most during a person's 30s; this trait is defined as being warm, generous, and helpful, and has been linked to relationships and to prosocial behavior. Neuroticism declined with age for women but did not decline for men; this trait is defined in people who worry and are emotionally unstable. It has been linked to depression and other mental health problems. Openness showed small declines with age for both men and women. Finally, extraversion declined for women but did not show changes in men.

Both neuroticism and extraversion scores were higher for younger women than for younger men. But for both of these traits and most strikingly for neuroticism the apparent sex differences diminished with age.

Of the 132,515 participants, 54 percent were female, all lived in the U.S. or Canada, 86% were White and 14% were Asian, Black, Latino or Middle Eastern. A subset of the sample 42,578 were asked about their socioeconomic status. Of these participants, 405 (1%) said they were poor, 7,614 (18%) said they were working class, 23,024 (54%) said they were middle class and 10,718 (25%) said they were upper-middle class.

This study contradicts an often cited view that personality traits are genetically programmed to stop changing by early adulthood. There is considerable evidence against it, say the authors. In the study, "average levels of personality traits changed gradually but systematically throughout the lifespan, sometimes even more after age 30 than before. Increasing conscientiousness and agreeableness and decreasing neuroticism in adulthood may indicate increasing maturity people becoming on the average better adapted as they get older, well into middle age."

###

Article: "Development of Personality in Early and Middle Adulthood: Set Like Plaster or Persistent Change?" Sanjay Srivastava, Ph.D., and Oliver P. John, Ph.D., University of California, Berkeley; Samuel D. Gosling, Ph.D., University of Texas, Austin; Jeff Potter, B.A., Cambridge, MA; Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, Vol. 84, No. 5.

Full text of the article is available from the APA Public Affairs Office or at http://www.apa.org/journals/psp/press_releases/may_2003/psp8451041.html

The American Psychological Association (APA), in Washington, DC, is the largest scientific and professional organization representing psychology in the United States and is the world's largest association of psychologists. APA's membership includes more than 150,000 researchers, educators, clinicians, consultants and students. Through its divisions in 53 subfields of psychology and affiliations with 60 state, territorial and Canadian provincial associations, APA works to advance psychology as a science, as a profession and as a means of promoting health, education and human welfare.

Note: This story has been adapted from material provided by American Psychological Association.

http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2003/05/030513075924.htm

greyhair biker
10-07-2007, 06:09 AM
I have always believed that you are constantly adding to (or subtracting from) your personality. You are what you make yourself to be...granted, we are products of our environment to a large degree but given our free will...agency if you will...we are the molders of our own minds. One of my favorite motivational speakers - Zig Ziglar - said it something like this, 'You are what you put into your mind'. I am paraphrasing of course but the old ' garbage in garbage out principal is true. Zig follows this up by saying 'If you want to get good stuff to come out youve got to put the good stuff in'. He's one of the most positive people I have ever had the priviledge to meet and he has an amazing personality.
...I really didnt think Id be getting on that soapbox but there you go in a nutshell :mrgreen:

sparker1
10-07-2007, 08:16 AM
So, maybe there's hope for me yet. :2thumbs:

TreeHugger
10-07-2007, 10:39 AM
You dont find yourself, you create yourself.

stefan
10-07-2007, 10:43 AM
You dont find yourself, you create yourself.

very true and well said.

i suppose it could be said that it is by finding your way through life and its experiences that you create yourself.

tanya
10-07-2007, 07:01 PM
I have always believed that you are constantly adding to (or subtracting from) your personality. You are what you make yourself to be...granted, we are products of our environment to a large degree but given our free will...agency if you will...we are the molders of our own minds. One of my favorite motivational speakers - Zig Ziglar - said it something like this, 'You are what you put into your mind'. I am paraphrasing of course but the old ' garbage in garbage out principal is true. Zig follows this up by saying 'If you want to get good stuff to come out youve got to put the good stuff in'. He's one of the most positive people I have ever had the priviledge to meet and he has an amazing personality.
...I really didnt think Id be getting on that soapbox but there you go in a nutshell :mrgreen:

Without a doubt it helps to be around positive people! Just look at women in abusive relationships, poor people, homeless people....

While we can mold ourselves to a point, there is also a big impact from outside influence.

tanya
10-07-2007, 07:01 PM
So, maybe there's hope for me yet. :2thumbs:


I'm not too sure about that. :haha:

TreeHugger
10-08-2007, 05:32 PM
You dont find yourself, you create yourself.

very true and well said.

i suppose it could be said that it is by finding your way through life and its experiences that you create yourself.

Yes, and said better. I think that you create yourself by the choices you make and the way that you choose to respond or react to life experiences.

cachehiker
10-09-2007, 08:16 AM
Without a doubt it helps to be around positive people! Just look at women in abusive relationships, poor people, homeless people....

While we can mold ourselves to a point, there is also a big impact from outside influence.

Ever since I struggled through Foucault's Pendulum, I've wondered at the stories some people "write" with their lives. The book dwells on the concept of "you write your own story" towards the end and it seems like so many people seem content to tell stories of poverty, ignorance, abuse, abandonment, addiction, etc. I'll warn you though. It's not a quick read and it will repeatedly have you in search of a dictionary.

I tend to be one of those very moldable people myself. Once I've made up my mind about wanting something or to aquire some trait, it just starts to happen. I often consider it a weakness though. There's very often nothing worse than having blinders on while you methodically work out how you're going to accomplish your next objective.

tanya
10-09-2007, 03:39 PM
Without a doubt it helps to be around positive people! Just look at women in abusive relationships, poor people, homeless people....

While we can mold ourselves to a point, there is also a big impact from outside influence.

Ever since I struggled through Foucault's Pendulum, I've wondered at the stories some people "write" with their lives. The book dwells on the concept of "you write your own story" towards the end and it seems like so many people seem content to tell stories of poverty, ignorance, abuse, abandonment, addiction, etc. I'll warn you though. It's not a quick read and it will repeatedly have you in search of a dictionary.

I tend to be one of those very moldable people myself. Once I've made up my mind about wanting something or to acquire some trait, it just starts to happen. I often consider it a weakness though. There's very often nothing worse than having blinders on while you methodically work out how you're going to accomplish your next objective.

I think we are much alike! I tend to go through life with BLINDERS on. :haha:

Although I do agree that we do write our own story...... its the way people are brought up and those outside influences that mold the way they write it. I got my BS degree... then my MS degree... then started Judo and trained at the OTC (Olympic Training Center).... all this time I was molded and living in my own little world...

Then I came here to Utah. I was in shock with how people think. I did not get it.... but it is because of how their environment molded them when they were younger.... its the only way 'they' (and I am talking about all kinds of people --- drug addicted, Mormons, happy people, sad people, good workers, lazy workers, those living on welfare or unemployment, awesome workers, family people, homeless people, etc... a huge variety, but those outside my little shell I was living in) can think now. I fought it..... then accepted it... and now I just pretty much have learned how they will react to different things.