Neuroticism may not reflect emotional variability
Adult
Male
Emotions
150
Individuality
AFFECTIVE INSTABILITY
FREQUENCY
negative emotion
EXTROVERSION
Humans
0501 psychology and cognitive sciences
neuroticism
emotional variability
VALIDITY
Neuroticism
PERSONALITY
05 social sciences
Anxiety Disorders
MODEL
experience sampling
Affect
DAILY-LIFE
personality
MOOD
RELIABILITY
Female
SEXUAL OBJECTIFICATION
Personality
DOI:
10.1073/pnas.1919934117
Publication Date:
2020-04-16T01:05:57Z
AUTHORS (11)
ABSTRACT
Neuroticism is one of the major traits describing human personality, and a predictor of mental and physical disorders with profound public health significance. Individual differences in emotional variability are thought to reflect the core of neuroticism. However, the empirical relation between emotional variability and neuroticism may be partially the result of a measurement artifact reflecting neuroticism’s relation with higher mean levels—rather than greater variability—of negative emotion. When emotional intensity is measured using bounded scales, there is a dependency between variability and mean levels: at low (or high) intensity, it is impossible to demonstrate high variability. As neuroticism is positively associated with mean levels of negative emotion, this may account for the relation between neuroticism and emotional variability. In a metaanalysis of 11 studies (
N
= 1,205 participants; 83,411 observations), we tested whether the association between neuroticism and negative emotional variability was clouded by a dependency between variability and the mean. We found a medium-sized positive association between neuroticism and negative emotional variability, but, when using a relative variability index to correct for mean negative emotion, this association disappeared. This indicated that neuroticism was associated with experiencing more intense, but not more variable, negative emotions. Our findings call into question theory, measurement scales, and data suggesting that emotional variability is central to neuroticism. In doing so, they provide a revisionary perspective for understanding how this individual difference may predispose to mental and physical disorders.
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CITATIONS (61)
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