Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
891114 Personality and Individual Differences 2012 6 Pages PDF
Abstract

This study investigates the measurement equivalence of a Five Factor measure of personality between applicant and non-applicant samples. The Big Five Questionnaire-2 was administered in two samples: A group of volunteers (n = 903), who completed the test for research purposes, and a group applying for jobs, who completed the test during hiring procedures (n = 401). Multiple-group confirmatory factor analysis on item composites was conducted to test for the equivalence of factor covariance and mean structures of twenty facets of the Five Factors. Item-level analyses were carried out through analysis of variance to further examine the issue of measurement invariance. Findings suggested that personality facets have the same measurement unit across applicants and non-applicants, while a lack of equivalence was found in the origin of the scales. Similar results were found at the item-level. Implications for personality assessment are advanced and discussed.

► The equivalence of a FFM measure between applicants and non-applicants was assessed. ► Personality scales have the same measurement unit across the groups. ► A lack of equivalence was found in the origin of the scales. ► Implications for personality assessment are advanced and discussed.

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