Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
951539 Journal of Research in Personality 2012 11 Pages PDF
Abstract

A longitudinal study of employed individuals was used to test the relationship between social investment at work—the act of cognitively and emotionally committing to one’s job—and longitudinal and cross-sectional personality trait development. Participants provided ratings of personality traits and social investment at work at two time-points, separated by approximately 3 years. Data were analyzed using latent change models. Cross-sectional results showed that extraversion, agreeableness, conscientiousness, and emotional stability were related to social investment at work. Additionally, a positive association was found between longitudinal change in social investment in work and change in personality traits—especially conscientiousness. Finally, the correlated changes in social investment and personality traits were invariant across age groups, suggesting that personality traits remain malleable across the lifespan.

► Changes in social investment at work are related to changes in conscientiousness over time. ► Correlated changes in conscientiousness and social investment at work are invariant across age groups. ► Social investment processes may shape personality development across the lifespan.

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Life Sciences Neuroscience Behavioral Neuroscience
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