Five Factor Model
Personality traits
The Five Factor Model of personality traits:
Evaluating universal and non-universal constructs of personality
The Five Factor Model of personality traits suggests that all human beings can be judged according to the degree to which they manifest five specific traits: openness, conscientiousness, extroversion, agreeableness, and neuroticism. It is true that "lexical studies, which examine personality factors in trait adjectives from different languages, have had somewhat mixed results [regarding their universality]. E, A, and C. factors almost always appear, but N. And O. sometimes do not" yet the concepts themselves still seem to exist cross-culturally (McCrae, n.d.: 2). The degree to which societies value different qualities may vary, but the universal presence of these qualities is noteworthy. For example, "extraverts are lively, cheerful, and sociable; introverts are sober and taciturn… Conscientiousness is seen in organization, punctuality, and purposefulness" (McCrae n.d.: 2). The United States may value extroversion more so than Japan, while Japan tends to place a higher value on the more communitarian vale of conscientiousness....
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