Implicit Quantification of Personality Traits
- 1 October 1993
- journal article
- research article
- Published by SAGE Publications in Personality and Social Psychology Bulletin
- Vol. 19 (5) , 594-604
- https://doi.org/10.1177/0146167293195011
Abstract
The common usage of personality trait terms in the language includes an implicit quantification that is part of the accepted meaning of the term. This aspect of a trait's meaning is here called its scope. Traits with high scope, such as honest, require a high relative frequency of behavioral manifestation before they are attributed. In contrast, low-scope traits such as dishonest can be attributed on the basis of very few behavioral instances. A number of hypotheses are considered concerning the scope of trait terms within a language and between languages. Speakers of a given language (English or Hebrew) exhibit agreement in their ratings of scope; English and Hebrew speakers also agree with each other on the scope of trait terms even when they disagree about the behavioral manifestations of those traits. These findings are interpreted in terms of an informational view of personality traits: The scope of a trait is set at a level that makes it communicatively useful.Keywords
This publication has 24 references indexed in Scilit:
- Moving away from the world: Life-course patterns of shy children.Developmental Psychology, 1988
- Personality in the life course.Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, 1987
- Category breadth and hierarchical structure in personality: Studies of asymmetries in judgments of trait implications.Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, 1986
- The prediction of semantic consistency in self-descriptions: Characteristics of persons and of terms that affect the consistency of responses to synonym and antonym pairs.Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, 1985
- The stability of confusion: A reply to Mischel and Peake.Psychological Review, 1983
- How probable is probable? A numerical translation of verbal probability expressionsJournal of Forecasting, 1982
- On predicting some of the people some of the time: The search for cross-situational consistencies in behavior.Psychological Review, 1974
- Likableness ratings of 555 personality-trait words.Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, 1968
- Adverbs as multipliers.Psychological Review, 1959
- Trait-names: A psycho-lexical study.Psychological Monographs: General and Applied, 1936