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David P. Schmitt
Researcher at Bradley University
Publications - 86
Citations - 14625
David P. Schmitt is an academic researcher from Bradley University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Evolutionary psychology & Big Five personality traits. The author has an hindex of 40, co-authored 84 publications receiving 13039 citations. Previous affiliations of David P. Schmitt include University of Michigan & Brunel University London.
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Journal ArticleDOI
Sexual Strategies Theory: An Evolutionary Perspective on Human Mating
David M. Buss,David P. Schmitt +1 more
TL;DR: A contextual-evolutionary theory of human mating strategies is proposed, hypothesized to have evolved distinct psychological mechanisms that underlie short-term and long-term strategies between men and women.
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Simultaneous Administration of the Rosenberg Self-Esteem Scale in 53 Nations: Exploring the Universal and Culture-Specific Features of Global Self-Esteem.
David P. Schmitt,Jüri Allik +1 more
TL;DR: Although positively and negatively worded items of the RSES were correlated within cultures and were uniformly related to external personality variables, differences between aggregates of positive and negative items were smaller in developed nations.
Journal ArticleDOI
Why can't a man be more like a woman? Sex differences in Big Five personality traits across 55 cultures.
TL;DR: Overall, higher levels of human development--including long and healthy life, equal access to knowledge and education, and economic wealth--were the main nation-level predictors of larger sex differences in personality.
Journal ArticleDOI
The Geographic Distribution of Big Five Personality Traits Patterns and Profiles of Human Self-Description Across 56 Nations
David P. Schmitt,Jüri Allik,Robert R. McCrae,Verónica Benet-Martínez,Lidia Alcalay,Lara Ault,Ivars Austers,Kevin Bennett,Gabriel Bianchi,Fredric Boholst,Mary Ann Borg Cunen,Johan Braeckman,Edwin G. Brainerd,Leo Gerard A. Caral,Gabrielle Caron,María Martina Casullo,Michael Cunningham,Ikuo Daibo,Charlotte J. S. De Backer,Eros De Souza,Rolando Díaz-Loving,Glaucia Ribeiro Starling Diniz,Kevin Durkin,Marcela Echegaray,Ekin Eremsoy,Harald A. Euler,Ruth Falzon,Maryanne L. Fisher,Dolores Foley,Douglas P. Fry,Sirspa Fry,M. Arif Ghayur,Debra L. Golden,Karl Grammer,Liria Grimaldi,Jamin Halberstadt,Shamsul Haque,Dora Herrera,Janine Hertel,Heather Hoffmann,Danica Hooper,Zuzana Hradilekova,Jasna Hudek-Kene-Evi,Jas Laile Suzana Binti Jaafar,Margarita Jankauskaite,Heidi Kabangu-Stahel,Igor Kardum,Brigitte Khoury,Hayrran Kwon,Kaia Laidra,Anton Laireiter,Dustin Lakerveld,Ada Lampert,Mary Anne Lauri,Marguerite Lavallée,Suk Jae Lee,Luk Chung Leung,Kenneth D. Locke,Vance Locke,Ivan Lukšík,Ishmael Magaisa,Dalia Marcinkeviciene,André Mata,Rui Mata,Barry Mccarthy,Michael E. Mills,Nhlanhla Mkhize,João Manuel Moreira,Sérgio Moreira,Miguel Moya,M. Munyae,Patricia Noller,Adrian Opre,Alexia Panayiotou,Nebojša Petrović,Karolien Poels,Miroslav Popper,Maria Poulimenou,Volodymyr P'yatokh,Michel Raymond,Ulf-Dietrich Reips,Susan E. Reneau,Sofía Rivera-Aragón,Wade C. Rowatt,Willibald Ruch,Velko S. Rus,Marilyn P. Safir,Sonia Salas,Fabio Sambataro,Kenneth Sandnabba,Marion K. Schulmeyer,Astrid Schütz,Tullio Scrimali,Todd K. Shackelford,Phillip R. Shaver,Francis J Sichona,Franco Simonetti,Tilahun Sineshaw,Tom Speelman,Spyros Spyrou,H. Canan Sümer,Nebi Sümer,Marianna Supekova,Tomasz Szlendak,Robin Taylor,Bert Timmermans,William Tooke,Ioannis Tsaousis,F. S.K. Tungaraza,Griet Vandermassen,Tim Vanhoomissen,Frank Van Overwalle,Ine Vanwesenbeeck,Paul L. Vasey,João Veríssimo,Martin Voracek,Wendy W.N. Wan,Ta Wei Wang,Peter Weiss,Andik Wijaya,Liesbeth Woertman,Gahyun Youn,Agata Zupanèiè,Mithila B. Sharan +123 more
TL;DR: The Big Five Inventory (BFI) is a self-report measure designed to assess the high-order personality traits of Extraversion, Agreeableness, Conscientiousness, Neuroticism, and Openness as discussed by the authors.
Journal ArticleDOI
Sociosexuality from Argentina to Zimbabwe: a 48-nation study of sex, culture, and strategies of human mating.
TL;DR: Sex differences in sociosexuality were generally large and demonstrated cross-cultural universality across the 48 nations of the ISDP, confirming several evolutionary theories of human mating.