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Grant W. Edmonds

Researcher at Oregon Research Institute

Publications -  32
Citations -  1135

Grant W. Edmonds is an academic researcher from Oregon Research Institute. The author has contributed to research in topics: Personality & Big Five personality traits. The author has an hindex of 15, co-authored 31 publications receiving 928 citations. Previous affiliations of Grant W. Edmonds include University of Illinois at Urbana–Champaign.

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Not all conscientiousness scales change alike: a multimethod, multisample study of age differences in the facets of conscientiousness.

TL;DR: Self-reported industriousness, impulse control, and reliability showed age differences from early adulthood to middle age, whereas orderliness did not, and age differences in observer-rated personality occurred mainly in older adulthood.
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It Is Developmental Me, Not Generation Me: Developmental Changes Are More Important Than Generational Changes in Narcissism-Commentary on Trzesniewski & Donnellan (2010).

TL;DR: It is shown that when new data on narcissism are folded into preexisting meta-analytic data, there is no increase in narcissism in college students over the last few decades, and that age changes in narcissistic tendencies are both replicable and comparatively large in comparison to generational changes in Narcissism.
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Compensatory Conscientiousness and Health in Older Couples

TL;DR: It was found that the combination of high conscientiousness and high neuroticism was also compensatory, such that the wives of men with this combination of personality traits reported better health than other women.
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Longitudinal Correlated Changes in Conscientiousness, Preventative Health-Related Behaviors, and Self-Perceived Physical Health

TL;DR: Evidence is provided that increases in conscientiousness and preventative health-related behaviors are associated with improvements in self-perceived health over the same time period as well as the relations between latent variables over a 3-year period.
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Childhood conscientiousness relates to objectively measured adult physical health four decades later.

TL;DR: Findings in this study are consistent with a key assumption in life span models that childhood conscientiousness is associated with objective health status in older adults and open the way for testing mechanisms by which childhood personality may influence mortality through morbidity; mechanisms that could then be targeted for intervention.