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Oliver P. John

Researcher at University of California, Berkeley

Publications -  184
Citations -  67225

Oliver P. John is an academic researcher from University of California, Berkeley. The author has contributed to research in topics: Personality & Big Five personality traits. The author has an hindex of 82, co-authored 176 publications receiving 60199 citations. Previous affiliations of Oliver P. John include Bielefeld University & University of Oregon.

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A dog's got personality: a cross-species comparative approach to personality judgments in dogs and humans.

TL;DR: This research offers a blueprint for how a cross-species comparative approach can be realized empirically and suggests an important conclusion not widely considered by either personality or animal researchers: Personality differences do exist and can be measured in animals other than humans.
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Understanding the social effects of emotion regulation: The mediating role of authenticity for individual differences in suppression.

TL;DR: The social costs of suppression do not seem to be due to reduced positive emotion expression but rather the incongruence between inner-self and outer-behavior, and the implications for emotion processes, self processes, and interpersonal relationships are discussed.
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Testing models of the structure and development of future time perspective: maintaining a focus on opportunities in middle age.

TL;DR: A core construct in socioemotional selectivity theory is future time perspective, conceptualized as a unidimensional and bipolar construct ranging from expansive to limited, which changed differentially with age.
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Validation par analyse factorielle du Big Five Inventory français (BFI-Fr). Analyse convergente avec le NEO-PI-R

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors present the poursuite du travail de validation du BFI francais (BFI-Fr) sur un large echantillon d'etudiants, for verifier ses qualites psychometriques internes and assurer une validation convergente avec le NEO Personality Inventory, Revised (NEO-PI-R).
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Towards a taxonomy of personality descriptors in German: A psycho‐lexical study

TL;DR: In this article, a taxonomy of German personality-descriptive terms is presented, which includes adjectives, moods and emotions, social roles, effects, evaluations, and physical appearance.