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Revised NEO Personality Inventory

About: Revised NEO Personality Inventory is a research topic. Over the lifetime, 494 publications have been published within this topic receiving 44504 citations.


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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, the authors used a survey to investigate whether accounting students' trait professional skepticism, assessed by the Hurtt Professional Skepticism Scale (HPSS), relate to personality dimensions and facets, in particular their trust, as assessed by Revised NEO Personality Inventory (NEO PI-R1).
Abstract: We used a survey to investigate whether accounting students’ trait professional skepticism, assessed by the Hurtt Professional Skepticism Scale (HPSS), relate to personality dimensions and facets, in particular their trust, as assessed by the Revised NEO Personality Inventory (NEO PI-R1). We then investigated how levels of trait skepticism as measured by these two instruments (the HPSS and NEO PI-R) are associated with accounting students’ skeptical judgments and decisions. The results showed that auditors’ skeptical judgments (what they think they will do) were significantly associated with the students’ trait skepticism as assessed by HPSS, but was not associated with whether the student was generally suspicious or trustful of people as assessed by NEO PI-R. By contrast, HPSS trait skepticism did not contribute to an understanding of the students’ skeptical decision (what they actually do). This was more closely related to student’s reports on the NEO PI-R Trust facet. Taken together, our findings suggest that being highly skeptical may be beneficial to the audit decisions quality.

2 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The analysis of correlations shows that young people with higher scores on Conscientiousness care most health areas evaluated, and that Agreeableness correlates positively with care over consumption of alcohol, tobacco and other drugs, and driving.
Abstract: The main causes of mortality and morbidity among the population are related to lifestyle. This study analyzes the effects of personality in the perception of health self-care. 200 youth from Valencian Community (Spain) were assessed (Mage = 20.92, SD = 2.25). Revised NEO Personality Inventory and Health Self-care Scale were used. Young people care for their health averaged 62.83 points (SD = 12.19), out of a possible 110 points. Most of them care of driving, hygiene and sexuality. By contrast, they take less care of physical exercise, alcohol consumption and medical checkup. The analysis of correlations shows that young people with higher scores on Conscientiousness care most health areas evaluated. People with higher Neuroticism care less over the feeding, physical exercise, consumption of tobacco and other drugs. Extraversion correlates positively with careful diet and sexual habits. Openness to Experience is positively associated with careful diet and sun exposure habits. Finally, Agreeableness correlates positively with care over consumption of alcohol, tobacco and other drugs, and driving. The regression analysis revealed that Agreeableness and Conscientiousness explained about 18.2 percent of the variance in the perception of health self-care. The individual characteristics of individuals, considered as active agents, are one of the most important for understanding the processes involved in the acquisition, maintenance or impairment of own health.

2 citations

01 Jan 2005
TL;DR: In this article, the authors investigated the relationship between scores on the Revised NEO Personality Inventory (NEO-PIR) and police academy performance for 74 cadets and found that scores on values and trust subscales were positively related to academy academic performance.
Abstract: We investigated the relationship between scores on the Revised NEO Personality Inventory (NEO-PIR) and police academy performance for 74 cadets. The results indicated that scores on the values and trust subscales were positively related to academy academic performance and scores on the assertiveness subscale were negatively related to academy academic performance. Sample The sample consisted of 74 cadets enrolled in three consecutive police academy classes in the St. Louis, Missouri area during the year 2001. The mean age of sample participants was 25.13 years (SD = 3.7). The majority of the officers were white (79.0%) or African American (19.6%) with a small percentage of Hispanics/Latinos (1.6%). Men comprised 80.6% of the sample. The academy was 26 weeks long.

2 citations

01 Jan 2005
TL;DR: In this article, the authors compared 20 OCD patients with 20 patients with panic disorder, 20 subjects with sub-clinical OC symptoms and 20 healthy control subjects on tests of working memory and the Five-Factor Model of personality.
Abstract: Obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD) is a common psychiatric illness characterised by recurrent, intrusive thoughts and repetitive, stereotyped behaviours. There is converging evidence that OCD is associated with a specific cognitive deficit related to organising and manipulating information in working memory. There is also evidence that OCD is associated with certain pre-morbid personality traits. However, further research is needed to elucidate whether these cognitive deficits and personality traits are specific to OCD or are present in other anxiety disorders and/or individuals with sub-clinical levels of obsessive-compulsive (OC) symptoms. In this thesis, 20 OCD patients were compared to 20 patients with panic disorder, 20 subjects with sub-clinical OC symptoms and 20 healthy control subjects on tests of working memory and the Five-Factor Model of personality. To measure different aspects of working memory, participants completed three delayed matching-to-sample (DMS) tasks and two continuous performance working memory tasks (n-back tasks). The DMS tasks assessed the ability to actively maintain different types of information in working memory (irregular objects; geometric objects; spatial locations). The n-back tasks assessed the ability to update and temporally order verbal and spatial stimuli in working memory. The OCD patients were less accurate than the healthy control subjects on the memory trials of the spatial DMS task, the 3- back trials of the spatial n-back task, and the 2-back and 3-back trials of the verbal n-back task. The OCD patients were also less accurate than patients with panic disorder and sub-clinical OC subjects on the verbal 3-back task. The results indicated that OCD patients were impaired on cognitive tasks requiring the maintenance of spatial stimuli and the updating and temporal ordering of verbal and spatial stimuli in working memory. The OCD patients were not impaired on tasks requiring the maintenance of object information in working memory. To measure normal personality traits, subjects completed the Revised NEO Personality Inventory (NEO PIR). Compared to healthy controls, OCD patients reported being highly emotional and introverted, less open to new experiences, and lacking confidence in their own abilities. The OCD patients were similar to the panic disorder patients on most of the domains and facets of the NEO PI-R, however, they were distinguished by their lower openness to experiencing new activities, and being less diligent and purposeful. Compared to the sub-clinical OC subjects, OCD patients reported being more prone to feelings of depression, more vulnerable to stress, less likely to experience positive emotions, more humble and sincere and less able to carry tasks through to completion. Overall, the thesis provided further evidence that OCD patients are impaired on cognitive tasks requiring the organisation and manipulation of information in working memory. However, it is still unclear whether this deficit arises due to capacity constraints being exceeded in working…

2 citations

Proceedings ArticleDOI
01 Sep 2019
TL;DR: The Extreme Learning Machine model is employed to perform the classification of personality features called Revised NEO Personality Inventory (NEO PI-R) and the model is trained and tested using 10- fold mechanism to verify the effectivity of the classification.
Abstract: Determining the duration of drug consumption is essential for the success of treatment for drug abuse since the effectivity of such a program depends on the duration of the treatment. One promising set of features to identify the duration of drug consumption is personality features called Revised NEO Personality Inventory (NEO PI-R). In this paper, the Extreme Learning Machine model is employed to perform the classification. The model is trained and tested using 10- fold mechanism to verify the effectivity of the classification. The accuracy of the classifier differs, depending on the type of drug, with the maximum accuracy of 86.31% and the minimum one of 36.65%.

2 citations


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Performance
Metrics
No. of papers in the topic in previous years
YearPapers
20221
20218
202016
201916
201812
201723