Mind-Personality Relations from Childhood to Early Adulthood

We present three studies which investigated the relations between cognition and personality from 7 to 20 years of age. All three studies showed that general cognitive ability and the general factor of personality are significantly related throughout this age span. This relation was expressed in seve...

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Main Authors: Andreas Demetriou, George Spanoudis, Mislav Stjepan Žebec, Maria Andreou, Hudson Golino, Smaragda Kazi
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2018-12-01
Series:Journal of Intelligence
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.mdpi.com/2079-3200/6/4/51
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spelling doaj-c13f02a4ee144b8a8544b189f9deb5712020-11-25T00:17:16ZengMDPI AGJournal of Intelligence2079-32002018-12-01645110.3390/jintelligence6040051jintelligence6040051Mind-Personality Relations from Childhood to Early AdulthoodAndreas Demetriou0George Spanoudis1Mislav Stjepan Žebec2Maria Andreou3Hudson Golino4Smaragda Kazi5Department of Psychology, University of Nicosia, Nicosia 1700, CyprusDepartment of Psychology, University of Cyprus, Nicosia 1678, CyprusDepartment of Psychology, Croatian Studies University of Zagreb, 10000 Zagreb, CroatiaDepartment of Psychology, University of Cyprus, Nicosia 1678, CyprusDepartment of Psychology, University of Virginia, Charlottesville, VA 22903, USADepartment of Psychology, Panteion University of Social Sciences, 17671 Athens, GreeceWe present three studies which investigated the relations between cognition and personality from 7 to 20 years of age. All three studies showed that general cognitive ability and the general factor of personality are significantly related throughout this age span. This relation was expressed in several ways across studies. The first investigated developmental relations between three reasoning domains (inductive, deductive, and scientific) and Eysenck’s four personality dimensions in a longitudinal-sequential design where 260 participants received the cognitive tests three times, and the personality test two times, covering the span from 9 to 16 years. It was found that initial social likeability significantly shapes developmental momentum in cognition and vice versa, especially in the 9- to 11-year period. The second study involved 438 participants from 7 to 17 years, tested twice on attention control, working memory, reasoning in different domains, and once by a Big Five Factors inventory. Extending the findings of the first, this study showed that progression in reasoning is affected negatively by conscientiousness and positively by openness, on top of attention control and working memory influences. The third study tested the relations between reasoning in several domains, the ability to evaluate one’s own cognitive performance, self-representation about the reasoning, the Big Five, and several aspects of emotional intelligence, from 9 to 20 years of age (N = 247). Network, hierarchical network, and structural equation modeling showed that cognition and personality are mediated by the ability of self-knowing. Emotional intelligence was not an autonomous dimension. All dimensions except emotional intelligence influenced academic performance. A developmental model for mind-personality relations is proposed.https://www.mdpi.com/2079-3200/6/4/51personalityintelligencedevelopmentcognition
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Andreas Demetriou
George Spanoudis
Mislav Stjepan Žebec
Maria Andreou
Hudson Golino
Smaragda Kazi
spellingShingle Andreas Demetriou
George Spanoudis
Mislav Stjepan Žebec
Maria Andreou
Hudson Golino
Smaragda Kazi
Mind-Personality Relations from Childhood to Early Adulthood
Journal of Intelligence
personality
intelligence
development
cognition
author_facet Andreas Demetriou
George Spanoudis
Mislav Stjepan Žebec
Maria Andreou
Hudson Golino
Smaragda Kazi
author_sort Andreas Demetriou
title Mind-Personality Relations from Childhood to Early Adulthood
title_short Mind-Personality Relations from Childhood to Early Adulthood
title_full Mind-Personality Relations from Childhood to Early Adulthood
title_fullStr Mind-Personality Relations from Childhood to Early Adulthood
title_full_unstemmed Mind-Personality Relations from Childhood to Early Adulthood
title_sort mind-personality relations from childhood to early adulthood
publisher MDPI AG
series Journal of Intelligence
issn 2079-3200
publishDate 2018-12-01
description We present three studies which investigated the relations between cognition and personality from 7 to 20 years of age. All three studies showed that general cognitive ability and the general factor of personality are significantly related throughout this age span. This relation was expressed in several ways across studies. The first investigated developmental relations between three reasoning domains (inductive, deductive, and scientific) and Eysenck’s four personality dimensions in a longitudinal-sequential design where 260 participants received the cognitive tests three times, and the personality test two times, covering the span from 9 to 16 years. It was found that initial social likeability significantly shapes developmental momentum in cognition and vice versa, especially in the 9- to 11-year period. The second study involved 438 participants from 7 to 17 years, tested twice on attention control, working memory, reasoning in different domains, and once by a Big Five Factors inventory. Extending the findings of the first, this study showed that progression in reasoning is affected negatively by conscientiousness and positively by openness, on top of attention control and working memory influences. The third study tested the relations between reasoning in several domains, the ability to evaluate one’s own cognitive performance, self-representation about the reasoning, the Big Five, and several aspects of emotional intelligence, from 9 to 20 years of age (N = 247). Network, hierarchical network, and structural equation modeling showed that cognition and personality are mediated by the ability of self-knowing. Emotional intelligence was not an autonomous dimension. All dimensions except emotional intelligence influenced academic performance. A developmental model for mind-personality relations is proposed.
topic personality
intelligence
development
cognition
url https://www.mdpi.com/2079-3200/6/4/51
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