Testing the Associations Between Adult Playfulness and Sensation Seeking: A SEM Analysis of Librarians and Police Officers

Playfulness is an understudied personality trait in adults. We examined the relationships between facets of adult playfulness and sensation seeking (SS) in distant vocational groups, namely, librarians (N = 339) and police officers (N = 399). First, manifest and latent group comparisons (measurement...

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Main Authors: Kay Brauer, Tiziana Scherrer, René T. Proyer
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Frontiers Media S.A. 2021-06-01
Series:Frontiers in Psychology
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/fpsyg.2021.667165/full
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spelling doaj-d0525d29307246e5b1c2f8593cb44b6a2021-06-04T04:52:10ZengFrontiers Media S.A.Frontiers in Psychology1664-10782021-06-011210.3389/fpsyg.2021.667165667165Testing the Associations Between Adult Playfulness and Sensation Seeking: A SEM Analysis of Librarians and Police OfficersKay BrauerTiziana ScherrerRené T. ProyerPlayfulness is an understudied personality trait in adults. We examined the relationships between facets of adult playfulness and sensation seeking (SS) in distant vocational groups, namely, librarians (N = 339) and police officers (N = 399). First, manifest and latent group comparisons (measurement invariance [MI] analysis) showed that police officers were higher in SS than librarians, while we found no group differences for playfulness. Second, structural equation modeling (SEM) analyses showed that playfulness was widely positively related to SS, and findings were replicated across groups. However, the effects were of small to moderate size, and playfulness and SS shared between 4 and 22% variance. Our findings indicate that playfulness is not redundant with SS. Our study extends the understanding of adult playfulness by clarifying its overlap and distinctiveness from SS.https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/fpsyg.2021.667165/fulladult playfulnesslibrariansOLIWpolicesensation seekingmeasurement invariance
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Kay Brauer
Tiziana Scherrer
René T. Proyer
spellingShingle Kay Brauer
Tiziana Scherrer
René T. Proyer
Testing the Associations Between Adult Playfulness and Sensation Seeking: A SEM Analysis of Librarians and Police Officers
Frontiers in Psychology
adult playfulness
librarians
OLIW
police
sensation seeking
measurement invariance
author_facet Kay Brauer
Tiziana Scherrer
René T. Proyer
author_sort Kay Brauer
title Testing the Associations Between Adult Playfulness and Sensation Seeking: A SEM Analysis of Librarians and Police Officers
title_short Testing the Associations Between Adult Playfulness and Sensation Seeking: A SEM Analysis of Librarians and Police Officers
title_full Testing the Associations Between Adult Playfulness and Sensation Seeking: A SEM Analysis of Librarians and Police Officers
title_fullStr Testing the Associations Between Adult Playfulness and Sensation Seeking: A SEM Analysis of Librarians and Police Officers
title_full_unstemmed Testing the Associations Between Adult Playfulness and Sensation Seeking: A SEM Analysis of Librarians and Police Officers
title_sort testing the associations between adult playfulness and sensation seeking: a sem analysis of librarians and police officers
publisher Frontiers Media S.A.
series Frontiers in Psychology
issn 1664-1078
publishDate 2021-06-01
description Playfulness is an understudied personality trait in adults. We examined the relationships between facets of adult playfulness and sensation seeking (SS) in distant vocational groups, namely, librarians (N = 339) and police officers (N = 399). First, manifest and latent group comparisons (measurement invariance [MI] analysis) showed that police officers were higher in SS than librarians, while we found no group differences for playfulness. Second, structural equation modeling (SEM) analyses showed that playfulness was widely positively related to SS, and findings were replicated across groups. However, the effects were of small to moderate size, and playfulness and SS shared between 4 and 22% variance. Our findings indicate that playfulness is not redundant with SS. Our study extends the understanding of adult playfulness by clarifying its overlap and distinctiveness from SS.
topic adult playfulness
librarians
OLIW
police
sensation seeking
measurement invariance
url https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/fpsyg.2021.667165/full
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