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      On Traits, Situations, and Their Integration: A Developmental Perspective

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      Personality and Social Psychology Review
      Informa UK Limited

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          Subjective well-being: The science of happiness and a proposal for a national index.

          Ed Diener (2000)
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            A cognitive-affective system theory of personality: reconceptualizing situations, dispositions, dynamics, and invariance in personality structure.

            A theory was proposed to reconcile paradoxical findings on the invariance of personality and the variability of behavior across situations. For this purpose, individuals were assumed to differ in (a) the accessibility of cognitive-affective mediating units (such as encodings, expectancies and beliefs, affects, and goals) and (b) the organization of relationships through which these units interact with each other and with psychological features of situations. The theory accounts for individual differences in predictable patterns of variability across situations (e.g., if A then she X, but if B then she Y), as well as for overall average levels of behavior, as essential expressions or behavioral signatures of the same underlying personality system. Situations, personality dispositions, dynamics, and structure were reconceptualized from this perspective.
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              Toward a structure- and process-integrated view of personality: traits as density distribution of states.

              Three experience-sampling studies explored the distributions of Big-Five-relevant states (behavior) across 2 to 3 weeks of everyday life. Within-person variability was high, such that the typical individual regularly and routinely manifested nearly all levels of all traits in his or her everyday behavior. Second, individual differences in central tendencies of behavioral distributions were almost perfectly stable. Third, amount of behavioral variability (and skew and kurtosis) were revealed as stable individual differences. Finally, amount of within-person variability in extraversion was shown to reflect individual differences in reactivity to extraversion-relevant situational cues. Thus, decontextualized and noncontingent Big-Five content is highly useful for descriptions of individuals' density distributions as wholes. Simultaneously, contextualized and contingent personality units (e.g., conditional traits, goals) are needed for describing the considerable within-person variation.
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Personality and Social Psychology Review
                Pers Soc Psychol Rev
                Informa UK Limited
                1088-8683
                1532-7957
                December 21 2016
                December 21 2016
                : 8
                : 4
                : 402-416
                Article
                10.1207/s15327957pspr0804_5
                c30564a6-661e-4bfa-838c-4e101f9c0960
                © 2016

                http://journals.sagepub.com/page/policies/text-and-data-mining-license

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