Publication | Closed Access
Longitudinal Hierarchical Linear Modeling Analyses of California Psychological Inventory Data From Age 33 to 75: An Examination of Stability and Change in Adult Personality
38
Citations
28
References
2003
Year
Adult PersonalityBehavioral SciencesPersonality PsychologyPsychopathologyPsychiatryCpi ScalesTwenty AspectsSocial SciencesPsychometricsPersonality DevelopmentAdult DevelopmentMental HealthMedicinePsychologyPersonality ChangeDevelopmental Psychology
Twenty aspects of personality assessed via the California Psychological Inventory (CPI; Gough & Bradley, 1996) from age 33 to 75 were examined in a sample of 279 individuals. Oakland Growth Study and Berkeley Guidance Study members completed the CPI a maximum of 4 times. We used longitudinal hierarchical linear modeling (HLM) to ask the following: Which personality characteristics change and which do not? Five CPI scales showed uniform lack of change, 2 showed heterogeneous change giving an averaged lack of change, 4 showed linear increases with age, 2 showed linear decreases with age, 4 showed gender or sample differences in linear change, 1 showed a quadratic peak, and 2 showed a quadratic nadir. The utility of HLM becomes apparent in portraying the complexity of personality change and stability.
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