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The place of impulsiveness in a dimensional system of personality description
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1977
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Three questionnaire studies factor‑analysed impulsiveness items and correlated the resulting factors with the major personality dimensions extraversion, neuroticism, psychoticism, and lie. Broad impulsiveness decomposes into four replicable factors—narrow impulsiveness, risk‑taking, non‑planning, and liveliness—that correlate positively with each other, sociability, extraversion, psychoticism, neuroticism, and lie, underscoring the importance of distinguishing broad from narrow impulsiveness for understanding extraversion and guiding future experimental research.
Three questionnaire studies are reported in which sets of items traditionally used to measure impulsiveness were intercorrelated and the resulting matrices factor analysed; the factors extracted were correlated with measures of the major personality dimensions E (extraversion), N (neuroticism) and P (psychoticism), and also with the L (lie; dissimulation) scale. It was found that impulsiveness in the broad sense (Imp B ) breaks down into four factors (narrow impulsiveness or Imp N , risk‐taking, non‐planning and liveliness) which are replicable from sample to sample and from males to females. These factors are positively correlated with each other and also with sociability to varying degrees. Imp B correlates quite well with extraversion, but even better with psychoticism; Imp N correlates positively with N and P, suggesting that this trait is somewhat pathological. It is suggested that the distinction between Imp B and Imp N is crucial for the discussion of the nature and measurement of extraversion and also for future experimental work on the causal background and experimental testing of impulsive behaviour patterns.