Neuroticism-Extraversion-Openness Personality Inventory (NEO-PI, NEO-PI-R) - Personality StudiesPilkonis, Paul (2019) Neuroticism-Extraversion-Openness Personality Inventory (NEO-PI, NEO-PI-R) - Personality Studies. [Dataset] (Unpublished)
AbstractThis submission contains data and codebooks from several personality studies conducted 1990-2017, organized by assessment instrument. For demographic information about the study participants, please refer to Background Information Questionnaire (BIQ) - Personality Studies (http://d-scholarship.pitt.edu/id/eprint/35424). Description: (From Miller & Pilkonis 2006): “The NEO Personality Inventory includes 180 items rated on a 5-point scale; 48 items constitute each of the domains of neuroticism, extraversion, and openness, and 18 items are used to assess agreeableness and conscientiousness, respectively. (From Scott, Stepp, & Pilkonis 2014): The NEO-PI–R is a reliable and valid measure of the five personality traits that comprise the five-factor model of personality, each of which is further broken down into six trait facets, with eight items corresponding to each facet. Participants were asked to rate the degree to which each item described them using a 5-point scale ranging from 0 (strongly disagree) to 4 (strongly agree). Data Notes: • the original version of the NEO-PI did not provide facet scores for Agreeableness and Conscientiousness; only scale scores were computed for these domains. • IFB data is a clinician-rated scoresheet only The data files for Validity - Participant and Validity - SO were replaced 4/24/2019 with more complete files. Reliability: (From McCrae & Costa, 2010) The internal consistency of the NEO PI-R was high, at: N = .92, E = .89, O = .87, A = .86, C = .90. The internal consistency of the facet scales ranged from .56 to .81. The test-retest reliability for over 6 years, as reported in the NEO PI-R manual, was the following: N = .83, E = .82, O = .83, A = .63, C = .79. References: McCrae, R. R., & Costa, P. T. Jr., (2010). NEO Inventories: Professional manual. Lutz, FL: Psychological Assessment Resources, Inc. Scott, L.N., Stepp, S.D., & Pilkonis, P.A. (2014). Prospective associations between features of borderline personality disorder, emotion dysregulation, and aggression. Personality Disorders, 5(3), 278-288. Share
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