Examining five-factor model personality traits among recently divorced Danes

Publikation: Bidrag til tidsskriftTidsskriftartikelForskningfagfællebedømt

Standard

Examining five-factor model personality traits among recently divorced Danes. / Strizzi, Jenna Marie; Ciprić, Ana; Sander, Søren; Hald, Gert Martin; Øverup, Camilla S.

I: Nordic Psychology, 2024.

Publikation: Bidrag til tidsskriftTidsskriftartikelForskningfagfællebedømt

Harvard

Strizzi, JM, Ciprić, A, Sander, S, Hald, GM & Øverup, CS 2024, 'Examining five-factor model personality traits among recently divorced Danes', Nordic Psychology. https://doi.org/10.1080/19012276.2024.2316654

APA

Strizzi, J. M., Ciprić, A., Sander, S., Hald, G. M., & Øverup, C. S. (2024). Examining five-factor model personality traits among recently divorced Danes. Nordic Psychology. https://doi.org/10.1080/19012276.2024.2316654

Vancouver

Strizzi JM, Ciprić A, Sander S, Hald GM, Øverup CS. Examining five-factor model personality traits among recently divorced Danes. Nordic Psychology. 2024. https://doi.org/10.1080/19012276.2024.2316654

Author

Strizzi, Jenna Marie ; Ciprić, Ana ; Sander, Søren ; Hald, Gert Martin ; Øverup, Camilla S. / Examining five-factor model personality traits among recently divorced Danes. I: Nordic Psychology. 2024.

Bibtex

@article{73bf53397e3e4b6790db8c97516415c2,
title = "Examining five-factor model personality traits among recently divorced Danes",
abstract = "One of the main theoretical perspectives for understanding the mechanism responsible for the extensively reported mental and physical health disparities between divorcees and continuously married populations is the Selection Perspective. This perspective posits that due to “problematic personal characteristics of poorly adjusted people”, they are at higher risk for both divorce and poorer health outcomes. A criticism of this perspective is that it may contribute to divorce-related stigma, especially if there is insufficient empirical data to support it. The present study compared the Five Factor Model personality scores of 676 recently divorced Danes (Nwomen = 446, Nmen = 230) to the general Danish population normative data of the same instrument. Divorced women reported higher conscientiousness than the Danish norm, whereas divorced men had higher neuroticism scores than the Danish norm. Divorced participants of both genders had higher agreeableness and openness levels than the Danish norms. Though the differences were significant, they were small and did not provide compelling evidence for the Selection Perspective{\textquoteright}s assumption, meaning that the recently divorced participants{\textquoteright} personality characteristics did not differ from the general population in ways that could be considered to constitute problematic personal characteristics. Future research should further evaluate the adequacy of the Selection Perspective.Keywords: Big fivedivorcenormspersonality",
author = "Strizzi, {Jenna Marie} and Ana Cipri{\'c} and S{\o}ren Sander and Hald, {Gert Martin} and {\O}verup, {Camilla S.}",
year = "2024",
doi = "10.1080/19012276.2024.2316654",
language = "English",
journal = "Nordic Psychology",
issn = "1901-2276",
publisher = "Routledge",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Examining five-factor model personality traits among recently divorced Danes

AU - Strizzi, Jenna Marie

AU - Ciprić, Ana

AU - Sander, Søren

AU - Hald, Gert Martin

AU - Øverup, Camilla S.

PY - 2024

Y1 - 2024

N2 - One of the main theoretical perspectives for understanding the mechanism responsible for the extensively reported mental and physical health disparities between divorcees and continuously married populations is the Selection Perspective. This perspective posits that due to “problematic personal characteristics of poorly adjusted people”, they are at higher risk for both divorce and poorer health outcomes. A criticism of this perspective is that it may contribute to divorce-related stigma, especially if there is insufficient empirical data to support it. The present study compared the Five Factor Model personality scores of 676 recently divorced Danes (Nwomen = 446, Nmen = 230) to the general Danish population normative data of the same instrument. Divorced women reported higher conscientiousness than the Danish norm, whereas divorced men had higher neuroticism scores than the Danish norm. Divorced participants of both genders had higher agreeableness and openness levels than the Danish norms. Though the differences were significant, they were small and did not provide compelling evidence for the Selection Perspective’s assumption, meaning that the recently divorced participants’ personality characteristics did not differ from the general population in ways that could be considered to constitute problematic personal characteristics. Future research should further evaluate the adequacy of the Selection Perspective.Keywords: Big fivedivorcenormspersonality

AB - One of the main theoretical perspectives for understanding the mechanism responsible for the extensively reported mental and physical health disparities between divorcees and continuously married populations is the Selection Perspective. This perspective posits that due to “problematic personal characteristics of poorly adjusted people”, they are at higher risk for both divorce and poorer health outcomes. A criticism of this perspective is that it may contribute to divorce-related stigma, especially if there is insufficient empirical data to support it. The present study compared the Five Factor Model personality scores of 676 recently divorced Danes (Nwomen = 446, Nmen = 230) to the general Danish population normative data of the same instrument. Divorced women reported higher conscientiousness than the Danish norm, whereas divorced men had higher neuroticism scores than the Danish norm. Divorced participants of both genders had higher agreeableness and openness levels than the Danish norms. Though the differences were significant, they were small and did not provide compelling evidence for the Selection Perspective’s assumption, meaning that the recently divorced participants’ personality characteristics did not differ from the general population in ways that could be considered to constitute problematic personal characteristics. Future research should further evaluate the adequacy of the Selection Perspective.Keywords: Big fivedivorcenormspersonality

U2 - 10.1080/19012276.2024.2316654

DO - 10.1080/19012276.2024.2316654

M3 - Journal article

JO - Nordic Psychology

JF - Nordic Psychology

SN - 1901-2276

ER -

ID: 384363242