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  2. Person–situation debate - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Person–situation_debate

    Personality traits are important because personality traits exist. The field of personality psychology gained attention when Allport had his assistant, Henry Odbert, counted how many different words in the English dictionary could be used to describe differences in personality. Odbert reported 17, 953. [22]

  3. Lexical hypothesis - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lexical_hypothesis

    Being the most important of the four columns to Allport and Odbert and future psychologists, [4] its terms most closely relate to those used by modern personality psychologists (e.g., aggressive, introverted, sociable). Allport and Odbert suggested that this column represented a minimum rather than final list of trait terms.

  4. 16PF Questionnaire - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/16PF_Questionnaire

    This statement has become known as the Lexical Hypothesis, which posits that if there is a word for a trait, it must be a real trait. Allport and Odbert used this hypothesis to identify personality traits by working through two of the most comprehensive dictionaries of the English language available at the time, and extracting 18,000 ...

  5. Gordon Allport - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gordon_Allport

    In his work, Concepts of Trait and Personality (1927), Allport states that traits are "habits possessed of social significance" [16] and become very predictable, traits are a unit of personality. Allport emphasized that an individual's personality is the single most unique thing about a person. [16]

  6. Big Five personality traits - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Big_Five_personality_traits

    The Big Five personality traits accounted for 14% of the variance in GPA, suggesting that personality traits make some contributions to academic performance. Furthermore, reflective learning styles (synthesis-analysis and elaborative processing) were able to mediate the relationship between openness and GPA.

  7. Agreeableness - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Agreeableness

    As is the case with all Big Five personality traits, the roots of the modern concept of agreeableness can be traced to a 1936 study by Gordon Allport and Henry S. Odbert. [7] Seven years after that study, Raymond Cattell published a cluster analysis of the thousands of personality-related words identified by Allport and Odbert. [8]

  8. Today’s NYT ‘Strands’ Hints, Spangram and Answers for ...

    www.aol.com/today-nyt-strands-hints-spangram...

    An example spangram with corresponding theme words: PEAR, FRUIT, BANANA, APPLE, etc. Need a hint? Find non-theme words to get hints. For every 3 non-theme words you find, you earn a hint.

  9. Floyd Henry Allport - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Floyd_Henry_Allport

    Floyd Allport and his brother Gordon Allport collaborated on this 1921 paper which outlined the dimensions of the personality assessments that they used while studying personality. [6] They provided information of how they arrived at these classifications and brief examples of what the manifestations of the traits will be in the actual person.