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Personality and conceptions of religiosity across the world’s religions
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SYSNO ASEP 0605328 Document Type J - Journal Article R&D Document Type Journal Article Subsidiary J Článek ve WOS Title Personality and conceptions of religiosity across the world’s religions Author(s) Baranski, E. (US)
Gardiner, G. (US)
Shaman, N. (US)
Shagan, J. (US)
Lee, D. (US)
Funder, D. (US)
Beramendi, M. (AR)
Bastian, B. (AU)
Neubauer, A. (AT)
Cortez, D. (BO)
Roth, E. (BO)
Torres, A. (BR)
Zanini, D.S. (BR)
Petkova, K. (BG)
Tracy, J. L. (CA)
Amiot, C. (CA)
Pelletier-Dumas, M. (CA)
González, R. (CL)
Rosenbluth, A. (CL)
Salgado, S.A.S. (CL)
Guan, Y. (GB)
Yang, Y. (CN)
Forero, D. (CO)
Camargo, A. (CO)
Papastefanakis, E. (GR)
Graf, Sylvie (PSU-E) ORCID, RID, SAI
Hřebíčková, Martina (PSU-E) RID, SAI, ORCIDNumber of authors 140 Article number 104496 Source Title Journal of Research in Personality. - : Elsevier - ISSN 0092-6566
Roč. 110, červen (2024)Number of pages 16 s. Publication form Print - P Language eng - English Country US - United States Keywords religiosity ; country variation ; personality traits ; religious affiliations Subject RIV AN - Psychology OECD category Psychology (including human - machine relations) Method of publishing Limited access Institutional support PSU-E - RVO:68081740 UT WOS 001298336100001 EID SCOPUS 85193580679 DOI https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jrp.2024.104496 Annotation Research assessing personality traits and religiosity across cultures has typically neglected variation across religious affiliations and has been limited to a small number of personality traits. This study examines the relationship between the Big Five personality traits and their facets, two theoretically distinct measures of religiosity, and twelve other personality traits across seven religious affiliations and 61 countries/regions. The proportion of participants following a religion varied substantially across countries (e.g., Indonesia = 99%, Estonia = 7%). Both measures of religiosity were related to agreeableness, conscientiousness, happiness, and fairness, however, relations with religiosity as a social axiom were stronger and less variable across religious affiliations. Additionally, personality-religiosity links were more robust in low-development, high-conflict, and collectivist nations. Workplace Institute of Psychology Contact Štěpánka Halamová, Halamova@praha.psu.cas.cz, Tel.: 222 222 096 Year of Publishing 2025 Electronic address https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jrp.2024.104496
Number of the records: 1