Number of the records: 1  

Personality and conceptions of religiosity across the world’s religions

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    SYSNO ASEP0605328
    Document TypeJ - Journal Article
    R&D Document TypeJournal Article
    Subsidiary JČlánek ve WOS
    TitlePersonality 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, ORCID
    Number of authors140
    Article number104496
    Source TitleJournal of Research in Personality. - : Elsevier - ISSN 0092-6566
    Roč. 110, červen (2024)
    Number of pages16 s.
    Publication formPrint - P
    Languageeng - English
    CountryUS - United States
    Keywordsreligiosity ; country variation ; personality traits ; religious affiliations
    Subject RIVAN - Psychology
    OECD categoryPsychology (including human - machine relations)
    Method of publishingLimited access
    Institutional supportPSU-E - RVO:68081740
    UT WOS001298336100001
    EID SCOPUS85193580679
    DOI https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jrp.2024.104496
    AnnotationResearch 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.
    WorkplaceInstitute of Psychology
    ContactŠtěpánka Halamová, Halamova@praha.psu.cas.cz, Tel.: 222 222 096
    Year of Publishing2025
    Electronic addresshttps://doi.org/10.1016/j.jrp.2024.104496
Number of the records: 1  

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