January 17, 2013 – New
Orleans – Extraversion does not just explain differences between
how people act at social events. How extraverted you are may
influence how the brain makes choices – specifically whether you
choose an immediate or delayed reward, according to a new study. The
work is part of a growing body of research on the vital role of
understanding personality in society.
"Understanding
how people differ from each other and how that affects various
outcomes is something that we all do on an intuitive basis, but
personality psychology attempts to bring scientific rigor to this
process,” says Colin DeYoung of the University of Minnesota, who
worked on the new study. "Personality affects academic and job
performance, social and political attitudes, the quality and
stability of social relationships, physical health and mortality, and
risk for mental disorder.”
DeYoung is one of several
researchers presenting new work in a special session today about
personality psychology at a conference in New Orleans. "DeYoung's
research in biology and neuroscience aids in the development of
theories of personality that provide explanations for persistent
patterns of behavior and experience,” says David Funder of the
University of California, Riverside, who is the new president of the
Society for Personality and Social Psychology (SPSP). "The
researchers presenting at this session represent just what
personality psychology can achieve and its relevance for important
social issues – from how personality affects health to guidance for
the new DSM-5.”
Personality to understand neural
differences
In the
new study, DeYoung and colleagues scanned people in an fMRI and asked
them to choose between smaller immediate rewards or larger delayed
rewards, for example $15 today versus $25 in three weeks. They then
correlated their choices and associated brain activity to various
personality traits.
They found that extraversion predicts
neural activity in a region of the brain called the medial
orbitofrontal cortex, which is involved in evaluating rewards. In the
task, this region responded more strongly to the possibility of
immediate rewards than to the possibility of delayed rewards. "This
is a brain region where we have previously shown that extraversion
predicts the size of the region, so our new study provides some
converging evidence for the importance of sensitivity to reward as
the basis of extraversion,” DeYoung says.
More broadly,
DeYoung works on understanding "what makes people tick, by
explaining the most important personality traits, what psychological
processes those traits represent, and how those processes are
generated by the brain,” he says. "The brain is an incredibly
complicated system, and I think it’s impressive that neuroscience
is making such great progress in understanding it. Linking brain
function to personality is another step in understanding how the
brain makes us who we are.”
Personality to improve
health
Researchers
are also finding that personality influences health over time. In
particular, new lifespan models that measure both personality and
health early and late in life, and multiple times in between, are
documenting that health is the result not only of genetics and
environmental factors but also of changeable personality
characteristics.
"Personality
develops in childhood and is probably most malleable in childhood,”
says Sarah Hampson of the Oregon Research Institute. Childhood is
when habits first become established, so understanding how
differences in personality affect health could point toward positive
behaviors that would help children later in life.
For
example in a new study, soon to be published in Health
Psychology, Hampson
and colleagues found that children lower in conscientiousness –
traits including being irresponsible and careless – had worse
health 40 years later, including greater obesity and higher
cholesterol. The study builds on past work showing that more
conscientious children live longer.
The
data come from more than 2,000 elementary school children in Hawaii
who received personality assessments in the 1960s. Funded by the
National Institute of Mental Health and the National Institute of
Aging, researchers were able to complete medical and psychological
examinations for 60% of the original group, who, as adults, agreed to
further studies starting in 1998. They found that the children rated
by their teachers as less conscientious had worse health status as
adults, particularly for their cardiovascular and metabolic systems.
The
work could point the way to childhood interventions, Hampson says.
"Parents and schools shape personality, and this is our opportunity
to support the development of conscientiousness – planfulness,
ability to delay gratification, self-control.” She adds: "Society
depends on such pro-social, self-regulated behavior.”
Personality
to evaluate mental health care
In
the mental health community, researchers have known for some time
that personality can greatly influence how patients respond to
particular treatments. But until recently, the guidebook for treating
mental illnesses – the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental
Disorders (DSM) – has not fully incorporated such personality data.
"The
influence of personality psychology has increased as it offers tools
and methods that are relevant to solving problems in psychiatric
classification, such as ways of developing models of differences
among people that are based on data as opposed to clinical
speculation,” says Robert Krueger of the University of Minnesota,
who helped update the soon-to-be-published DSM-5.
"DSM-5
contains a model of personality traits that derives from work in
personality psychology and recognizes that specific peoples'
personalities can't easily be placed in categorical boxes,” he
explains. Using this model, a therapist can better tailor treatments
for depression, for example, by distinguishing between a patient who
is generally agreeable versus one who it typically at odds with other
people. "The first person is likely to form a good working
relationship with the therapist, whereas the second person is likely
to be more challenging and require more effort by taking personality
features into account alongside 'particular conditions,'” Krueger
says.
The
DSM-5 thus shows how personality psychology can be directly applied
to mental health issues, Krueger says. "Indeed, DSM-5 may prove to
be a watershed moment in the history of psychiatric classification
because, more so than ever in the past, its construction was
influenced by the methods and findings of personality psychology,”
Funder says.
A special session on this
research "Contributions of Personality to Health, Biological and
Clinical Psychology” took place Jan. 17, 2013, at the SPSP annual
meeting. More than 3,600 scientists are in attendance at the meeting
in New Orleans from Jan. 17-19.
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SPSP promotes scientific
research that explores how people think, behave, feel, and interact.
The Society is the largest organization of social and personality
psychologists in the world.
Contacts:
Lisa
M.P. Munoz, SPSP Public Information Officer
703-951-3195
spsp.publicaffairs@gmail.com
@SPSPnews
Colin
DeYoung, University of Minnesota
cdeyoung@umn.edu
Sarah
Hampson, Oregon Research Institute
sarah@ori.org
Bob
Krueger, University of Minnesota
krueg038@umn.edu
David
Funder, University of California, Riverside
david.funder@ucr.edu