Results 301 to 310 of about 99,449 (339)
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Handwriting as a Correlate of Extraversion
Journal of Personality Assessment, 1978The validity of graphologists' claims that handwriting is a measure of extraversion was examined in this study. Three handwriting measures, line slope, letter slant, and letter width were chosen, and the relationship between these measures and extraversion as measured by the Eysenck Personality Inventory was studied.
D A, Rosenthal, R, Lines
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Journal of the American Academy of Child & Adolescent Psychiatry, 2003
Journal of the American Academy of Child & Adolescent Psychiatry - Vol.
Lucy I, Spirling, Raj, Persaud
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Journal of the American Academy of Child & Adolescent Psychiatry - Vol.
Lucy I, Spirling, Raj, Persaud
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Extraversion and Emotional Reactivity.
Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, 2004Six mood induction studies and a meta-analysis were conducted to test 2 models of the extraversion-pleasant affect relation. The affect-level model suggests that extraverts should be happier than introverts in both neutral and positive mood conditions. The reactivity model posits that extraverts react particularly strongly to pleasant stimuli and that ...
Richard E, Lucas, Brendan M, Baird
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Anxiety, Neuroticism and Extraversion
Psychological Reports, 1971Very high positive correlations ( N = 85) were observed between the Taylor MAS, Cattell's Anxiety Scale Questionnaire and the neuroticism dimension of the EPI. There were no significant correlations between these and the extraversion dimension of the EPI.
R H, Bull, K T, Strongman
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Extraversion and Exercise Addiction
The Journal of Psychology, 1999Extraversion has been suggested as a factor associated with addiction. This claim was tested in relation to exercise addiction. Twelve exercise addicts were compared with 12 nonaddicted individuals who were committed to regular exercise and with 12 nonexercising individuals drawn from the same student population. Addicted exercisers did not differ from
S, Mathers, M B, Walker
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On the Psychophysiology of Extraversion
2004Initial research on individual differences in personality centered on the development of questionnaires. These were the only available tools for the description and prediction of behavior. Later, trait models were developed that attempted to move from personality description to a multilevel causal form of explanation.
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Extraversion and the McCollough Effect
British Journal of Psychology, 1993Two experiments are reported which show that extraverts experience significantly stronger McCollough Effects than introverts. In both experiments the strength of the McCollough Effect (ME) was measured by the match‐interference method devised by Shute (1979). The technique was found to be predictably sensitive to the eye tested and
N A, Logue, W, Byth
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Anxiety, extraversion and smoking
British Journal of Social and Clinical Psychology, 1978In previous large‐scale studies, smoking has been found to be associated either with extra version or anxiety, though not both. Using a large population of adult American males, anxiety and extraversion scores were examined in groups of never smokers, former light, former heavy, current light and current heavy smokers to test the hypotheses that ...
R R, McCrae, P T, Costa, R, Bossé
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Mobility, extraversion, and neuroticism
The Pavlovian Journal of Biological Science, 1985Mobility, a property of Pavlovian higher nervous activity, was measured using an induction task. Negative induction, following presentation of an excitatory stimulus, is an index of mobility of excitation and positive induction, following presentation of an inhibitory stimulus is an index of mobility of inhibition.
Dall P.J., White K.D.
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Pain Perception and Extraversion
Perceptual and Motor Skills, 1974Eysenck's ( 1960) theory of personality indicates a positive relationship between Extraversion and the inhibition of stimulation. Ss high on Extraversion should, accord~ng to this theory, have higher thresholds for pain and greater tolerance of pain than low Ss H~gh scorers should, in other words, interpret a given amount of stimulation as less painful
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