Top download from APA Journals in 2025 examines occupational differences in #personality traits, drawing on Big Five domains and personality nuances. Full article + interactive tool to explore the results ➡️ https://bit.ly/3NMyk3h @katlinanni.bsky.social @ukuvainik.bsky.social @renemottus.bsky.social
04.02.2026 18:06
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New episode alert! 🚨 @renemottus.bsky.social spoke with Elliot Berkman, @kaitlynmwerner.bsky.social and @andero.bsky.social about self-regulation and affect regulation, and how each of the guests' research connects to personality psychology. Check it out!
30.12.2025 00:10
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For those submitting a symposium to the ECP22 (deadline soon!): I added details to the submission instructions.
www.ecp22edinburgh.org/submission
27.11.2025 12:55
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For those coming to the ECP22 in Edinburgh, 2026:
You can now book more affordable Summer Stay rooms (75 rooms currently available at a cheaper price)
For details:
www.ecp22edinburgh.org/accommodation
22.11.2025 10:15
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Reminder: The submission deadline for ECP22 is December 7th.
www.ecp22edinburgh.org/submission
19.11.2025 09:49
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🔔 Those coming to the ECP22 in Edinburgh: Consider booking accommodation early!
Edinburgh is a very popular place.
Here are accommodation tips for ECP folks:
docs.google.com/document/d/1...
📝 Submissions & registrations are also open:
ecp22edinburgh.org
#ecp22
06.11.2025 17:11
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Small samples
05.11.2025 22:50
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Why aren't some of the strongest personality neuroscience papers getting widely cited?
04.11.2025 17:08
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ECP22 Registration is now open:
www.ecp22edinburgh.org/registration
04.11.2025 13:01
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Reminder: the 22nd European Conference on Personality, ECP22, Edinburgh, July 2026, is accepting submissions until 07/12. Submit a symposium, talk, or poster! We promise you the best research, many smart discussions, social fun, and a fantastic historic city.
www.ecp22edinburgh.org/submission
24.10.2025 08:59
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Personality change people: does it make sense to think that to change a broader trait domain (neuroticism, agreeableness, conscientiousness) one could consider starting with those facets/nuances that are furthest from the desired levels?
(Most room for change?)
26.09.2025 21:04
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21 to 24 July 2026
19.09.2025 08:43
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Keynote speakers: @tuckerdrob.bsky.social @foswald.bsky.social Ellen Hamaker
Hands-on workshops by:
@tedmond.bsky.social & @ukuvainik.bsky.social (genomic analyses)
@dirkwulff.bsky.social (LLMs in personality research)
www.ecp22edinburgh.org/programme
18.09.2025 15:21
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European Conference on Personality, Edinburgh, 2026
Submissions are now open for 22nd European Conference on Personality (Edinburgh, 2026); deadline 7/12/25.
Keynote speakers and pre-conference workshops have also been confirmed.
www.ecp22edinburgh.org/submission
18.09.2025 15:21
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Rethinking measurement invariance causally
Highlights:
It is preferable to work with a causal definition of measurement invariance
A violation of measurement invariance is a potentially substantively interesting observation
Standard tests for measurement invariance rely on strong assumptions
Group differences can be thought of as descriptive results
Conceptual graph illustration the central points of the manuscript. A group variable is potentiall connected to a construct of interest which affects items. Measurement invariance is violated if the group variable directly affects the items, for example by modifying the loadings from the construct to the items, or by directly affecting an item
To make this less abstract, consider a scenario where students take an exam, R, meant to capture some ability, T, and then are admitted to a program, V, depending on their exam results: R → V. This is sufficient to result in a violation of the statistical definition of measurement invariance. Exam results and admission are not independent given ability because exam results have a direct effect on admission. Even if we know somebody’s ability (e.g., we know it’s very high), learning about their admission status (e.g., they were not admitted) can tell us something about their exam result (e.g., it may have been worse than expected). According to the causal definition, this in itself does not constitute measurement bias, which seems a sensible conclusion here. After all, the scenario does not involve any reason to believe that the measurement process varied systematically by admission status. Admission happens after the exams took place, it cannot retroactively influence the measurement process (and, for example, lead to unfair treatment depending on admission status).
New paper out with @boryslaw.bsky.social 🥳 In which we sketch out how to rethink measurement invariance causally for applied researchers. And provide a causal definition of measurement invariance!
www.sciencedirect.com/science/arti...
11.09.2025 09:11
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TACT: Trisect And Cross-Tabulate to understand and visualise correlations
I once proposed a simple tool to understand and visualise correlations, TACT.
doi.org/10.5964/ps.7...
This app makes it even easier to use: apps.psych.ut.ee/TACT/
05.09.2025 17:15
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Since otherwise the stability is confounded with test-specific variance (e.g., facets/nuances, stable item interpretations etc).
It's like people define latent traits as the shared variance of multiple indicators cross-sectionally -- here we extend to longitudinal data.
11.07.2025 14:15
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I suppose yes, this makes them real in some sense.
My follow-up question is: if these "real" Big Five exist independently of their tests, then to study the "real" rank-order stability of the Big Five, we should assess them with different tests at different time-points.
11.07.2025 14:15
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Personality folks, is there an argument to be made for latent Big Five traits that exist independently of the particular test we happen to use to assess them?
(If yes, I will have a follow-up question)
10.07.2025 19:08
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Now published in Current Opinion, we show why personality research should embrace multi-rater studies and how this can be achieved in practice, even at scale. Often, this is the most realistic way to avoid (reliably) invalid conclusions.
doi.org/10.1016/j.co...
30.06.2025 16:16
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What I really enjoy about Bluesky is how you can serendipitously learn so much stuff. You’ve probably heard of Dunbar’s number — the idea that humans can only maintain X stable social relationships, because *gestures vaguely* brain? Here’s a deconstruction of it.>
14.06.2025 06:48
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Good thing there is a reference for why this (or any such) number makes no sense.
14.06.2025 10:29
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Folks, it's time to submit your papers to PCI Psychology. Here is our invitation to you, taken from our editorial osf.io/preprints/ps...
12.06.2025 12:27
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What is the best public domain occupational interest test currently available (still relevant for the current job market)?
11.06.2025 10:43
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And how that difference plays out in other demographic trends (see number of kids 👀). Personality is up next 😁
09.06.2025 11:48
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OSF
doi.org/10.31234/osf...
Sorry.
07.06.2025 12:55
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