» Articles » PMID: 32926800

The Well-Being Benefits of Person-Culture Match Are Contingent on Basic Personality Traits

Overview
Journal Psychol Sci
Specialty Psychology
Date 2020 Sep 14
PMID 32926800
Citations 1
Authors
Affiliations
Soon will be listed here.
Abstract

People enjoy well-being benefits if their personal characteristics match those of their culture. This is integral to many psychological theories and-as a driver of migration-carries much societal relevance. But do people differ in the degree to which person-culture match confers well-being benefits? In the first-ever empirical test of that question, we examined whether the person-culture match effect is moderated by basic personality traits-the Big Two and Big Five. We relied on self-reports from 2,672,820 people across 102 countries and informant reports from 850,877 people across 61 countries. Communion, agreeableness, and neuroticism exacerbated the person-culture match effect, whereas agency, openness, extraversion, and conscientiousness diminished it. People who possessed low levels of communion coupled with high levels of agency evidenced no well-being benefits from person-culture match, and people who possessed low levels of agreeableness and neuroticism coupled with high levels of openness, extraversion, and conscientiousness even evidenced well-being costs. Those results have implications for theories building on the person-culture match effect, illuminate the mechanisms driving that effect, and help explain failures to replicate it.

Citing Articles

Extracting Agency and Communion From the Big Five: A Four-Way Competition.

Entringer T, Gebauer J, Paulhus D Assessment. 2021; 29(6):1216-1235.

PMID: 33813905 PMC: 9301169. DOI: 10.1177/10731911211003978.

References
1.
Ashton M, Lee K . Religiousness and the HEXACO personality factors and facets in a large online sample. J Pers. 2019; 87(6):1103-1118. DOI: 10.1111/jopy.12459. View

2.
Gebauer J, Sedikides C, Schonbrodt F, Bleidorn W, Rentfrow P, Potter J . The religiosity as social value hypothesis: A multi-method replication and extension across 65 countries and three levels of spatial aggregation. J Pers Soc Psychol. 2016; 113(3):e18-e39. DOI: 10.1037/pspp0000104. View

3.
Barr D, Levy R, Scheepers C, Tily H . Random effects structure for confirmatory hypothesis testing: Keep it maximal. J Mem Lang. 2014; 68(3). PMC: 3881361. DOI: 10.1016/j.jml.2012.11.001. View

4.
Ebert T, Gebauer J, Talman J, Rentfrow P . Religious people only live longer in religious cultural contexts: A gravestone analysis. J Pers Soc Psychol. 2020; 119(1):1-6. DOI: 10.1037/pspa0000187. View

5.
Gebauer J, Sedikides C, Neberich W . Religiosity, social self-esteem, and psychological adjustment: on the cross-cultural specificity of the psychological benefits of religiosity. Psychol Sci. 2012; 23(2):158-60. DOI: 10.1177/0956797611427045. View