Individual differences in contingencies between situation characteristics and personality states

Kuper, N; Breil, S B; Horstmann, K T; Roemer, L; Lischetzke, T; Sherman, R A; Back, M D; Denissen, J J A; Rauthmann, J F

Research article (journal) | Peer reviewed

Abstract

Contingencies between situational variables and psychological states have been proposed as key individual difference variables by many theoretical approaches to personality. Despite their relevance, the basic properties, nomological correlates, and factor structure of individual differences in contingencies have not been examined so far. We address these fundamental questions in five studies with overall N = 952 participants and N = 32,052 unique assessments. Individual differences in situation characteristic–state contingencies (SCSCs) between DIAMONDS situation characteristics and Big Five personality states were examined in everyday life. SCSCs showed substantial variation across participants, and individual differences in them were moderately reliable (average meta-analytic reliability = .47) and short-term stable (average meta-analytic latent stability = .43). They were weakly and inconsistently related to average personality states, self-reported personality traits, subjective happiness, and sociodemographic variables across studies. However, there were meaningful intercorrelations among SCSCs that could be described by four factors: contingencies involving (1) positive states and situational problems, (2) positive states and situational rewards, (3) thinking/work and requirements of thinking/work, and (4) neurotic states. Overall, our findings support the notion of SCSCs as potentially important individual difference variables, and we sketch future lines of research on contingencies. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2022 APA, all rights reserved)

Details about the publication

JournalJournal of Personality and Social Psychology
Volume123
Issue5
Page range1166-1198
StatusPublished
Release year2022
Keywordscontingencies, person ×situation interactions, situation characteristics, personality states, personality dynamics

Authors from the University of Münster

Back, Mitja