Personality Psychology Podcast

personalitypsychologypodcast
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Jan 16, 2024 • 22min

#40 Paper Spotlight with David Hughes and Paul Irwing

In this episode, Lisanne de Moor spoke with David Hughes and Paul Irwing, two of the authors of a recent publication in the European Journal of Personality titled "Toward a taxonomy of personality facets". The authors summarize their article and its studies and outline how they developed the facet map.
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Dec 22, 2023 • 43min

#39 Life events and personality change with Wiebke Bleidorn and Chris Hopwood

Many lay people and scientists think that life events can change personality traits. But proving or disproving this has been surprisingly challenging. Wiebke Bleidorn and Chris Hopwood are among the leading researchers on this topic, and they were involved in a recent large study that summarized the evidence so far. They will talk to René Mõttus about the latest research on life events and personality trait change, and discuss possible ways forward.
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Nov 28, 2023 • 37min

#38 How to do the most good? Effective altruism, animals, and future risks with Lucius Caviola

In this episode, Lucius Caviola discusses his psychological research on effective altruism and how people can be encouraged to give more effectively. You can try out effective giving yourself using his research-based donation platform https://givingmultiplier.org/personality. The episode also explores Lucius' research on how we perceive the value of animals and think about future risks. 
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Oct 27, 2023 • 27min

#37 Sense of purpose with Gabrielle Pfund

Have you ever pondered about your purpose? In this episode, we talked with Gabrielle Pfund about sense of purpose. What does it mean to have a sense of purpose, how can we measure it, and how is it related to important life outcomes? Gabrielle also describes the characteristics of people who are more likely to have a sense of purpose and in what direction her research is headed.
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Oct 17, 2023 • 44min

#36 Personality change interventions with Mathias Allemand, Gabriel Olaru, and Christoph Flückiger

There is a lot of interest in the idea that people can voluntarily change their personality traits. René Mõttus talks to Mathias Allemand, Gabriel Olaru, and Christoph Flückiger about personality change interventions. Why people want to change their personality traits, how can they do it, and how long could the effects last? They also discuss ethical issues related to trait change, and whether most people have already been subjected to a personality change intervention – at school. 
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Sep 25, 2023 • 56min

#35 Personality and aging with Flavia Chereches, Denis Gerstorf, Eileen Graham, and Dan Mroczek

In this episode, Lisanne de Moor talks with four researchers in the field of personality and aging about common trends in personality change into old age, antecedents and consequences thereof and, most importantly, individual differences.
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Aug 25, 2023 • 34min

#34 Goals and motivations with Marie Hennecke and Jana Nikitin

In this episode, Marie Hennecke and Jana Nikitin talk about their research on goals and motivations. Specifically, they discuss why goals and motivations are important, how they change across the lifespan, and how we can achieve our goals—and even change our personality traits.
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Jul 25, 2023 • 11min

#33 Paper Spotlight with Emily Willroth

What is a good life? And can people have it? A recent European Journal of Personality paper authored by Emily Willroth and colleagues explored this question among U.S. Americans and Japanese, and also asked whether most people have the lives that they want.
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Jun 29, 2023 • 40min

#32 Narrative identity with Jonathan Adler, Kate McLean, and Monisha Pasupathi

In this episode, Lisanne de Moor talks with three experts on what narrative identity is, what important contributions it makes to the field of personality psychology, and what is needed to further advance research on narrative identity.
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Jun 14, 2023 • 42min

#31 Attachment, optimism, and honesty with Bill Chopik

Personality research occupies itself with not only the Big Five traits but a myriad of other important constructs. Bill Chopik talks in this episode about his research on attachment, optimism, and honesty, and also close relationships (including pets). He shares his experience with cross-cultural and lifespan studies, and important lessons from grad school.

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