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Openness to Experience,Intellect, and Cognitive Ability
Authors:Colin G. DeYoung  Lena C. Quilty  Jordan B. Peterson  Jeremy R. Gray
Affiliation:1. Department of Psychology , University of Minnesota;2. Centre for Addiction and Mental Health , Toronto , Ontario , Canada;3. Department of Psychology , University of Toronto , Canada;4. Department of Psychology , Yale University
Abstract:An instrument designed to separate 2 midlevel traits within each of the Big Five (the Big Five Aspect Scales [BFAS]) was used to clarify the relation of personality to cognitive ability. The BFAS measures Openness to Experience and Intellect as separate (although related) traits, and refers to the broader Big Five trait as Openness/Intellect. In 2 samples (N = 125 and 189), Intellect was independently associated with general intelligence (g) and with verbal and nonverbal intelligence about equally. Openness was independently associated only with verbal intelligence. Implications of these findings are discussed for the empirical and conceptual relations of intelligence to personality and for the mechanisms potentially underlying both Openness/Intellect and cognitive ability.
Keywords:
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