Abstract
Various methods have been used to describe individuals’ desires to change their personality traits including: trait change inventories, identifying personality change goals in open-ended responses, and asking participants for goals to change personality directly. The current study is the first to assess personality change desires with multiple methods in the same sample (N = 500 undergraduates). Findings with each method were compared to meta-analyses of other studies utilizing each respective method, and methods were then compared within-person to explore how the same person might provide different information about their desire to change their personality with each method. The findings of each method replicated the results of other studies using that method very closely. Some deviations from previous the studies in the prevalence of certain goals were likely due to goals being collected during a global pandemic. The three methods did not show a high degree of convergence. Only participants desiring to increase Extraversion in one method tended to express desires to increase Extraversion in the other two methods. The methodological differences between the methods impact the conclusions that can be drawn with each.
Disclosure statement
No potential competing interest was reported by the author.
Open Scholarship
This article has earned the Center for Open Science badges for Open Data, Open Materials and Preregistered through Open Practices Disclosure. The data and materials are openly accessible at https://osf.io/tfa7r/?view_only=aaa813f0575d433b93be8022dc2abe2a, https://osf.io/8xf74/?view_only=1330fdd9ecb14d2480766077797dd6cd and https://osf.io/8xf74/?view_only=1330fdd9ecb14d2480766077797dd6cd. To obtain the author's disclosure form, please contact the Editor.
Notes
3 Studies used are: Asadi et al. (Citation2020), Costantini et al. (Citation2020; Study 2), Hudson and Fraley (Citation2016), Hudson and Roberts (Citation2014; Study 1 and 2), Hudson et al. (Citation2019), Hudson, Fraley et al. (Citation2020), Quintus et al. (Citation2017; older and younger sample); Robinson et al. (Citation2015), and Sun and Goodwin (Citation2020; Study 1 and 2).
4 Only the Baranski (Citation2018; US Sample) provided the necessary information for all traits.
5 Effect sizes from Baranski et al. (Citation2017) were reported as Cohen’s ds, these were converted to r’s using the r package Effect Size and Confidence Interval Calculator (MOTE; Buchanan et al., Citation2019). Group sizes were calculated by taking the sample size and multiplying it by the proportion of the sample reporting to have a goal in that category and rounding to the nearest whole number (e.g., 602 x .41 = 247).
6 Provided in personal communication.