Title of article
The Impact of the Big Five Personality Traits on Reports of Child Behavior Problems by Different Informants
Author/Authors
Gert Kroes، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
دوماهنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2005
Pages
10
From page
231
To page
240
Abstract
The present study compared ratings of a standardized sample of child behavior problems across
informants and examined the effects of informant personality traits on child behavior ratings by
mothers, teachers, and group-care workers. Participants were 55 clinic-referred children, aged
6–12 years. All informants watched and rated the same 17-min videotaped behavior sample of a
familiar target child. Independent trained observers rated the same videotapes to provide criterion
ratings. Informants’ personality traits were assessed using the NEO Five Factor Personality Inventory.
Results showed that mothers reported fewer behavior problems than did the professionals, that the
informants who were familiar with the child reported more behavior problems than did the independent
observers, and that higher levels of informant neuroticism were related to higher ratings
of child behavior problems in the case of the professionals, but not in the case of the mothers. In
addition, group-care workers who were less extraverted and open were likely to report more child
behavior problems than group-care workers with normal levels of extraversion and openness. Finally,
no relations were found between agreeableness or conscientiousness and ratings of child behavior.
Findings suggest that professionals who work with children are not immune to distortions based on
their own personality.
Keywords
Bias , informant characteristics , cross-informant agreement , child assessment.
Journal title
Journal of Abnormal Child Psychology
Serial Year
2005
Journal title
Journal of Abnormal Child Psychology
Record number
828786
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