Association for Research in Personality (ARP)

First Stand-Alone Conference

Evanston, IL

July 17-18, 2009

 

Poster Sessions

 

 

Poster Session #1.  Friday, July 17, 4:45-6:00 PM.

 

  1. Bashir Abdullah and Alicia Limke.  Multicultural differences in self-conceptualization:  An examination of differences in American and Indian self-description.
  2. Robert A. Ackerman, Edward A. Witt, and M. Brent Donnellan.  Critically evaluating the Narcissistic Personality Inventory:  Conceptual and psychometric considerations.
  3. Jonathan M. Adler.  The co-evolution of narrative identity and mental health over the course of psychotherapy:  Results from a prospective, longitudinal study.
  4. Kimberly Angelo.  The up-regulation of positive affect:  Cognitive and behavioral strategies in everyday life.
  5. Tabashi Aobayashi.  Inhibition of self-concept promotes affect regulation.
  6. Elizabeth Austin and Ya-Shuyan Jin.  Personality associations of visual processing style.
  7. Dick P. H. Barelds and Pieternel Dijkstra.  Narcissism and social comparison:  The role of self-esteem.
  8. Sarah Berger, Cristina Brown, and Brenda McDaniel.  Exploring morality through family dynamics and individual differences.
  9. Tim Bogg and Peter R. Finn.  A self-regulatory model of behavioral disinhibition in late adolescence:  Integrating personality traits, externalizing psychopathology, and cognitive capacity.
  10. Matthew Braslow.  An exploration of faith and politics:  What narratives reveal.
  11. William R. Calabrese and Leonard J. Simms.  A short-term prospective study of psychosocial dysfunction associated with personality pathology.
  12. Erika N. Carlson, R. Michael Furr, and Simine Vazire.  Differential meta-accuracy:  People are aware of the relative impressions they make.
  13. Avner Caspi and Sonia Roccas.  Accuracy in personality impression is affected by social identity and mode of information gathering.
  14. Joey Cheng, Jessica L. Tracy, and Joseph Henrich.  Leading by fear or admiration?  Personality predictors of two fundamental leadership styles.
  15. Allan Clifton.  Interpersonal perceptions across the social network.
  16. Phebe Cramer.  Denial and undercontrol are related to externalizing behavior problems in early adolescence.
  17. Boelle de Raad and Dick P. H. Barelds.  Psycho-lexical openness to experience.
  18. Pieternel Dijkstra, Dick P. H. Barelds, Noks Nauta, and Sieuwke Ronner.  Partner preferences among the gifted.
  19. Joseph Eblin and Robert Arkin.  Gender differences in claimed self-handicapping:  The Value of Effort Scale.
  20.  Jennifer Fayard, Brent W. Roberts, and Richard W. Robins.  From conscientiousness to life satisfaction:  Decoding the mystery.
  21. Emily-Ana Filardo, Angela Febbraro, Ritu Gill, Tara Holton, and Tonya Hendriks.  Precursors to gender attitudes in the air cadet gliding population.
  22. Judith Gere and Ulrich Schimmack.  Set-point change and adaptation after the birth of the first child.
  23. Azriel Grysman.  Abstracting and extracting:  Causal coherence and the development of the life story.
  24. Peter D. Harms and Paul Lester.  Assessing the impact of combat experience on personality change and the development of post-traumatic stress.
  25. Kathleen Hazlett, Jameson K. Hirsch, Edward C. Chang, William Tsai, Kavita Srivastava, Jean M. Kim, Elizabeth L. Jeglic, Ratika Singh, Melissa Ng, and Lawrence J. Sanna.  Perfectionism and suicidal risk in a college student population:  Does loneliness affect the link?
  26. Daniel Heller, Wei Qi Elaine Perunovic, and Daniel Reichman.  The dynamics of social roles, goals, and personality states:  A bottom-up perspective.
  27. Molly Hensler and Dustin Wood.  Motives, abilities, and perceptions underlying the dimensions of extraversion.
  28. Sarah Hirschmuller, Mitja D. Back, Sascha Krause, Boris Egloff, and Stefan C. Schmukle.  Unraveling the three faces of self-esteem:  A new information-processing sociometer perspective.
  29. Ryan Y. Hong and Sampo V. Paunonen.  Exploring the links between trait structure and social-cognitive processes:  The case of personality vulnerabilities to psychopathology.
  30. Akihiko Ieshima.  The impact of anime/manga on personality development on youth.
  31. Tatiana Indina and V. Morosanova.  Regulation and personality mechanisms of decision making of decision making in emergency situations.
  32. Jadzia Jagiellowicz, Xiaomeng Xu, Arthur Aron, Elaine Aron, Guikang Cao, Tingyong Feng, and Xuchu Weng.  Individuals with the temperament trait of sensory processing sensitivity notice subtleties:  Natural response to change in visual scenes.
  33. John A. Johnson.  Calibrating personality self-report scores to acquaintance ratings.
  34. Kaoru Kurosawa, Nozomi Doi, and Miho Shirai.  Belief in a just world and blaming the victim.
  35. Daniel Leising, Julia Ostner, and Kate Rogers.  Normative assumptions underlying the DSM-IV personality disorder criteria.
  36. Jennifer Lodi-Smith, Brent W. Roberts, and Jacqui Smith.  Mechanisms of personality trait change in older adulthood.
  37. Alanna Maguire and Sara Konrath.  Revolutions, coups, and clashes:  Predicting civic unrest through analyses of implicit motives in political speeches.
  38. Raymond A. Mar and Taras Babyuk.  Lifetime exposure to narrative fiction predicts recognition of facial emotion.
  39. Laura Maruskin, Scott E. Cassidy, and Todd M. Thrash.  Inspiration and the creativity of writing:  Person, process, and product. 
  40. Robert E. McGrath.  Is isomorphic scaling of personality constructs possible?
  41. Kate C. McLean and Monisha Pasupathi.  Conversational processes and life storytelling in dating couples.
  42. Paula Y. Mullineaux, Kirby Deater-Deckard, Stephen A. Petrill, Lee A. Thompson, and Laura S. De Thorne.  Behavioral genetic models of temperament:  Hostility, rating bias, and sibling contrasts.
  43. Christopher S. Nave, Ryne A. Sherman, David C. Funder, Sarah E. Hampson, and Lewis R. Goldberg.  Teachers’ assessments of children’s personality traits predict directly observed behaviors forty years later.
  44. Erik E. Noftle and William Fleeson.  High stability and high variability in personality validated in observer reports.
  45. Julie K. Norem and Jonathan M. Cheek.  Acquaintance ratings for the imposter phenomenon.
  46. K. V. Petrides.  Trait emotional intelligence:  A scientific model of EI.
  47. Jean E. Pretz and Jeffrey B. Brookings.  Development and preliminary validation of the Types of Intuition Scale (TIntS).
  48. Richard W. Robins and Ulrich Orth.  Low self-esteem prospectively predicts depression.
  49. Rasha A. Salib.  Personality correlates of attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) in middle childhood.
  50. Gregory C. Schell and Jennifer L. Tackett.  Agency and communion as indicators of personality in middle childhood.
  51. Ryne Sherman, Christopher S. Nave, and David C. Funder.  The Riverside Situational Q-Sort.
  52. Jennifer L. Smith and Fred B. Bryant.  Savoring as a mediator of the influence of Type A behavior on enjoyment.
  53. Christie T. Spence and Thomas F. Oltmanns.  Social motivation in personality disorders.
  54. Nick Stauner, Tierra S. Stimson, Michael Boudreaux, and Daniel J. Ozer.  When do personality traits predict personal goals?
  55. Kuniko Takagi and Tomomi Niwa.  Reexamination of content validity of ACS-2 (Assumed Confidence Scale, 2nd Version).
  56. Amber Gayle Thalmayer, Gerard Saucier, and Tarik Bel-Bahar.  Person descriptors ubiquitous across cultures:  A study of twelve diverse languages.
  57. Nicholas A. Turiano, Avon Spiro III, and Daniel K. Mroczek.  Conscientiousness and openness as predictors of mortality.
  58. Gregory D. Webster.  Personality comes out of the closet:  The unexpected emergence of “personality” in an analysis of article titles from the Journal of Research in Personality, 1973-2008.
  59. Joshua Wilt, Benjamin Schalet, and C. Emily Durbin.  SNAP trait profiles as valid indicators of personality pathology in non-clinical samples.
  60. James H. Wirth, Donald R. Lyman, and Kipling D. Williams.  Ostracism and aggression:  The moderating influence of psychopathic traits.
  61. Jessica Wortman and Dustin Wood.  The personality traits of liked people.
  62. Stevie C. Y. Yap, Isis H. Settles, and Jennifer S. Pratt-Hyatt.  Racial identity and life satisfaction among a community sample of African American men and women.
  63. Fang Zhang and Maria Parmely.  Attachment style and perception of facial expressions of emotion among close friend dyads and casual acquaintance dyads.
  64. Andew J.Wawrzyniak and Martha C. Whiteman.  Personality dynamics and academic outcomes in first-year university students.
  65. Gerard Saucier.  Support for a Big Six model of personality attributes in inclusive lexical studies.
  66. Leonard J. Simms, William R. Calabrese, and Monica Rudick.  Exploring the common lexicon as a basis for structural personality and personality disorders research.
  67. Michael Chmielewski, David Watson, and Lee Anna Clark.  Oddity:  The sixth factor of personality.

 

 

Poster Session #2.  Saturday, July 18,  8:30 – 9:45 AM.

 

  1. Mathias Allemand.  Long-term correlated change in personality traits:  A comparison of middle-aged and older adults.
  2. Jim Anderson and James Grice.  Cognition and personality in binary choice tasks.
  3. Ivana Anusic and Ulrich Schimmack.  Halo factor in personality ratings.
  4. Ashley Ausikaitis and Allan Clifton.  Facebook profiles as measures of personality and self-enhancement.
  5. Stefanie Badzinski.  The relationship between implicative dilemmas and measures of psychological well-being. 
  6. Gregory Bartoszek and Daniel Cervone.  An implicit measure of discrete emotional states:  A preliminary investigation.
  7. Sarah C. Bienkowski and Mark C. Bowler.  A conditional reasoning measure of goal  orientation.
  8. Terry K. Borsook.  Painkilling effects of social interactions.
  9. Erika Brown, Jim Anderson, Stefanie Dorough, and James Grice.  The Dynamic Analog Scale:  A single-item method for personality measurement.
  10. Jasmine Carey and Delroy L. Paulhus.  Are free will and determinism incompatible?
  11. Patrick J. Carroll and Robert M. Arkin.  The desirability of alternative selves as a moderator of disengagement from existing desired selves:  Stepping up rather than down in revising desired selves.
  12. A. Daniel Catterson, Joshua S. Eng, and Oliver P. John.  I think I can . . . I think I can:  Self-efficacy and the use of emotion regulation strategies.
  13. Chmielewski, M., & Watson, D.  Affect, personality, and psychopathology:  The long-term stability and predictive validity of trait measures across young adulthood.
  14. David C. Cicero and John G. Kerns.  Multidimensional factor structure of positive schizotypy.
  15. Keith S. Cox.  Psychological well-being among slum dwellers, sex workers, and other impoverished adults in Nicaragua.
  16. Kirby Deater-Deckard, Charlie Beekman, Stephen A. Petrill, and Lee A. Thompson.  Dispositional frustration/anger in childhood:  Independent genetic links with fear and approach.
  17. Christopher Ditzfeld and Carolin Showers.  Self-structure and affect valuation:  The preference for low arousal.
  18. Nicholas R. Eaton, Robert F. Krueger, Susan C. South, Leonard J. Simms, and Lee Anna Clark.  Finite mixture modeling of pathological personality dimensions:  Identification and validation of personality disorder prototypes.
  19. Michael A. Faber.  Personality, media preferences, and current concerns.
  20. Patrick Gallagher, Rick Hoyle, and William Fleeson.  A multiple-parameter, self-report trait measure:  Can people describe their own density distributions?
  21. Lindsay T. Graham, Cindy K. Chung, James W. Pennebaker, and Samuel D. Gosling.  What’s in a name?  Consensus and validity of impressions based on online screen names.
  22. Gareth Hagger-Johnson.  Conscientiousness and mental health:  Education and multiple health behaviours do not explain the association.
  23. Kathrin J. Hanek, Brad Olson, and Dan P. McAdams.  Political orientation, happiness, and the psychology of Christian prayer.
  24. Patrick C. L. Heaven and Joseph Ciarrochi.  Personality predictors of peer-rated adjustment and likeability:  A three-year longitudinal study.
  25. Krista Hill and C. Randall Colvin.  Positive illusions in romantic relationships.
  26. Jacob B. Hirsch, Colin G. De Young, Xiaowen Xu, and Jordan B. Peterson.  Bleeding heart liberals and conscientious conservatives:  Personality and political ideology.
  27. Shannon E. Holleran and Matthias R. Mehl.  The accuracy of personality judgments at zero-acquaintance:  A meta-analysis using realistic, everyday environments.
  28. Lauren J. Human and Jeremy C. Biesanz.  The role of adjustment in perceptive and expressive accuracy.
  29. Joshua J. Jackson, Naomi Sadeh, Shabnam Javadni, and Edelyn Verona.  Variation in the serotonin transporter gene moderates the effect of family environment on negative emotionality.
  30. Lasse Meinert Jensen.  Personal ways of handling everyday life.
  31. Yuliya Kotelnikova and Jennifer L. Tackett.  Personality correlates of cross-cultural differences in values.
  32. Robert D. Latzman, Jatin G. Vaidya, and Lee Anna Clark.  Components of disinhibition (vs. constraint) differentially predict aggression and alcohol use.
  33. Liat Levontin.  Victory with no victims:  Amity achievement goals.
  34. Michelle Luciano, Jennifer Huffman, Lina Zgaga, Caroline Hayward, Harry Campbell, Alan Wright, Ian Deary, and Igor Rudan.  Genome-wide association of personality and psychological distress traits in a Croatian population.
  35. Cade D. Mansfield, Kate C. McLean, and Jennifer Pals Lilgendahl.  Does wisdom matter in the narrative processing of traumas and transgressions.
  36. Kristian E. Markon.  Reference reliability:  Summarizing measurement precision under conditions of maximal test utility.
  37. Ashley E. Mason and David A Sbarra.  Thin slices of well-being:  Perceptions of psychological adjustment following marital separation.
  38. Kira McCabe, Lori Mack, and William Fleeson.  Methodology standards for palm pilot experience-sampling studies.
  39. Theresa A. Morgan, Michael Chmielewski, and Lee Anna Clark.  Relations between trait dependency factors, “depressive” dependency, and normal personality.
  40. Kumiko Mukaida, Lauren S. Crane, and Hiroshi Azuma.  How people describe  their past efforts:  A comparison between China, Japan, and the U. S.
  41. Kristin Naragon-Gainey and David Watson.  The structure of extraversion and facet-level relations with psychological symptoms.
  42. Brady D. Nelson and Stewart A. Shankman.  Do individual differences in trait emotional/motivational tendencies predict emotional responses to predictable and unpredictable aversive events?
  43. Atsushi Oshio.  Aspects of everyday life deemed important by dichotomous thinkers.
  44. Sunwoong Park and Jack J. Bauer.  Lack of effort, it is my responsibility?  It depends on who you are.
  45. Carly Parnitzke and Mike Furr.  Behavioral manifestation of sub-clinical personality pathology in brief social interactions.
  46. Erik Pettersson and Erik Turkheimer.  Structural relations between personality and psychopathology free from evaluation.
  47. Holly Rau, Paula Williams, Yana Suchy, and Sommer Thorgusen.  Openness to experience and efficiency of attentional networks.
  48. Katherine Rogers and Dustin Wood. Perceptions of differences in personality traits across U. S. regions are more accurate than chance.
  49. J. Philippe Rushton and Paul Irwing.  A general factor of personality (GFP) in four personality disorder inventories.
  50. Benjamin Schalet, C. Emily Durbin, and Elizabeth Hayden.  Hypomanic personality traits:  Evidence for unique associations with normal personality dimensions.
  51. Leigh Sharma and Lee Anna Clark.  The impulsive-like traits.
  52. Karen Sixkiller, Grant W. Edmonds, Joshua J. Jackson, Jennifer Fayard, Tim Bogg, Kate E. Walton, Dustin Wood, Peter Harms, Jennifer Lodi-Smith, and Brent W. Roberts.  The relationship between lower order structure of conscientiousness and health behaviors.
  53. Kathy Smolewska, Jonathan Oakman, and Marta Szepietowska.  Emotional experience and borderline personality disorder:  Examination of correlates in an undergraduate sample.
  54. Juliane M. Stopfer, Mitja D. Back, Simine Vazire, Sam Gaddis, Stefan C. Schmukle, Boris Egloff, and Samuel D. Gosling.  Faecbook profiles reflect actual personality, not self-idealization.
  55. Wakako Tabuchi.  A qualitative examination of TAT in relation to Jung’s psychological types.
  56. Yusuke Takahashi, S. Yamagata, C. Shikishima, K. Ozaki, K. Nonaka, and J. Ando.  Positive parenting received in adolescence does not moderate the genetic and environmental etiology of Big Five personality in early adulthood.
  57. Maine Tobari.  Prosocial behavior and trait empathy in adolescents.
  58. Beth A. Visser, Michael C. Ashton, and Julie A. Pozzebon.  Is anxiety part of the psychopathy construct?
  59. Simone Walker.  A multi-method, multi-trait examination of gratitude and relationship quality.
  60. Sylia Wilson and C. Emily Durbin.  Multi-method assessment of normal and pathological personality factors:  Convergence and incremental contribution to Axis I disorders.
  61. Heike Winterheld.  Regulatory focus and social support:  A dyadic perspective.
  62. Edward A. Witt, M. Brent Donnellan, Robert A. Ackerman, and Rand Congor.  Planful competence:  A personality trait that even sociologists can love.
  63. Xu Qiumei and Marie-Elene Roberge.  The effect of leaders’ personality and values on individual and group health.
  64. Michelle Yik.  What’s interpersonal about the Chinese circumplex model of affect?
  65. Axel Zinkernagel, F. Dislich, and M. Schmitt.  Leads feedback of automatic behavior to a change of explicit self-knowledge?  A study in the domain of disgust sensitivity.
  66. Brenda Lee McDaniel, B. Houltberg, and A. S. Morris.  Role models and the moral development of at-risk youth.
  67. Randy Colvin.  To know or like the self?  Contributions of accurate self-knowledge and self-esteem to psychological well-being.