Logo
Nazad
P. Jonason, M. Żemojtel-Piotrowska, J. Piotrowski, C. Sedikides, W. K. Campbell, Jochen E. Gebauer, J. Maltby, Mladen Adamovic, B. Adams, A. Kadiyono, K. Atitsogbe, H. Bundhoo, Sergiu Bălțătescu, S. Bilic, Joel Gruneau Brulin, Phatthanakit Chobthamkit, Alejandra del Carmen Dominguez, Sonya Dragova-Koleva, Sofián El-Asta, C. Esteves, Walaa Labib M. Eldesoki, V. Gouveia, Katherine Gundolf, D. Iliško, E. Jauk, S. Kamble, N. Khachatryan, Martina Klicperová-Baker, E. Knezović, Monika Kovács, Xuejun Lei, Kadi Liik, Agim Mamuti, Carlos Rodrigo Moreta-Herrera, T. Milfont, Chin Wei Ong, E. Osin, Joonha Park, Boban Petrović, J. Ramos-Diaz, Goran Ridic, A. Qadir, Adil Samekin, Artur Sawicki, Habib Tiliouine, R. Tomšik, C. Umeh, K. van den Bos, Alain Van Hiel, O. Uslu, Anna Wlodarczyk, Illia Yahiiaev
67 18. 6. 2020.

Country-Level Correlates of the Dark Triad Traits in 49 Countries.

OBJECTIVES The Dark Triad traits (i.e., narcissism, psychopathy, Machiavellianism) capture individual differences in aversive personality to complement work on other taxonomies, such as the Big Five traits. However, the literature on the Dark Triad traits relies mostly on samples from English-speaking (i.e., Westernized) countries. We broadened the scope of this literature by sampling from a wider array of countries. METHOD We drew on data from 49 countries (N = 11,723; 65.8% female; AgeMean = 21.53) to examine how an extensive net of country-level variables in economic status (e.g., Human Development Index), social relations (e.g., gender equality), political orientations (e.g., democracy), and cultural values (e.g., embeddedness) relate to country-level rates of the Dark Triad traits, as well as variance in the magnitude of sex differences in them. RESULTS Narcissism was especially sensitive to country-level variables. Countries with more embedded and hierarchical cultural systems were more narcissistic. Also, sex differences in narcissism were larger in more developed societies: Women were less likely to be narcissistic in developed (vs. less developed) countries. CONCLUSIONS We discuss the results based on evolutionary and social role models of personality and sex differences. That higher country-level narcissism was more common in less developed countries, whereas sex differences in narcissism were larger in more developed countries, is more consistent with evolutionary than social role models.


Pretplatite se na novosti o BH Akademskom Imeniku

Ova stranica koristi kolačiće da bi vam pružila najbolje iskustvo

Saznaj više