Objective: Personality psychology has traditionally focused on stable between-person differences. Yet, recent theoretical developments and empirical insights have led to a new conceptualization of personality as a dynamic system (e.g., Cybernetic Big Five Theory). Such dynamic systems comprise several components that need to be conceptually distinguished and mapped to a statistical model for estimation.
Method: In the current work, we illustrate how common components from these new dynamic personality theories may be implemented in a continuous time-modeling framework.
Results: As an empirical example, we reanalyze experience sampling data with N = 180 persons (with on average T = 40 [SD = 8] measurement occasions) to investigate four different effects between momentary happiness, momentary extraverted behavior, and the perception of a situation as social: (1) between-person effects, (2) contemporaneous effects, (3) autoregressive effects, and (4) cross-lagged effects.
Conclusion: We highlight that these four effects must not necessarily point in the same direction, which is in line with assumptions from dynamic personality theories.
Keywords: autoregressive effects; between-person effects; contemporaneous effects; continuous-time modeling; cross-lagged effects; experience sampling; personality dynamics.
© 2022 The Authors. Journal of Personality published by Wiley Periodicals LLC.