DocumentCode
20332
Title
Neuroticism, Extraversion, Conscientiousness and Stress: Physiological Correlates
Author
Brouwer, Anne-Marie ; van Schaik, Martin G. ; Korteling, J.E. ; van Erp, Jan B. F. ; Toet, Alexander
Author_Institution
Netherlands Organ. for Appl. Sci. Res., Soesterberg, Netherlands
Volume
6
Issue
2
fYear
2015
fDate
April-June 1 2015
Firstpage
109
Lastpage
117
Abstract
High extraversion and conscientiousness and low neuroticism predict successful performance during and after stressful conditions. We investigated whether these personality factors are linked to stress sensitivity and to baseline physiology. Stress was induced through negative feedback on gaming performance. Stress sensitivity was determined as the difference in baseline physiological variables (skin conductance, heart rate and heart rate variability) before and after performing the game, as well as the difference in subjectively reported stress. While physiological results suggest that the game indeed induced stress, subjective reports do not. Maybe due to a low level of experienced stress, stress sensitivity (as indicated by the difference in heart rate) only correlates with conscientiousness and not with extraversion or neuroticism. The baseline measurements show the expected correlations between extraversion and both heart rate and heart rate variability-negative and positive respectively. The negative correlation between neuroticism and skin conductance is opposite to what we expected. While the exact mechanisms are not clear yet, the present results indicate that for healthy individuals, there are indeed measurable and consistent relations between physiology and personality. Hence, physiological indicators of personality may ultimately be of value as predictors of stress resiliency.
Keywords
cardiology; neurophysiology; occupational stress; psychology; baseline measurement; baseline physiological variable; baseline physiology; conscientiousness; experienced stress; extraversion; gaming performance; heart rate variability; negative correlation; negative feedback; neuroticism; personality factor; physiological correlate; physiological indicator; skin conductance; stress resiliency; stress sensitivity; stressful condition; Games; Heart rate variability; Physiology; Sensitivity; Skin; Stress; Stress; conscientiousness; extraversion; gaming; heart rate; heart rate variability; neuroticism; personality; physiology; skin conductance;
fLanguage
English
Journal_Title
Affective Computing, IEEE Transactions on
Publisher
ieee
ISSN
1949-3045
Type
jour
DOI
10.1109/TAFFC.2014.2326402
Filename
6821267
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