Academic literature on the topic 'EPQ-R questionnaire'

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Journal articles on the topic "EPQ-R questionnaire"

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Alansari, B., and T. Alali. "Psychometric properties of eysenck personality questionnaire-revised (EPQ-R) short scale in Arabic among undergraduates in Kuwait." European Psychiatry 64, S1 (April 2021): S751. http://dx.doi.org/10.1192/j.eurpsy.2021.1990.

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IntroductionThe 48-item EPQR-S is a short version of EPQ-R widely used to assess neuroticism (N), extraversion (E), psychoticism (P) and Lie scale (L) for research purposes. The EPQR-S was chosen for the Arab population because it is a well-established Eysenck theory of personality.ObjectivesTo evaluate the psychometric properties of the Arabic EPQR-S.MethodsThe EPQ-R S, the Eysenck Personality Questionnaire (EPQ) and NEO Five-Factor Inventory (NEO–FFI-3) were administered to 1842 (538 males, 1304 females) Kuwait University undergraduates with a mean age = 20.42 ± 1.42. The internal consistency reliability, factor structure, and convergent validity of the EPQR-S with EPQ and NEO–FFI-3 were assessed.ResultsCronbach’s alpha was satisfactory for N (0.76), E (0.72), L (0.70) and low for P. (0.60). The results revealed significant gender differences in P & E with a favor for males and in N & L a favor with females. PCA showed that EPQR-S four factors explains 52.48% of the total variance. Moreover, the high correlations between the EPQR-S and EPQ scales, with coefficients of (0.92) for the N, (0.88) for the E, (0.78) for the L, and (0.76) for the P as the majority of items of the dimensions of the EPQR-S are the same with those of the EPQ. Furthermore, there were high correlations between the same scales of the EPQR-S and NEO–FFI-3, with coefficients of (0.67) for the N scales, and (0.52) for the E scales.ConclusionsThe findings support the psychometric properties N, E, L scales only.DisclosureNo significant relationships.
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Ruch, Willibald. "Die revidierte Fassung des Eysenck Personality Questionnaire und die Konstruktion des deutschen EPQ-R bzw. EPQ-RK." Zeitschrift für Differentielle und Diagnostische Psychologie 20, no. 1 (March 1999): 1–24. http://dx.doi.org/10.1024//0170-1789.20.1.1.

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Zusammenfassung: Der Bericht beschreibt die Konstruktion der deutschen Standard- und Kurzfassung des Eysenck Personality Questionnaire-revised (EPQ-R) von Eysenck und Eysenck (1991) . Eine Pilotform des EPQ mit 140 Items wurde 2914 Probanden vorgelegt. Eine Faktorenanalyse der 100 Items der englischen Fassung erbringt in zwei nach Geschlecht getrennten Analysestichproben (N ≅ 800) jeweils die Eysenck'schen Superfaktoren. Die Ladungen der P-Skala erweisen sich jedoch durch Unterschiede in der Itemschwierigkeit verzerrt, so daß eine Analyse mit maximumskorrigierten Koeffizienten durchgeführt wird. Aufgrund der Ergebnisse von Faktoren- und Itemanalysen werden die 102 bzw. 50 Items der deutschen Fassung bzw. deutschen Kurzfassung EPQ-RK ermittelt. Die Kennwerte werden in einer Replikationsstichprobe abgesichert. Die Skalen erweisen sich als reliabel; während die innere Konsistenz der P-Skala geringer ausfällt, sind die Retest- und Testhalbierungsreliabilitäten der Kurz- und Standardskala gut. Die Alters- und Geschlechtsunterschiede der englischen Fassung können reproduziert werden (N = 2600), wobei jedoch die Werte der P-Skala im Vergleich zur englischen Stichprobe deutlich erhöht sind. Die Äquivalenz der Skalen E, N und L mit der Vorgängerversion EPI kann belegt werden. Ferner bestehen auch die erwarteten Beziehungen zu Impulsivität und Abenteuerlust.
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García-González, Juan Manuel, Juan José Fernández-Muñoz, Esperanza Vergara-Moragues, and Luis Miguel García-Moreno. "Eysenck Personality Questionnaire Revised-Abbreviated: invariance gender in Spanish university students." Electronic Journal of Research in Education Psychology 19, no. 53 (April 1, 2021): 205–22. http://dx.doi.org/10.25115/ejrep.v19i53.3527.

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Introduction. This article has two objectives: a) to examine the factorial structure of the Spanish version of the EPQR-A through an exploratory factor analysis and b) to perform a confirmatory factor analysis to determine the psychometric properties of the Spanish version of the EPQR-A in terms of construct validity in an adult academic population. Method: The sample was 826 university undergraduate students volunteered to complete the Spanish version of the Eysenck Personality Questionnaire Revised-Abbreviated (EPQR-A) and to examine the concurrent validity of the EPQR-A, the Spanish version of the questionnaire Dysexecutive Questionnaire (DEX-Sp). We applied exploratory and confirmatory factor analysis. Results. The instrument demonstrated good psychometric properties and reinforcing the original dimensional structure of the scale. The EPQR-A has psychometric characteristics comparable to longer questionnaires, such as the EPQ-R; therefore, it has great suitability when inserted into more extensive protocols. Conclusion. The differences between males and females allow us to affirm that in late adolescence and early youth, promotion, prevention, and intervention health strategies differentiated by gender should be conducted.
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Wray, Naomi R., Andrew J. Birley, Patrick F. Sullivan, Peter M. Visscher, and Nicholas G. Martin. "Genetic and Phenotypic Stability of Measures of Neuroticism Over 22 Years." Twin Research and Human Genetics 10, no. 5 (October 1, 2007): 695–702. http://dx.doi.org/10.1375/twin.10.5.695.

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AbstractPeople meeting diagnostic criteria for anxiety or depressive disorders tend to score high on the personality scale of neuroticism. Studying this dimension of personality can therefore give insights into the etiology of important psychiatric disorders. Neuroticism can be assessed easily via self-report questionnaires in large population samples. We have examined the genetic and phenotypic stability of neuroticism, measured up to 4 times over 22 years, on different scales, on a data set of 4999 families with over 20,000 individuals completing at least 1 neuroticism questionnaire. The neuroticism scales used were the Eysenck Personality Questionnaire revised (EPQ-R), the EPQ-R shortened form, and the NEO 5 factor inventory personality questionnaire. The estimates of heritability of the individual measures ranged from .26 ± .04 to .36 ± .03. Genetic, environmental, and phenotypic correlations averaged .91, .42, and .57 respectively. Despite the range in heritabilities, a more parsimonious ‘repeatability model’ of equal additive genetic variances and genetic correlations of unity could not be rejected. Use of multiple measures increases the effective heritability from .33 for a single measure to .43 for mean score because of the reduction in the estimate of the environmental variance, and this will increase power in genetic linkage or association studies of neuroticism.
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Rawlings, David, and Brock Bastian. "Painting Preference and Personality, with Particular Reference to Gray's Behavioral Inhibition and Behavioral Approach Systems." Empirical Studies of the Arts 20, no. 2 (July 2002): 177–93. http://dx.doi.org/10.2190/73uq-50qu-uatw-ry5e.

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Gray's (1991) neurobiological systems–the behavioral approach system (BAS) and behavioral inhibition system (BIS)–have been operationalized by Carver and White (1994) in their BIS/BAS Questionnaire. In the present study, 129 undergraduate students completed the BIS/BAS Questionnaire, the Eysenck Personality Questionnaire–Revised (EPQ-R), and Zuckerman's Impulsive Sensation Seeking Scale. They also rated 72 paintings previously divided into two stylistic (Abstract and Traditional) and five content (Erotic, Pleasant, Neutral, Violent, Unpleasant) categories. As hypothesized, scores on the BIS were negatively associated with liking for Unpleasant and Violent paintings; scores on the BAS predicted liking for Pleasant and Neutral paintings, though this was due almost entirely to the BAS Reward Responsiveness sub-scale. Sensation Seeking, EPQ-R Psychoticism, and the BAS Fun-Seeking sub-scale predicted liking for Abstract stimuli, and disliking for Unpleasant and Violent paintings. Our results provide evidence that Gray's constructs can be usefully applied to the area of aesthetic preference.
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Alexopoulos, D. S., and Ioannis Kalaitzidis. "Psychometric properties of Eysenck Personality Questionnaire-Revised (EPQ-R) Short Scale in Greece." Personality and Individual Differences 37, no. 6 (October 2004): 1205–20. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.paid.2003.12.005.

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Ettinger, Ulrich, and Philip J. Corr. "The Frequency Accrual Speed Test (FAST): psychometric intelligence and personality correlates." European Journal of Personality 15, no. 2 (March 2001): 143–52. http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/per.403.

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Performance on a putative psychophysical measure of information processing related to intelligence (Vickers' 1995 Frequency Accrual Speed Test, FAST) was assessed in relation to two psychometric measures of intelligence (Raven's Advanced Progressive Matrices and the Mill Hill vocabulary test). Participants (N = 57) completed the Eysenck Personality Questionnaire — Revised (EPQ‐R), and performed the FAST task under either low (70 dB) or high (90 dB) levels of white noise. FAST correlated with Raven's (r = 0.56) and Mill Hill (r = 0.28), as expected. FAST total scores were not affected by personality or personality‐by‐noise interactions. However, a measure of consistency of FAST performance (i.e. the standard deviation) was correlated negatively with total FAST scores (r = −0.37) and positively with (EPQ‐R) extraversion (r = 0.34). The results are discussed in terms of the validity of the FAST to explicate the information processing variables in psychometric intelligence. Copyright © 2001 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.
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Martin, Neilson, Guy Goodwin, Christopher Fairburn, Rob Wilson, David Allison, Lon R. Cardon, and Jonathan Flint. "A population-based study of personality in 34 000 sib-pairs." Twin Research 3, no. 4 (August 1, 2000): 310–15. http://dx.doi.org/10.1375/twin.3.4.310.

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AbstractSeveral theoretical studies have suggested that large samples of randomly ascertained siblings can be efficiently used to ascertain phenotypically extreme individuals and increase power to detect genetic linkage. Phenotypes that can be reliably measured by questionnaire are of obvious utility for such selection strategies, as large numbers of individuals can be contacted without laborious individual interview. As the first step in developing a large randomly-ascertained family cohort in southwest England, a sample of 88 000 individuals, including more than 34 000 sibling pairs in 20 000 sibships, was administered the Eysenck Personality Questionnaire (EPQ) by commercial mailing. The sample age ranges were 20–67 years and comprised 59% males and 41% females. Descriptive properties of the EPQ scales are similar to those reported from other large family cohorts. Test–retest correlations on 1681 probands in the sample are substantial for the N-scale (r = 0.93), but somewhat more modest for the other scales (range r = 0.70–0.88). Phenotypic and sibling correlations correspond quite closely to those of twin studies. Twin Research (2000) 3, 310–315.
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Almiro, Pedro Armelim, Octávio Moura, and Mário R. Simões. "Psychometric properties of the European Portuguese version of the Eysenck Personality Questionnaire — Revised (EPQ-R)." Personality and Individual Differences 88 (January 2016): 88–93. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.paid.2015.08.050.

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Banasiewicz, Jolanta, Kornelia Zaręba, Hanna Rozenek, Michał Ciebiera, Grzegorz Jakiel, Joanna Chylińska, and Krzysztof Owczarek. "Adaptive capacity of midwives participating in pregnancy termination procedures: Polish experience." Health Psychology Open 7, no. 2 (July 2020): 205510292097322. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/2055102920973229.

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A cross-sectional study was conducted in 181 midwives working in hospitals in Poland. The midwives completed professional psychological tests (CISS questionnaire, EPQ-R questionnaire, OLBI questionnaire) and a questionnaire developed for this study. Midwives participating in pregnancy termination procedures most commonly used the task-oriented coping style. The emotion-oriented coping style was positively related to burnout in the group which performed pregnancy terminations. The analysis showed that the higher the indices of neuroticism, the greater the severity of burnout in both groups. The results indicate the need to conduct an initial assessment of personality resources when employing midwives to the wards.
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Books on the topic "EPQ-R questionnaire"

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J, Eysenck H. Manual of the Eysenck personality scales (EPS adult): Comprising the EPQ-revised (EPQ-R) (including addiction and criminality scales), EPQ-R short scale impulsiveness (IVE) questionnaire (impulsiveness/venturesomeness/empathy). London: Hodder & Stoughton, 1991.

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Book chapters on the topic "EPQ-R questionnaire"

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Weaver, J., and C. Kiewitz. "Eysenck Personality Questionnaire." In Handbook of Research on Electronic Surveys and Measurements, 360–63. IGI Global, 2007. http://dx.doi.org/10.4018/978-1-59140-792-8.ch052.

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We describe a newly developed 12-item short form version of the self-report Eysenck Personality Questionnaire (EPQ) originally developed by Eysenck and Eysenck (1977) and most recently revised by Eysenck, Eysenck, and Barrett (EPQ-R; 1985). The original EPQ consists of 90 items while the EPQ-R involves 36 items. Both instruments were designed to assess three dimensions of personality – extraversion, neuroticism, psychoticism. An understanding of the hierarchical model for personality envisaged by Eysenck (1947) facilitates our explication of these personality dimensions. Eysenck’s system involved four levels. At the lowest level of this system are singly occurring acts or cognitions. Habitual acts or cognitions are at the second level. The third level is composed of traits, defined in terms of significant intercorrelations between different habitual behaviors. The final level is that of personality types or dimensions defined in terms of substantial intercorrelations between traits. Against this backdrop, Eysenck (see Eysenck,1990; Eysenck & Eysenck, 1985) defined extraversion by the observed correlations between the traits sociable, lively, active, assertive, sensation-seeking, carefree, dominant, and venturesome. Neuroticism was defined by the traits anxious, depressed, guilt feelings, low self-esteem, tense, irrational, shy, moody, and emotional. Finally, psychoticism was defined by the traits aggressive, cold, egocentric, impersonal, impulsive, antisocial, unempathic, and tough-minded.
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Oleson, James C. "The Study." In Criminal Genius. University of California Press, 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.1525/california/9780520282414.003.0003.

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Little is known about high-IQ criminals because they are statistically rare. Only 2 percent of the general population has an IQ score of over 130 and only one in two thousand possesses an IQ of over 150. Another reason little is known is that few are caught. The differential detection hypothesis suggests that people with high IQs are less likely to be detected, arrested, prosecuted, convicted, and incarcerated than others. Prison studies, therefore, are of limited utility, and to study elite crime, self-report is essential. There is, however, little advantage for high-IQ individuals to participate in self-report research—and potentially much to lose. High-IQ individuals often possess the means to block research inquiries. This chapter describes the methodology of the study, including ethical and legal challenges associated with adult self-report research. It describes the study’s sampling, the design of the self-report questionnaire, the rationale and logistics of the follow-up interviews, and the structure of the Eysenck Personality Questionnaire (EPQ-R).
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