Dimensions of Personality

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A01=Hans Eysenck
A01=Martin Rein
Aspiration Scores
Author_Hans Eysenck
Author_Martin Rein
Body Sway Test
Category=JMS
Category=VSP
Choline Esterase
Choline Esterase Activity
clinical psychology research
Connotative Concepts
Cycloid Personalities
Cyclothymic Personality
dichotomy
Dysthymic Group
eq_bestseller
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
eq_self-help
eq_society-politics
experimental personality assessment methods
extraversion measurement
extravert
Extravert Introvert Dichotomy
Female Neurotics
group
Hans Eysenck
Ideo-motor Action
introvert
Judgment Discrepancy
Juvenile Amaurotic Idiocy
neurotic
Neurotic Group
Neurotic Scores
neuroticism scale
Personal Tempo
Poor Night Vision
Primary Suggestibility
psychometric evaluation
Punch Test
quantitative behavioral analysis
Secondary Suggestibility
Serum Choline Esterase Activity
Suggestibility Scores
Suggestibility Test
Tetrachoric Correlation Coefficients
Tetrachoric Correlations
trait hierarchy theory

Product details

  • ISBN 9781560009856
  • Weight: 544g
  • Dimensions: 152 x 229mm
  • Publication Date: 30 Jan 1997
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Inc
  • Publication City/Country: US
  • Product Form: Paperback
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This is the original work on which Hans Eysenck's fifty years of research have been built. It introduced many new ideas about the nature and measurement of personality into the field, related personality to abnormal psychology, and demonstrated the possibility of testing personality theory experimentally. The book is the result of a concentrated and cooperative effort to discover the main dimensions of personality, and to define them operationally, that is, by means of strictly experimental, quantitative procedures. More than three dozen separate researches were carried out on some 10,000 normal and neurotic subjects by a research team of psychologists and psychiatrists. A special feature of this work is the close collaboration between psychologists and psychiatrists. Eysenck believes that the exploration of personality would have reached an advanced state much earlier had such a collaboration been the rule rather than the exception in studies of this kind. Both disciplines benefit by working together on the many problems they have in common. In his new introduction, Eysenck discusses the difficulty he had in conveying this belief to scientists from opposite ends of the psychology spectrum when he first began work on this book. He goes on to explain the basis from which Dimensions of Personality developed. Central to any concept of personality, he states, must be hierarchies of traits organized into a dimensional system. The two major dimensions he posited, neuroticism and extraversion, were in disfavor with most scientists of personality at the time. Now they form part of practically all descriptions of personality. Dimensions of Personality is a landmark study and should be read by both students and professionals in the fields of psychiatry, psychology, and sociology.