Personality Psychology: Foundations and Findings is an evidence-based text with integrated cultural references and excellent coverage of the key building blocks of the subject matter—namely, the “foundations”(traits, genetics, self and identity, neuroscience, intrapsychic aspects, regulations and motivation, and cognition as it applies to the human personality) and the “findings” (the cutting edge research in each of these areas in which personality psychologists are actively engaged every day).
Personality Psychology: A Student-Centered Approach by Jim McMartin organizes the field of personality psychology around basic questions relevant to the reader’s past, present, and future selves.
This handbook discusses the development and measurement of personality as well as biological and social determinants, dynamic personality processes, the personality's relation to the self, and personality in relation to applied psychology.
This second edition of The Cambridge Handbook of Personality Psychology offers a one-stop resource for scientific personality psychology.
Using a novel organizational framework, one that emphasizes domains of knowledge about human nature, this trusted text presents the field of contemporary personality psychology as a collection of interrelated topics and themes.
Psychology of Personality
This volume represents a significant landmark in the psychology of personality.
Personality and Individual Differences, 36, 1611–1626. personality. Psychiatric Clinics of North America Special Issue: Borderline Personality Disorder, 23, 123–136. behavioral preferences for risk, and risk-accepting attitudes.
Now in a new edition, this book expands on previous editions on the study of personality and neuroscience.
Note that in discussing the empirical literature on personality change, we did not mention studies of rank-order stability at all. Such work is typically considered a key component of the body of work on personality development in ...
In Search of the Person: The Historical Development of American Personality Psychology