This is Part 4 of our series on Personality Neuroscience. Click here to read from the beginning.
Over the past few decades, the Five Factor Model (the “Big Five”) has emerged as the most well-validated model of personality traits. As a result, most personality studies today use the Big Five as a foundation.
In 2014, Colin DeYoung published the Cybernetic Big Five Theory (CB5T), which views personality as a goal-directed, adaptive system. In this article, we will go through the traits themselves. Later, we’ll cover their neurobiological causes.
The five traits that make up the Big Five are:
An individual’s ability and tendency to explore and create new experiences, manifesting curiosity, imagination, perception, and creativity.
An individual’s ability and tendency to pursue non-immediate goals and follow a set of rules (either self-imposed or imposed by others).
An individual’s ability and tendency to explore, interact, and engage with external rewards (including social, material, and experiential rewards).
An individual’s ability and tendency to understand the perspectives of others and adjust their behavior to accommodate them.
An individual’s tendency to experience feelings like anxiety, fear, anger, and panic.
You can remember them in this order with the OCEAN acronym.
The Big Five were previously believed to be the broadest dimensions of personality, but as the theory has progressed, researchers have discovered that the Big Five traits most likely exist in a hierarchy with two meta-traits above them and ten sub-traits below.
Stability and Plasticity sit at the highest level of the hierarchy, and they have been found to have almost zero correlation, meaning there are no higher traits. Each of them has been linked to the levels of a specific chemical in the brain...
Serotonin is a neurotransmitter that is known to stabilize information, disrupt impulses, and allow you to focus on goals. High serotonin levels have been associated with low Neuroticism (leading to emotional stability), high Conscientiousness (motivational stability), and high Agreeableness (social stability).
Dopamine is a different neurotransmitter that facilitates exploration, learning, and cognitive flexibility. It controls your sensitivity to rewards and potential rewards. High dopamine levels have been associated with high Extraversion and high Openness.
While these two traits are still relatively new discoveries and are still debated among psychologists, the ten sub-traits have been researched extensively and have a big impact on the differences people can experience within the Big Five traits.
According to CB5T, personality traits emerge from both geneticand environmental forces. You can probably observe this in your own personality, as you identify the traits that come naturally vs the ones that you’ve picked up from the people around you. The question is… to what extent does each affect your personality?
Unfortunately, we don’t yet know the answer to that question. However, we do have substantial evidence that personality can change drastically over time.
What we know for sure is that everyone has a unique mix of the Big Five traits (and their sub-traits), and that your particular mix is influenced by slight variations in the structure and function of your brain.
Each trait has specific underlying neurobiological causes, and we’re only just beginning to discover them. In the next few posts, we’ll go over what we currently know, trait by trait.