TIPI | R Documentation |
Data on the Ten Item Personality Inventory
Description
The Ten Item Personality Inventory (Gosling et al. 2003) is a brief inventory of the Big Five personality domains (Extraversion, Neuroticism, Conscientiousness, Agreeableness, and Openness to experience). This dataset, originally from the Open Source Psychometrics Project (https://openpsychometrics.org/), was used by Jones et al. (2020), from which we obtained this version.
Format
A data frame with 1799 observations on the following 16 variables.
Extraversion
a numeric vector
Neuroticism
a numeric vector
Conscientiousness
a numeric vector
Agreeableness
a numeric vector
Openness
a numeric vector
education
an ordered factor with levels
<HS
<HS
<Univ
<Grad
urban
an ordered factor with levels
Rural
<Suburban
<Urban
gender
a factor with levels
M
F
engnat
a factor with levels
Native
Non-native
age
a numeric vector
religion
a factor with levels
Agnostic
Atheist
Buddhist
Christian (Catholic)
Christian (Mormon)
Christian (Protestant)
Christian (Other)
Hindu
Jewish
Muslim
Sikh
Other
orientation
a factor with levels
Heterosexual
Bisexual
Homosexual
Asexual
Other
race
a factor with levels
Asian
Arab
Black
Indig-White
Other
voted
a factor with levels
Yes
No
married
a factor with levels
Never married
Currently married
Previously married
familysize
a numeric vector
Details
In addition to scores on the Big Five scales, the dataset contains 11 demographic variables on the participants, potentially useful in multivariate analyses.
Scores on each personality domain were calculated by averaging items
assigned to each domain (after reverse scoring specific items). In this
version, total scores for each scale were calculated by averaging the
positively and negatively coded items, for example, TIPI$Extraversion
<- (TIPI$E + (8-TIPI$E_r))/2
.
Then, for the present purposes, some tidying was done:
100 cases with 'gender=="Other" were deleted;
codes for levels of 'education', 'engnat' and 'race' were abbreviated for ease of use in graphics.
Source
Jones, P.J., Mair, P., Simon, T. et al. (2020). Network Trees: A Method for Recursively Partitioning Covariance Structures. Psychometrika, 85, 926?945. https://doi.org/10.1007/s11336-020-09731-4
References
Gosling, S. D., Rentfrow, P. J., & Swann, W. B, Jr. (2003). A very brief measure of the Big-Five personality domains. Journal of Research in Personality, 37, 504?528.
Examples
data(TIPI)
# fit an mlm
tipi.mlm <- lm(cbind(Extraversion, Neuroticism, Conscientiousness, Agreeableness, Openness)
~ engnat + gender + education, data = TIPI )
car::Anova(tipi.mlm)
heplot(tipi.mlm, fill=TRUE, fill.alpha=0.1)
pairs(tipi.mlm, fill=TRUE, fill.alpha=0.1)
# candisc works best for factors with >2 levels
library(candisc)
tipi.can <- candisc(tipi.mlm, term="education")
tipi.can
heplot(tipi.can, fill=TRUE, fill.alpha=0.1,
var.col = "darkred", var.cex = 1.5, var.lwd = 3)