Peter Borkenau
Martin Luther University of Halle-Wittenberg
86 Papers
627 Citations
Peter Borkenau is an academic researcher from Martin Luther University of Halle-Wittenberg. The author has contributed to research in topics: Personality & Big Five personality traits. The author has an hindex of 35, co-authored 86 publications. Previous affiliations of Peter Borkenau include Wittenberg University & Bielefeld University.
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Papers
Trait inferences: Sources of validity at zero acquaintance.
Peter Borkenau,Anette Liebler +1 more
TL;DR: In this article, the authors investigated the correlation between self-ratings and ratings of personality traits and found that ratings by strangers or acquaintances correlate substantially with the targets' self-reports, and that personality ratings reflect actual attributes of the target persons rather than illusions that exist only in the eye of the beholder.
Thin slices of behavior as cues of personality and intelligence.
TL;DR: Self-reports, peer reports, intelligence tests, and ratings of personality and intelligence from 15 videotaped episodes were collected for 600 participants and a particularly strong single predictor was how persons read short sentences.
504
Carving personality description at its joints: Confirmation of three replicable personality prototypes for both children and adults
TL;DR: The authors tested the hypothesis that there are three major prototypic patterns of personality description (resilient, overcontrolled, and undercontrolled) in a series of studies including adults' self-descriptions on the Big Five and parents' Big Five judgments of their childern, using both replicated cluster analyses and replicated Q-factor analyses.
476
Integrating Personality Structure, Personality Process, and Personality Development:
Anna Baumert,Anna Baumert,Manfred Schmitt,Marco Perugini,Wendy Johnson,Gabriela Blum,Peter Borkenau,Giulio Costantini,Jaap J. A. Denissen,William Fleeson,Ben Grafton,Eranda Jayawickreme,Elena Kurzius,Colin MacLeod,Lynn C. Miller,Stephen J. Read,Brent W. Roberts,Brent W. Roberts,Michael D. Robinson,Dustin Wood,Cornelia Wrzus +20 more
TL;DR: In this article, the authors argue that personality processes, personality structure, and personality development have to be understood and investigated in integrated ways in order to provide comprehensive information.
Extraversion is accurately perceived after a 50-ms exposure to a face.
TL;DR: This article found correlations between perceived extraversion and self-reports on items measuring the extraversion facets excitement seeking and positive emotions, and found that self-other agreement for extraversion was mediated by cheerfulness of facial expressions that was related to self-reported of extraversion but not of other personality traits.
208