Most people’s life satisfaction matches their personality traits: True correlations in multi-trait, multi-rater, multi-sample data

René Mõttus, Anu Realo, Jüri Allik, Liisi Ausmees, Sam Henry, Robert R. McCrae, Uku Vainik

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract / Description of output

Despite numerous meta-analyses, the true extent to which life satisfaction reflects personality traits has remained unclear due to overreliance on a single method to assess both and insufficient attention to construct overlaps. Using data from three samples tested in different languages (Estonian, N = 20,886; Russian, N = 768; English, N = 600), we combined self- and informant-reports to estimate personality domains’ and nuances’ true correlations (rtrue) with general life satisfaction (LS) and satisfactions with eight life domains (DSs), while controlling for single-method and occasion-specific biases and random error, and avoiding direct construct overlaps. The associations replicated well across samples. The Big Five domains and nuances allowed predicting LS with accuracies up to rtrue ≈.80–.90 in independent (sub)samples. Emotional stability, extraversion, and conscientiousness correlated rtrue≈.30–.50 with LS, while its correlations with openness and agreeableness were small. At the nuances level, low LS was most strongly associated with feeling misunderstood, unexcited, indecisive, envious, bored, used, unable, and unrewarded (rtrue ≈.40–.70). Supporting LS’s construct validity, DSs had similar personality correlates among themselves and with LS, and an aggregated DS correlated rtrue ≈.90 with LS. LS’s approximately 10-year stability was rtrue =.70 and its longitudinal associations with personality traits mirrored cross-sectional ones. We conclude that without common measurement limitations, most people’s life satisfaction is highly consistent with their personality traits, even across many years. So, satisfaction is usually shaped by these same relatively stable factors that shape personality traits more broadly.
Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)676-693
Number of pages18
JournalJournal of Personality and Social Psychology
Volume126
Issue number4
Early online date30 Apr 2024
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - Apr 2024

Keywords / Materials (for Non-textual outputs)

  • personality traits
  • life-satisfaction
  • well-being
  • multi-rater

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