regardless of whether our personalities trend agreeable or disagreeable
: on the distinction between compassion and politeness,
see Colin G. DeYoung, Lena C. Quilty, and Jordan B. Peterson, “Between Facets and Domains: 10 Aspects of the Big Five,”
Journal of Personality and Social Psychology 93 (2007): 880–896; on compassion connecting more strongly to honesty and
humility than agreeableness, see Michael C. Ashton and Kibeom Lee, “Empirical, Theoretical, and Practical Advantages of the
HEXACO Model of Personality Structure,”
Personality and Social Psychology Review 11 (2007): 150–166; on distinguishing
agreeableness from giver values, see Sonia Roccas, Lilach Sagiv, Shalom H. Schwartz, and Ariel Knafo, “The Big Five
Personality Factors and Personal Values,”
Personality and Social Psychology Bulletin 28 (2002): 789–801.
Mike Homer
: Personal interviews with Danny Shader (February 13, 2012), Greg Sands (March 5, 2012), and an anonymous mentee
(February 28, 2012).
givers are more accurate
: Dawne S. Vogt and C. Randall Colvin, “Interpersonal Orientation and the Accuracy of Personality
Judgments,”
Journal of Personality 71 (2003): 267–295.
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