阿迪新闻英语-人的个性会随着年龄增长而改变吗?

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20200828 Fri
阿迪新闻英语
人的个性会随着年龄增长而改变吗?
Does your personality change as you get older?
Between adolescence and adulthood, you go through a host of
changes — jobs, regrettable haircuts and relationships that come
and go. But what about who you are at your core? As you grow older,
does your personality change?
Personality is the pattern of thoughts, feelings and behaviors
unique to a person. People tend to think of personality as fixed.
But according to psychologists, that's not how it works.
"Personality is a developmental phenomenon. It's not just a static
thing that you're stuck with and can't get over," said Brent
Roberts, a psychologist at the University of Illinois at
Urbana-Champaign.
That's not to say that you're a different person each day you
wake up. In the short term, change can be nearly imperceptible,
Roberts told Live Science. Longitudinal studies, in which
researchers survey the personalities of participants regularly over
many years, suggest that our personality is actually stable on
shorter time scales.
In one study, published in 2000 in the journal Psychological
Bulletin, researchers analyzed the results of 152 longitudinal
studies on personality, which followed participants ranging in age
from childhood to their early 70s. Each of these studies measured
trends in the Big Five personality traits. This cluster of traits,
which include extroversion, agreeableness, conscientiousness,
openness to experience, and neuroticism, are a mainstay of
personality research. The researchers found that individuals'
levels of each personality trait, relative to other participants,
tended to stay consistent within each decade of life.
That pattern of consistency begins around age 3, and perhaps
even earlier, said Brent Donnellan, professor and chair of
psychology at Michigan State University. When psychologists study
children, they don't measure personality traits in the same way
they do for adults. Instead, they look at temperament — the
intensity of a person's reactions to the world. We come into the
world with unique temperaments, and research suggests that our
temperaments as children — for example, whether we're easy going or
prone to temper tantrums, eager or more reluctant to approach
strangers — correspond to adult personality traits.
Earlier temperament seems to affect later life experience. For
example, one 1995 study published in the journal Child Development
followed children from the age of 3 until the age of 18. The
researchers found, for instance, that children who were shyer and
more withdrawn tended to grow into unhappier teenagers.
But those decades add up. Throughout all those years, our
personality is still changing, but slowly, Roberts said. "It's
something that's subtle," he added. You don't notice it on that
five-to-10-year time scale, but in the long term, it becomes
pronounced. In 1960, psychologists surveyed over 440,000 high
school students. The students answered questions about everything
from how they reacted to emotional situations to how efficiently
they got work done. Fifty years later, researchers tracked down
1,952 of these former students and gave them the same survey. The
results, published in 2018 in the Journal of Personality and Social
Psychology, found that in their 60s, participants scored much
higher than they had as teenagers on questions measuring calmness,
self-confidence, leadership and social sensitivity.
Again and again, longitudinal studies have found similar
results. Personality tends to get "better" over time. Psychologists
call it "the maturity principle." People become more extraverted,
emotionally stable, agreeable and conscientious as they grow older.
Over the long haul, these changes are often pronounced.
Some individuals might change less than others, but in
general, the maturity principle applies to everyone. That makes
personality change even harder to recognize in ourselves — how your
personality compares with that of your peers doesn't change as much
as our overall change in personality, because everyone else is
changing right along with you. "There's good evidence that the
average self-control of a 30-year-old is higher than a
20-year-old," Donnellan said. "At the same time, people who are
relatively self-controlled at 18 also tend to be relatively
self-controlled at age 30."
So why do we change so much? Evidence suggests it's not
dramatic life events, such as marriage, the birth of a child or
loss of a loved one. Some psychologists actually suggest these
events reinforce your personality as you bring your characteristics
with you to that particular situation, Donnellan said.
Instead, changing expectations placed on us — as we adjust to
university, the work force, starting a family — slowly wears us in,
almost like a pair of shoes, Roberts said. "Over time you are asked
in many contexts across life to do things a bit differently," he
said. "There's not a user manual for how to act, but there's very
clear implicit norms for how we should behave in these situations."
So we adapt.