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Surgency

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Short description: Personality trait of cheerfulness, spontaneity and sociability

Surgency is a trait aspect of emotional reactivity in which a person tends towards high levels of positive affect.[1] The APA Dictionary of Psychology defines it as "a personality trait marked by cheerfulness, responsiveness, spontaneity, and sociability but at a level below that of extraversion or mania."[2]

In children, surgency is an emotional dimension that is characterized by high levels of activity and positive emotion, impulsivity, and engagement with their environment.[1] It has been linked to the Big Five personality trait of extraversion in children.[3][4] High surgency in children as identified by parental self-report has been associated with lower levels of effortful control.[5] A 2003 meta-analysis of gender differences in temperament showed a small to moderate gender difference in surgency levels between boys and girls, with boys showing higher levels of surgency and "generally indicating that boys are slightly more active, less shy, and derive more pleasure than girls from high-intensity stimuli."[4]

Thurstone and Thurstone identified surgency by the word "fluency".[6] This concept of fluency is very broad, and includes facility both in speech and in writing. Cattell found that of all of the objective tests developed for assessing temperament, the fluency tests were the most valid for testing surgency. Studman had also come to similar conclusions.[7]

See also

References

  1. 1.0 1.1 Blandon, Alysia Y.; Susuan D. Calkins; Susan P. Keane; Marion O'Brien (2010). "Contribution of child's physiology and maternal behavior to children's trajectories of temperamental reactivity". Developmental Psychology 46 (5): 1089–1102. doi:10.1037/a0020678. PMID 20822225. 
  2. "Surgency". APA Dictionary of Psychology. Washington, DC: American Psychological Association. n.d.. https://dictionary.apa.org/surgency. Retrieved 2019-09-26. 
  3. Shiner, Rebecca; Avshalom Caspi (2003). "Personality differences in childhood and adolescence: Measurement, development, and consequences". Journal of Child Psychology and Psychiatry 44 (1): 2–32. doi:10.1111/1469-7610.00101. PMID 12553411. 
  4. 4.0 4.1 Else-Quest, Nicole (2003). Gender Differences in Temperament: A Meta-Analysis. doi:10.1037/e341392004-001. 
  5. Rothbart, Mary; Evans, D. E.; Ahadi, S. A. (2000). "Temperament and Personality: Origins and Outcome". Journal of Personality and Social Psychology 78 (1): 122–135. doi:10.1037/0022-3514.78.1.122. PMID 10653510. 
  6. Thurstone, L.L.; Thurstone, T.G. (1941). Factorial Studies of Intelligence. Psychometric Monographs, no. 2. Chicago: University of Chicago Press. 
  7. Studman, L. G. (1935). "Studies in experimental psychiatry. V. w and f factors in relation to traits of personality". Journal of Mental Science 81 (332): 107–137. doi:10.1192/bjp.81.332.107. 





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