Interamerican Journal of Psychology | 2021

A Short Version of the Big Five Inventory (BFI-20): Evidence on Construct Validity

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Abstract


Several measures were developed in the past decades to measure personality, focusing on the Big Five Factor Model (BFFM; Openness, Conscientiousness, Extraversion, Agreeableness, and Neuroticism). Despite the relevance of their findings in different countries, a shared limitation of such measures is their length, demanding time from researchers and participants, which might cause boredom or fatigue, biasing the final results. This research aimed to provide a shorter version for the 44-Item Big Five Inventory (BFI), through two studies (NTotal = 8,119). The structure was assessed using a range of techniques (e.g., PAF analysis, Procrustes rotation). The best 20 items (4 per factor) were chosen to compose the final version of the BFI-20, which presented suitable psychometric evidences across the samples. Thus, due the growing need for shorter measures without losing their psychometric quality, our findings indicate the adequacy of the 20-item BFI and its potential applicability in research context.

Volume 55
Pages None
DOI 10.30849/RIPIJP.V55I1.1312
Language English
Journal Interamerican Journal of Psychology

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