Milieu effects on the Dark Triad traits and their sex differences in 49 countries

Authors
  • P.K. Jonason
  • S.K. Czerwiński
  • F. Tobaldo
  • J. Ramos-Diaz
  • M. Adamovic
  • B.G. Adams
  • R. Ardi
  • S. Bălțătescu
  • Y.S. Cha
  • P. Chobthamkit
  • S. El-Astal
  • K. Gundolf
  • T. Jukić
  • E. Knezović
  • K. Liik
  • J. Maltby
  • A. Mamuti
  • T.L. Milfont
  • R. Moreta-Herrera
  • J. Park
  • J. Piotrowski
  • A. Samekin
  • H. Tiliouine
  • R. Tomšik
  • C. Umeh
  • K. van den Bos
  • C.-M. Vauclair
  • A. Włodarczyk
  • I. Yahiiaiev
  • M. Żemojtel-Piotrowska
  • C. Sedikides
Publication date 10-2022
Journal Personality and Individual Differences
Article number 111796
Volume | Issue number 197
Number of pages 6
Organisations
  • Faculty of Social and Behavioural Sciences (FMG) - Psychology Research Institute (PsyRes)
Abstract

Most research on the development of personality traits like the Dark Triad (i.e., narcissism, Machiavellianism, and psychopathy) focuses on local effects like parenting style or attachment, but people live in a larger society that may set the stage for any local effects. Here we paired nation-level data on the traits from 49 nations with several milieu indicators (e.g., life expectancy, homicide rates) from three timepoints (and change among them) where the average participant (≈ 22yo) would have been a child (≈ 6yo), a pre-teen (≈ 11yo), and a teenager (≈ 16yo). Congruent with previous research, variance in narcissism was far more sensitive to variance in milieu conditions in general and across all three time points than variance in Machiavellianism or psychopathy. The milieu conditions differentiated the traits somewhat with income and education revealing negative correlations with narcissism, positive correlations with Machiavellianism, and null correlations with psychopathy. Sex differences in Machiavellianism and narcissism were correlated with homicide rates across the three timepoints. The evidence that changes in milieu conditions in ones' past predicts the traits was erratic, but larger sex differences in the traits were associated with decreased life expectancies and homicide rates between childhood and pre-teens.

Document type Article
Language English
Published at https://doi.org/10.1016/j.paid.2022.111796
Other links https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/85132876771
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