Five main factors of cartel, cartel personality, behavioral genetics, and evolutionary personality theory. Current research, Raymond Cattell (1905 - present), designed "Five Factors for Individuality" to clarify 5 categories. Five factors: # 1 outgoing and introvert, # 2 adaptive and confrontational, # 3 responsible and undirected, # 4 neurosis and emotional stability, # 5 open experience and no open experience. Three concerns about Han's Eysenck and Francis Galton's behavioral genetics and Arnold Bass's evolutionary personality theory are fused.
Despite various criticisms of the cartel's hypothesis, his empirical discovery will investigate the "five" aspects of the personality and provide a direction for later discovery. Fiske (1949) and Tups and Kristal (1961) reduced cartel variables to five repetitive factors called extroversion or homosexuality, consensus, consciousness, emotional stability, and intelligence or openness. (Pervin & John, 1999). Cattell's 16 personality factor models are highly criticized by many researchers, mainly because they are not replicable. During Cattell factor analysis, calculation error may cause data shift and could not be reproduced. There is no computer program for factor analysis during Cattell and calculation is done manually so it is not surprising that some errors occurred.
There is a possibility that the 5 element model does not meet the originality criteria. In fact, Cattell 's 16 - factor system has been in use for nearly five years (Digman, 1990) when Fiske first derived a model that predicts actions consisting of five factors. Nevertheless, the five factor model can be considered to be far enough from the cartel model to guarantee the original labeling. However, perhaps the opposite is that it is more convenient to examine factor models together, but as a theory it is quite different, but they are all suitable for families. This model series began with Cattell 's 16 - element system including Eysenck' s model and five - element model inspired by German psychologists Allport and Odbert (Digman, 1990) and their research was inspired. The other two German psychologists Baumgarten and Krakis (Digman, 1990)
Five-factor model studies began when DW Fiske was unable to find support for cartel's 16 personality factors in 1949 and was able to find support for five factors. The research increased from the 1980s to the 1990s, and it began to support more five-factor models. Personality traits of the five factors show interviews, consistency of self-description and observation, and a wide range of participants with different age and culture. It is the most widely accepted structure in characteristic theorists and personality psychology of today and is the most accurate approximation of the basic feature dimension (Funder, 2001).