
@article{ref1,
title="A royal road to understanding the mechanisms underlying person-in-context behavior",
journal="Journal of research in personality",
year="2009",
author="Van Mechelen, Iven",
volume="43",
number="2",
pages="179-186",
abstract="The structure of individual differences in behavioral profiles across situations constitutes a royal road to understanding the mechanisms underlying person-in-context behavior. I want to go beyond partial accounts of this structure in terms of cross-situational consistency coefficients and estimated percentages of variance accounted for by person-situation interactions. For this purpose I propose a small set of empirically testable questions that underlie a basic typology of contextualized individual differences structures. The answers to these questions and the resulting classes of the typology relate to a broad range of concepts and theoretical frameworks, including synergistic interactions, ability accounts of personality dispositions, stress-diathesis models within the psychopathology domain, individual differences in discriminative facility, and Traits As Situational Sensitivities models. Tools from the two-mode clustering domain (old as well as recently proposed ones) can be used to detect the type of individual differences structure that constitutes the gist of a person by situation data set at hand. I illustrate with data on individual differences in helping behavior in a set of emergency situations.<p />",
language="",
issn="0092-6566",
doi="10.1016/j.jrp.2008.12.012",
url="http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jrp.2008.12.012"
}