AI Article Synopsis

  • The study explores the complex relationship between conscientiousness and mental health, focusing on two cultural groups: Iranian and Swedish university students.
  • Utilizing a dual model, it finds that conscientiousness plays a role in distinguishing between four mental health categories: languishing, troubled, symptomatic, and flourishing, with lower conscientiousness linked to languishing and troubled states.
  • The findings suggest that the relationship is non-linear, indicating that both very high and very low levels of conscientiousness can be associated with mental health issues, with no significant cultural differences in mental health outcomes.

Article Abstract

Background: The relationship between conscientiousness, mental health and mental illness has been an issue for the last two decades.

Aims: By using a dual model of mental health, the present study examined a non-linear relationship between conscientiousness and healthy or non-healthy symptoms in two different cultures.

Method: Participants in this study were 296 Iranian and 310 Swedish university students (18-24 years of age). We used two different conscientiousness scales; the 12-item conscientiousness subscale of the NEO/FFI as an imported (etic) scale, and a 10-item Iranian conscientiousness scale as an indigenous (emic) and culture-dependent scale.

Results: In both conscientiousness scales, multivariate analysis of variance showed that conscientiousness differentiated among four mental health groups (languishing, troubled, symptomatic and flourishing), although languishing and troubled individuals were less conscientious than flourishing and symptomatic individuals. Furthermore, the non-healthy symptomatic individuals were more conscientiousness than flourishing individuals. The results showed no significant differences between the two cultures in terms of the four mental health categories.

Conclusions: It was concluded that the relationship between conscientiousness and mental health/mental illness is more a non-linear relationship than a linear one.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/09638237.2017.1340597DOI Listing

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