TY - JOUR
T1 - Personality traits as predictors of post-traumatic symptoms in conflict zones
T2 - the differential roles of neuroticism and extraversion
AU - Ryder, Chen Hanna
AU - Gal, Carmit
AU - Levy, Einav
AU - Raveh Amsalem, Shani
AU - Rozmann, Nir
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2025 Informa UK Limited, trading as Taylor & Francis Group.
PY - 2025
Y1 - 2025
N2 - This study examined how Big Five personality traits influence PTSD symptom development in civilian populations exposed to prolonged, multi-front conflict. Regression analyses of 100 participants revealed substantial increases, yielding three findings challenging conventional trauma models. First, personality traits demonstrated validity: neuroticism amplified PTSD severity while extraversion conferred protection, explaining 21% of variance. Second, contrary to proximity-based frameworks, geographic distance, gender, and military experience showed no effects, suggesting vulnerability transcends conventional demographics. Third, pre-conflict symptoms emerged as the strongest predictor, accounting for 62.5% of variance (R2 = 68%). Findings necessitate personality-informed intervention and early identification of vulnerable individuals in conflict-affected populations.
AB - This study examined how Big Five personality traits influence PTSD symptom development in civilian populations exposed to prolonged, multi-front conflict. Regression analyses of 100 participants revealed substantial increases, yielding three findings challenging conventional trauma models. First, personality traits demonstrated validity: neuroticism amplified PTSD severity while extraversion conferred protection, explaining 21% of variance. Second, contrary to proximity-based frameworks, geographic distance, gender, and military experience showed no effects, suggesting vulnerability transcends conventional demographics. Third, pre-conflict symptoms emerged as the strongest predictor, accounting for 62.5% of variance (R2 = 68%). Findings necessitate personality-informed intervention and early identification of vulnerable individuals in conflict-affected populations.
KW - Big Five
KW - conflict trauma
KW - extraversion
KW - neuroticism
KW - Personality traits
KW - pre-existing vulnerabilities
KW - psychological resilience
KW - PTSD
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/105024861608
U2 - 10.1080/13537121.2025.2580375
DO - 10.1080/13537121.2025.2580375
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AN - SCOPUS:105024861608
SN - 1353-7121
JO - Israel Affairs
JF - Israel Affairs
ER -