Introduction Results: Mediational Analyses Results: Zero-Order Correlations Method Presented at the 15 th Annual Meeting of the Society for Personality and Social Psychology Austin, TX February, 2014 Conscientiousness Mediates the Relationship Between Age and Time-of-Day Preference Ryan J. Walker, Zachary D. Kribs, Andrew N. Christopher, Oren R. Shewach, and Mareike B. Wieth Time-of-day preference relates to when a person is both physically and cognitively at their peek People feel most alert, energetic, and capable The relationship between age and time-of-day preference has been well-established (Adan et al., 2012) Less than ~12 yrs. = morning preference; ~12 – 20 yrs. = evening preference; greater than ~20 = increasing preference for morning Research on personality and time-of-day preference has found that conscientiousness is the best predictor of morningness (Tsaousis, 2010) Findings on the remaining Big Five factors are more inconclusive There are established age differences in personality (Lucas & Donnellan, 2009) For example, conscientiousness tends to increase with age o Major life tasks may facilitate these changes (e.g., building a career) Given the relations among these variables described above, is it possible that conscientiousness mediates the relationship between age and time-of-day preference? Hypothesis Consistent with previous research, older participants should express a strong morning preference, and younger participants should express a strong evening preference More importantly, conscientiousness should mediate the relationship between age and time-of-day preference Mediation Bootstrapping analyses to test if the Big Five personality traits mediate the relationship between age and time-of-day preference 491 participants, ranging in age from 17 to 71 years (M = yrs., SD = 15.29; 48% female) 223 students introductory psychology students (M = 18.7 yrs., SD = 1.1) 268 participants from StudyResponse (M = 45.3 yrs., SD = 11.2) Participants first completed Costa and McCrae’s (1992) 240-item NEO-PI-R measure of the Big Five personality factors Factors: conscientiousness (α =.93), agreeableness (α =.90), extraversion (α =.92), openness to experience (α =.91), neuroticism (α =.93) Responses were made using a 1 (not at all descriptive of me) to 7 (very descriptive of me) range 48 items were averaged to form a score for each Big Five Factor Participants then completed Horne and Ostberg’s (1976) Morningness-Eveningness Questionnaire (MEQ), α =.83 Most common measure of time-of-day preference (Adan et al., 2012) Example item: During the first half hour after having awakened in the morning, how tired do you feel? o Response options: very tired, fairly tired, fairly refreshed, very refreshed o Higher scores = morning preference; lower scores = evening preference Results: Mediational Model Consistent with previous research, age was related to time-of- day preference (r =.41) Older participants indicated a stronger morning preference, whereas younger participants indicated a stronger evening preference Age was significantly correlated with each Big Five factor, except for openness Positively correlated with agreeableness (r =.22) and conscientiousness (r =.31) Negatively correlated with neuroticism (r = -.33) and extraversion (r = -.25) Each personality factor was significantly correlated with time-of-day preference People scoring high on agreeableness (r =.14) and conscientiousness (r =.31) expressed a morning preference People scoring high on openness (r = -.11), neuroticism (r = -.22), and extraversion (r = -.10) expressed an evening preference Discussion Conducted bootstrapping analyses using Preacher and Hayes’ (2008) SPSS macro 5000 boot iterations and a 99% percentile confidence interval (CI) Enables testing of individual mediators, as well as the effect each mediator has in combination with the others Total effect of age on time-of-day preference remained significant when Big Five mediators were added (direct effect of age on time-of- day preference =.2095, p <.001) When mediating factors were added, the coefficient decreased, but remained significant Total indirect effect was not significant (point estimate of.0555 and a 99% bootstrap percentile CI of to.1075) Individual mediators Conscientiousness, with a point estimate of.0373 and a 99% CI of.0087 to.0695 was a unique mediator None of the other Big Five factors mediated the relationship Conscientiousness attenuated the relationship between age and time-of-day preference Conscientiousness plays a role in the relationship between age and time- of-day preference Findings consistent with life course perspective of personality traits Conscientiousness may increase as people begin their careers, when certain behaviors are expected (e.g., arriving at work on time) Limitation No participants were under the age of 17 o Around age 12 or 13, individuals tend to shift from a morning preference to an evening preference (Adan et al., 2012) o Conscientiousness levels tend to be lower at this age (Marsh et al., 2013) o Together, these findings provide further evidence that conscientiousness mediates the relationship between age and time-of-day preference Future Direction Conscientiousness as a potential moderator of the relationship between time-of-day preference and work shift adjustment (ease of adapting to non-preferred time of day) Implications and Conclusions Older people’s morning preference and younger people’s evening preference were significantly attenuated by conscientiousness It is crucial to examine how conscientiousness may play a role in behaviors associated with time-of-day preference Contact Information Ryan Walker: Andrew Christopher: