A cross-cultural study of self-monitoring in relation to the big five personality traits of Thai and foreign students at Assumption University of Thailand
A cross-cultural study of self-monitoring in relation to the big five personality traits of Thai and foreign students at Assumption University of Thailand
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2007
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Assumption University
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eng
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Assumption University. Martin de Tours School of Management and Economics
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AU Journal of Management 5, 1 (January-June 2007), 47-53
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Abstract
This study examined if differences in self-monitoring which is a specific dispositional trait are
related to differences in the big five general dispositional traits of personality for both Thai and Foreign
BBA students at Assumption University. Out of a sample of 321 students, 151 were low and 170 were
high self-monitors. The only trait that students differed on was extraversion with low self-monitors
having higher scores on extraversion. The Thai and Foreign students were further divided into high and
low self-monitors. Results indicated that both groups, high and low self-monitors for both Thai and
Foreign students have differences in extraversion, emotional stability and conscientiousness traits.
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In English ; only abstract in English.
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