Neuroticism in a sentence as a noun

But, "neuroticism" is not one of the variables I was using.

I think the article tried to put neuroticism on the other end of the spectrum from psychopathy.

Perhaps neuroticism includes it, but I think the term has been retired from usage in the past couple decades.

[1] Any scientific study is going to use the Big Five definition of neuroticism, of course.

There are so many situations where it can be used that assigning the whole word to a signal for neuroticism seems like a misstep to me.

Which aligns with the study as I've previously done the Five Factor Inventory and have a low neuroticism score.

I don't understand how using "****" a lot can be directly correlated to neuroticism.

And I love how none of this is about the child - it's all about managing the neuroticism of panicky helicopter parents.

They also found a 25% less strong correlation between swear words and neuroticism, compared to a previous, given study.

I just did some searching on "iq neuroticism"[1] and everything I found seemed to indicate that there's a small negative correlation.

The walkthrough took me through finding a correlation between voting preference and neuroticism.

But it's also worth noting that this dataset shows larger effect sizes at similar CIs for the correlation between [preference and age] and [age and neuroticism].

It is plain, on stronger and better replicated evidence, that the factor "neuroticism" is a risk factor for many bad outcomes, including shorter lifespan.

The neuroticism about his interview, the issues with his relationship, his wife throwing his poorly chosen words back at him, all those would be possible with regular memory.

Creativity is correlated with a longer life.> A large body of research links neuroticism with poorer health and conscientiousness with superior health.

And though he is far from a man anyone would want to end-up like, he is a free spirit who chooses to be a slave only to his own neuroticism rather than to anyone else's utilitarian logic.

The traits studied were "neuroticism, extraversion, agreeableness, and conscientiousness", the differences were quite small, and the differences between cultures were primarily due to differences between men, not women.

You'll find more ammunition for yourself than for me on that page, though, as apparently psychologists have tried to empirically distinguish shyness, introversion, neuroticism, embarrassability, public shyness, private shyness, and sociability.

Neuroticism definitions

noun

a mental or personality disturbance not attributable to any known neurological or organic dysfunction

See also: neurosis psychoneurosis