Profile picture of Gerard Saucier

Gerard Saucier

Professor
Psychology
Phone: 541-346-4927
Office: 425 Straub Hall
Research Interests: Personality, Values, Cultural Psychology, Moral Psychology

Biography

Dr. Saucier leads a research group, often involved in international collaborations, that focuses on the following research questions:

* What is the most comprehensive and cross-culturally generalizable structure of personality attributes? What is the best (especially, the most valid) way to measure this structure? How do the dimensions in this structure relate to the mindset or affective-motivational ‘personality system’ of the individual, and to larger cultural systems? What are the sources of personality change (including sources related to beliefs and values)?

* Particularly in terms of comprehensiveness and cross-culturally generalizability, how is structure for inter-individual variation in belief and value systems (include priorities regarding moralities) ordered and structured? What kinds of beliefs and values have the largest effects on patterns of behavior and emotion, and are the most integral components of culture and have the most important effects in the spheres of politics and religion? Which patterns of beliefs and values are associated with optimal human development, and which patterns encourage psychosocial dysfunction (e.g., alienation, corruption, militant extremism, genocide)?

The approach is “top-down” in the sense that we begin by defining the most important dimensions of dispositional variation and then seek to identify mechanisms that most importantly account for that variation. Dr. Saucier has been a leader in developing and refining dimensional models for personality (the Big Five, and upgrading from the Big Five to more comprehensive models and a broader, more universal 'Big Two') and beliefs and values (e.g., dimensions of ‘isms’). Theoretically, our approach emphasizes the contribution of cultural dynamics to psychological tendencies.

Dr. Saucier is no longer accepting new graduate students.

Selected Publications:

Saucier, G., & Iurino, K. (2020). High-dimensionality personality structure in the natural language: Further analyses of classic sets of English-language trait-adjectives. Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, 119, 1188-1219.

Saucier, G., Iurino, K., & Thalmayer, A.G. (2020). Comparing predictive validity in a community sample: High-dimensionality and traditional domain-and-facet models of personality variation. European Journal of Personality, 34, 1120-1137.

Saucier, G. (2018). Culture, morality, and individual differences: Comparability and incomparability across species. Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences, 373(1744), 20170170.

Saucier, G., & Akers, L. (2018). Democidal thinking: Patterns in the mindset behind organized mass killing. Genocide Studies and Prevention, 12(1), 80-97.

Saucier, G., Kenner, J., Iurino, K., Bou Malham, P., Chen, Z., Thalmayer, A.G., ...& Altschul, C. (2015). Cross-cultural differences in a global 'Survey of World Views'. Journal of Cross-Cultural Psychology, 46, 53-70.

Saucier, G. (2013). Isms dimensions: Toward a more comprehensive and integrative model of belief-system components. Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, 104, 921-939.

Saucier, G., Akers, L. G., Shen-Miller, S., Knezevic, G., & Stankov, L. (2009). Patterns of thinking in militant extremism. Perspectives on Psychological Science, 4, 256-271.

Saucier, G., & Skrzypinska, K. (2006). Spiritual but not religious? Evidence for two independent dispositions. Journal of Personality, 74, 1257-1292.

Saucier, G. (2000). Isms and the structure of social attitudes. Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, 78, 366-385.

For additional publications, see

https://www.uoregon.edu/~gsaucier/gsau3.htm