This paper presents a hierarchical taxonomy of human goals, based on similarity judgments of 135 goals gleaned from the literature. Women and men in 3 age groupsâ17â30, 25â62, and 65 and olderâsorted the goals into conceptually similar groups. These were cluster analyzed and a taxonomy of 30 goal clusters was developed for each age group separately and for the total sample. The clusters were conceptually meaningful and consistent across the 3 samples. The broadest distinction in each sample was between interpersonal or social goals and intrapersonal or individual goals, with interpersonal goals divided into family-related and more general social goals. Further, the 30 clusters were organized into meaningful higher order clusters. The role of such a taxonomy in promoting theory development and research is discussed, as is its relationship to other organizations of human goals and to the Big Five structure of personality.
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Description
an attempt from a psychology perspective to organize human intentions
%0 Journal Article
%1 chulef2001
%A Chulef, Ada S.
%A Read, Stephen J.
%A Walsh, David A.
%D 2001
%J Motivation and Emotion
%K GoalCategories classification intent taxonomy
%N 3
%P 191--232
%T A Hierarchical Taxonomy of Human Goals
%U http://dx.doi.org/10.1023/A:1012225223418
%V 25
%X This paper presents a hierarchical taxonomy of human goals, based on similarity judgments of 135 goals gleaned from the literature. Women and men in 3 age groupsâ17â30, 25â62, and 65 and olderâsorted the goals into conceptually similar groups. These were cluster analyzed and a taxonomy of 30 goal clusters was developed for each age group separately and for the total sample. The clusters were conceptually meaningful and consistent across the 3 samples. The broadest distinction in each sample was between interpersonal or social goals and intrapersonal or individual goals, with interpersonal goals divided into family-related and more general social goals. Further, the 30 clusters were organized into meaningful higher order clusters. The role of such a taxonomy in promoting theory development and research is discussed, as is its relationship to other organizations of human goals and to the Big Five structure of personality.
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@article{chulef2001,
abstract = {This paper presents a hierarchical taxonomy of human goals, based on similarity judgments of 135 goals gleaned from the literature. Women and men in 3 age groupsâ17â30, 25â62, and 65 and olderâsorted the goals into conceptually similar groups. These were cluster analyzed and a taxonomy of 30 goal clusters was developed for each age group separately and for the total sample. The clusters were conceptually meaningful and consistent across the 3 samples. The broadest distinction in each sample was between interpersonal or social goals and intrapersonal or individual goals, with interpersonal goals divided into family-related and more general social goals. Further, the 30 clusters were organized into meaningful higher order clusters. The role of such a taxonomy in promoting theory development and research is discussed, as is its relationship to other organizations of human goals and to the Big Five structure of personality.
ER -},
added-at = {2008-04-15T12:24:02.000+0200},
author = {Chulef, Ada S. and Read, Stephen J. and Walsh, David A.},
biburl = {https://www.bibsonomy.org/bibtex/2f029faed2025b2c7ad36da3f7717e4dc/mkroell},
description = {an attempt from a psychology perspective to organize human intentions},
interhash = {542f8b7cb31c6d0387c60b1d20e60047},
intrahash = {f029faed2025b2c7ad36da3f7717e4dc},
journal = {Motivation and Emotion},
keywords = {GoalCategories classification intent taxonomy},
month = {#sep#},
number = 3,
pages = {191--232},
timestamp = {2009-09-08T10:53:23.000+0200},
title = {A Hierarchical Taxonomy of Human Goals},
url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1023/A:1012225223418},
volume = 25,
year = 2001
}