“…Overall, our results suggest that just analysing the average amount of time a person spends talking can miss important relationships between personality and style of socializing. Our work adds to the growing literature on personality dynamics (Hopwood, Zimmermann, Pincus, & Krueger, 2015; Robinson & Gordon, 2011; Read et al, 2010; Sosnowska, Kuppens, De Fruyt, & Hofmans, 2019; Wright, Hopwood, & Simms, 2015) and the dynamics of socializing (Dishion & Snyder, 2004; Hollenstein, 2007; Lavictoire, Snyder, Stoolmiller, & Hollenstein, 2012; Schelling, 1998). We present the first instance (to the best of our knowledge) of relating non–linear socializing dynamics assessed through ambulatory assessment to personality traits (but see Gundogdu et al, 2017 and Wang et al, 2018, for related analysis strategies, and Stachl et al, 2020, for some linear dynamic measures).…”