“…Since then, a body of social cognitive work has shown that perceptual manipulations consistent with prominent metaphors (e.g., “good is up”: Meier & Robinson, 2004a) alter cognition and social judgments in a metaphor-consistent direction (Landau et al, 2010). There are many gaps in our current knowledge, but the primary one from our perspective is that metaphor representation theory has yet to contact the personality literature as much as might be desired (Robinson & Fetterman, in press), aside from a handful of studies examining personality trait predictors of reaction time processes (Meier & Robinson, 2006; Moeller, Robinson, & Zabelina, 2008; Robinson, Zabelina, Ode, & Moeller, 2008; Sherman & Clore, 2009). Yet, if metaphoric processes do constrain thought, feeling, and behavior in the manner suggested by Lakoff and Johnson (1999), the metaphor representation perspective might have largely untapped potential in understanding individual differences.…”