The way someone behaves (Personality) consistently follows a pattern of thought, action and feeling that sets individuals apart. Additionally, those patterns (Personality Traits) should not change very much from day-to-day or between different environments (Situations). Psychologists created a framework called Five-Factor Model (OCEAN) to organize how individuals exhibit 5 major personality traits including: Openness, Conscientiousness, Extraversion, Agreeableness and Neuroticism. Someone who has high levels of Openness tends to be creative and curious. High Conscientiousness indicates high organization and reliability. High Extraversion refers to being socially-sociable and energetic. High Agreeableness indicates being cooperative and having trust in others. Lastly, high Neuroticism refers to an individual's experience of negative moods.The Person v. Situation debate looks at whether "the way we behave" is better explained through personality traits versus the situation in which we currently find ourselves.