The regular research has had interesting results like showing a distinct pattern of cognitive traits and values associated with libertarian politics, but there's no reason one can't use it for investigating LWers in more detail; for example, going through the results, "we can see that many of us consider purity/respect to be far less morally significant than most", and we collectively seem to have Conscientiousness issues. (I also drew on it recently for a gay marriage comment.) If there were more data, it might be interesting to look at the results and see where LWers diverge the most from libertarians (the mainstream group we seem most psychologically similar to), but unfortunately for a lot of the tests, there's too little to bother with (LW n<10). Maybe more people could take it.
Big 5: http://www.yourmorals.org/bigfive_process.php
(You can see some of my results at http://www.gwern.net/Links#profile )
I think we may have a confusion of terminology here. The Big Five is the result of a statistical procedure which boils down thousands of peoples' responses to thousands of questions (based on personality words) into a set of 5 statistical abstractions which are as non-redundant and predict as many responses on average as possible; why 5? Well, 5 abstractions were chosen because if you boil it down further to 4/3/2/1, what's left doesn't seem particularly meaningful (there may be a 1 'J' healthy-personality factor akin to intelligence's G factor, but last I saw it mentioned it was still highly doubtful), and more than 5 would be harder to use since 5 is a nice easily-handled number which seems to map pretty well onto gross aspects of personalities & can be easily measured in a short questionnaire.
However, there is no reason you could not have a factorization instead as a Less-Big 6 (something like HEXACO) or a Even-Less-Big 7 or some larger number. And specifically, each of the Big 5 are themselves the correlation of 6 more specific factors or 'facets' for a total of 30 factors available (assuming you used the longer Big 5 tests which allow reasonably accurate per-facet measurements instead of lumping them together and only giving you say Openness); for example, Openness is extracted from the facets/factors dubbed "Fantasy", "Aesthetics", "Feelings", "Actions", "Ideas", & "Values". You might not consider the "Ideas" facet (whatever that is) to have anything to do with the "Fantasy" facet, but apparently they do correlate in the real-world samples of people taking the long more in-depth personality surveys which were used to construct the Big 5.
Often all you need are the top-level factors and so the details of how many factors doesn't matter, but sometimes it is important to go down to the more fine-grained factors and make use of the 30 facets. For example, males/females do not show up as very different on Big 5 inventories, despite the universal belief that men & women have very different personalities; but this is because the male/female difference is on the facets and that gets hidden when it's boiled down to the 5: "The Distance Between Mars and Venus: Measuring Global Sex Differences in Personality".
And the facets themselves can be factorized even more narrowly if one wants. (The most extreme example I've seen was a paper I can't seem to refind at the moment, but where they had hundreds of people fill out thousands of test items online and with this huge bulk of data, they extracted what they called the Tiny 100 or the Little 100 or something like that.)
I think your prediction would just be wrong. Interest in new ideas does seem to correlate with sensation-seeking (I'd guess those are the Openness facets "Ideas" and "Action", respectively) and that's why they help give rise to the Openness factor.
I'd agree on that one. Conformity I would expect to fall under Conscientiousness ("Order"?) and kindness is definitely under Agreeableness ("Altruism"). Hence conformism and kindness are going to be mostly independent traits.
So as I said before, you changed my mind but - now that I've had some time to mull it over, I'll articulate why instinctively I felt something wrong about the big-five...because everything you say is true, but I still have a nagging feeling of wrongness. I've put the more important parts in >quotation format, since these are unverbalized thoughts still in formation and tend to over-ramble and I don't have time to properly pare it down at the moment.
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