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Emily B. Ansell

Researcher at Pennsylvania State University

Publications -  81
Citations -  6541

Emily B. Ansell is an academic researcher from Pennsylvania State University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Personality & Personality disorders. The author has an hindex of 37, co-authored 75 publications receiving 5681 citations. Previous affiliations of Emily B. Ansell include Yale University & Syracuse University.

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Initial Construction and Validation of the Pathological Narcissism Inventory

TL;DR: The Pathological Narcissism Inventory is a 52-item self-report measure assessing 7 dimensions of pathological narcissism spanning problems with narcissistic grandiosity and narcissistic vulnerability and exhibited significant associations with parasuicidal behavior, suicide attempts, homicidal ideation, and several aspects of psychotherapy utilization.
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Narcissism at the crossroads: phenotypic description of pathological narcissism across clinical theory, social/personality psychology, and psychiatric diagnosis.

TL;DR: It is concluded that the construct of pathological narcissism is at a crossroads and recommendations for diagnostic assessment, clinical conceptualization, and future research that could lead to a more integrated understanding of narcissistic personality and narcissistic personality pathology are provided.
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The causes, phenomenology, and consequences of hurt feelings

TL;DR: One hundred sixty-four participants recounted situations in which their feelings had been hurt (victim accounts) or in which they had hurt another person's feelings (perpetrator accounts) and then completed a questionnaire as mentioned in this paper.
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Personality Assessment in DSM--5: Empirical support for rating Severity, Style, and Traits

TL;DR: This study empirically distinguished stylistic elements of personality pathology symptoms from the overall severity of personality disorder in a large, longitudinally assessed clinical sample, and found that generalized severity is the most important single predictor of current and prospective dysfunction.