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Sarah Francis Smith
Researcher at Emory University
Publications - 26
Citations - 1308
Sarah Francis Smith is an academic researcher from Emory University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Psychopathy & Personality. The author has an hindex of 16, co-authored 26 publications receiving 1063 citations.
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Psychopathy in the workplace: The knowns and unknowns
TL;DR: In this article, the authors bring together the diverse and growing scientific literature on the implications of business psychopathy for occupational and academic differences, workplace aggression and counterproductive behavior, ethical decision-making in the corporate world, white-color crime, and leadership.
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Psychopathy Deconstructed and Reconstructed: Identifying and Assembling the Personality Building Blocks of Cleckley's Chimera.
TL;DR: A meta-analysis of the correlations between the Psychopathy Checklist-Revised and normal-range personality traits is used as a launching point to deconstruct widely used measures of psychopathy into their constituent subdimensions and examine the associations of these subdimension with higher-order and lower-order personality dimensions drawn from the Big Five and Big Three frameworks.
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Successful Psychopathy A Scientific Status Report
TL;DR: A status report on successful psychopathy research can be found in this article, where the authors examine evidence for competing models of successful psychopathic traits and offer desiderata for future research.
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The Double-Edged Sword of Grandiose Narcissism Implications for Successful and Unsuccessful Leadership Among U.S. Presidents
Ashley L. Watts,Scott O. Lilienfeld,Sarah Francis Smith,Joshua D. Miller,W. Keith Campbell,Irwin D. Waldman,Steven Rubenzer,Thomas J. Faschingbauer +7 more
TL;DR: It is found that presidents exhibit elevated levels of grandiose narcissism compared with the general population, and that presidents’ grandiosed narcissism has been rising over time, suggesting that grandiOSE narcissism may be a double-edged sword in the leadership domain.
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Correlates of psychopathic personality traits in everyday life: results from a large community survey
TL;DR: Preliminary evidence that psychopathic personality traits display meaningful response penetration into daily functioning is offered, and provocative questions for future research are raised.