scispace - formally typeset
Open AccessJournal ArticleDOI

Assessment and Diagnosis of Personality Disorder: Perennial Issues and an Emerging Reconceptualization

Lee Anna Clark
- 01 Jan 2007 - 
- Vol. 58, Iss: 1, pp 227-257
TLDR
This chapter reviews recent personality disorder research, focusing on three major domains: assessment, comorbidity, and stability, and finds a new model for assessing PD-and perhaps all psychopathology-emerges from integrating these interrelated reconceptualizations.
Abstract
This chapter reviews recent (2000–2005) personality disorder (PD) research, focusing on three major domains: assessment, comorbidity, and stability. (a) Substantial evidence has accrued favoring dimensional over categorical conceptualization of PD, and the five-factor model of personality is prominent as an integrating framework. Future directions include assessing dysfunction separately from traits and learning to utilize collateral information. (b) To address the pervasiveness and extent of comorbidity, researchers have begun to move beyond studying overlapping pairs or small sets of disorders and are developing broader, more integrated common-factor models that cross the Axis I–Axis II boundary. (c) Studies of PD stability have converged on the finding that PD features include both more acute, dysfunctional behaviors that resolve in relatively short periods, and maladaptive temperamental traits that are relatively more stable—similar to normal-range personality traits—with increasing stability ...

read more

Content maybe subject to copyright    Report

Citations
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI

Five-Factor Model personality disorder prototypes: a review of their development, validity, and comparison to alternative approaches.

TL;DR: The development of Five-Factor Model (FFM) personality disorder (PD) prototypes for the assessment of DSM-IV PDs are reviewed, as well as subsequent procedures for scoring individuals' FFM data with regard to these PD prototypes, including similarity scores and simple additive counts that are based on a quantitative prototype matching methodology.
Journal ArticleDOI

Connecting DSM-5 Personality Traits and Pathological Beliefs: Toward a Unifying Model

TL;DR: Traits provide scaffolding for individual differences in pathological personality, within which dysfunctional beliefs offer specific vectors for clinical intervention in a cognitive framework, and the empirical commensurability of trait and cognitive models are discussed.
Journal ArticleDOI

The FFOCI and Other Measures and Models of OCPD

TL;DR: Results supported the validity of the FFOCI as a measure of OCPD and maladaptive variants of FFM traits, as well as identifying substantive differences among the alternative measures of OC PD, particularly with respect to their relationship with FFM conscientiousness, antagonism, and introversion.
Journal ArticleDOI

Why Psychiatric Research Must Abandon Traditional Diagnostic Classification and Adopt a Fully Dimensional Scope: Two Solutions to a Persistent Problem

TL;DR: Why psychiatric research must abandon Traditional Diagnostic Classification and Adopt a Fully Dimensional Scope and adopt a fully Ddimensional Scope and two Solutions to a persistent problem.
Journal ArticleDOI

An expert consensus approach to relating the proposed DSM-5 types and traits.

TL;DR: The ratings by experts in the current study demonstrated moderate agreement with the DSM-5 Personality and Personality Disorders Work Group's assignments, but also identified notable discrepancies between how these types were described by the Work Group and how they were perceived by other PD researchers.
References
More filters
Book

The Principles of Psychology

William James
TL;DR: For instance, the authors discusses the multiplicity of the consciousness of self in the form of the stream of thought and the perception of space in the human brain, which is the basis for our work.
Journal ArticleDOI

A Psychobiological Model of Temperament and Character

TL;DR: A psychobiological model of the structure and development of personality that accounts for dimensions of both temperament and character is described, for the first time, for three dimensions of character that mature in adulthood and influence personal and social effectiveness by insight learning about self-concepts.
Journal ArticleDOI

The Five Factor Model and impulsivity: using a structural model of personality to understand impulsivity

TL;DR: The UPPS Impulsive Behavior Scale as mentioned in this paper was developed to identify four distinct personality facets associated with impulsive-like behavior which were labeled urgency, lack of premeditation, pre-emption, and perseverance.
Related Papers (5)