337 personality Flashcards
1
Q
Big Five factors
A
- neuroticism (even-tempered vs. temperamental/moody)
- extraversion (talkative, assertive, active vs. passive, reserved, quieter)
- openness to experience (imaginative, curious, creative vs. hsllaow, imperceptive)
- agreeableness (kind, trusting, warm vs. hostile, selfish, distrustful)
- conscientiousness (organized, thorough, reliable vs. careless, negligent, unreliable)
2
Q
personality
A
- enduring pattern of perceiving, relating to the environment
- the range of responses one can generate in a situation (behaviour, affect, cognitions), the expression of personality traits vary depending on the situation
- temperament develops early and personality begins at 18 years old, both are relatively stable
3
Q
personality pathology
A
- rigidity in responses
- same traits, but people generate the same responses over and over without adapting to the situation
4
Q
DSM history of personality disorders
A
- introduced in DSM-III as longstanding maladaptive ways of relating to the world as opposed to more transient/phasic syndromes like MDD
- largely ignored until 1980 Axis II
- not conceptualized as diathesis-stress, but as part of your personality that happens gradually and interferes with how you operate in the world (range in severity)
5
Q
personality disorder
A
- enduring pattern of inner experience and behaviour that:
- deviates from cultural expectations (social value)
- pervasive and inflexible
- onset in adolescence or early adulthood
- stable over time
- leads to distress or impairment (can be to the individual or to others)
6
Q
Cluster A PDs
A
- odd/eccentric
- people who seem odd with unusual behaviour that ranges from eccentric detachment to extreme paranoia and withdrawal
- paranoid PD
- schizotypal PD
- schizoid PD
- least well-studied
7
Q
Cluster B PDs
A
- dramatic/emotional/erratic
- tendency to be dramatic and emotional, impulsive, antisocial behaviour, attract attention in social situations, often show up in treatment or referred legally
- antisocial PD
- borderline PD
- histrionic PD
- narcissistic PD
8
Q
Cluster C PDs
A
- anxious/fearful
- present like anxiety disorders
- avoidant PD
- dependent PD
- obsessive-compulsive PD
- avoidant and dependent have fears and anxieties as primary features, OCPD has rules and orderliness (not as much anxiety)
9
Q
prevalence of PDs
A
- 4-15% in gen pop (lots of variability depending on population and study)
- higher rates in inpatient settings
- high rates of comorbidity with other PDs (the norm) and major disorders (mood, anxiety, substance use)
10
Q
controversies about PDs
A
- is there a difference between Axis I and II disorders in terms of distress, phasic/stable patterns?
- are personality disorders a difference in degree or in kind?
- how can one be diagnosed with 2+ PDs if we only have one personality - suggests that are categories might not be appropriate
11
Q
problems with assessment of PDs
A
- insight: person lacks good insight, but how do you decide which informant to interview
- informant reports tend to vary, which informant is best, use of informants still rare in clinical practice
- current mood states can exacerbate PD symptoms (people come in for Tx when they’re distressed)
- using different instruments can result in different diagnoses
- categorical inter-rater reliability is good, but test-retest is weak (perhaps not as stable as we think)
- PDs can be successfully treated (again, not as stable as we think)
12
Q
hybrid dimensional-categorical model
A
- PDs as an extreme constellation of traits that are each along a continuum
- proposed as a revision in DSM-5 but rejected
- Five Factor model = almost all disorders are high in neuroticism (may not be specific enough for PD functioning), designed for normal populations and may not translate to clinical
- Five Factor model works well for some PDs like BPD, histrionic, dependent, OCPD but not for others like schizoid and schizotypal
13
Q
proposed revision for DSM-5
A
- keep antisocial, avoidant, borderline, narcissistic, obsessive-compulsive, schizotypal
- eliminate dependent, histrionic, schizoid, paranoid because of a lack of research about them (correlates, prevalence)
14
Q
gender and cultural diagnosis issues
A
- potential for misdiagnosis based on clinician’s perspective (few behavioural indicators in symptoms, no discrete time period which makes behaviours very context-dependent)
- clinicians reluctant to diagnose women with antisocial, men with histrionic (aggression in ASPD may be expressed differently in men and women based on culture, histrionic explicitly gendered)
- BPD appears to manifest differently in men and women (more diagnosed in women)
- more men have dx of psychopathy than women despite being in prison for the same crimes
15
Q
comorbidity and diagnostic overlap in PDs
A
- people with diagnoses for BPD are likely to also meet criteria for avoidant and histrionic
- antisocial has symptom overlap with schizoid and narcissistic (cluster B disorders conceptualized very similarly to each other)
- high comorbidity with major disorders (avoidant/dependent = anxiety and depression, BPD = unipolar and bipolar, PTSD, ASPD/BPD/NPD = SUD, avoidant = eating disorders, OCPD = anorexia, binge eating)