Lecture 13 Flashcards
What does Borderline personality look like?
Instability. The relationships tend to be intense, emotional and potentially violent. Strong fears of abandonment. Shifting views of themselves. Strong emotions. (high N, low A.p, low C)
What does Antisocial personality look like?
A pattern of disregard for, and violation of, the rights of others. (low A, low C, high N.v).
Less likely to cause the individual with antisocial behaviour distress as the people around them with distress – so it’s a disorder even though they don’t give distress to the individual.
What Big Five characteristics are popping up most across personality disorders?
N: .24
E: -.07
O: -.01
A: -.17
C: -.09
Aren’t the strongest associations in the world. But they’re not trivial and problematic in their consistency. Openness seems to be irrelevant.
Many of the disorders seem to be empirical challenged.
What is the general conception of a mental disorder according to DSM 5?
Usually associated with significant distress in social, occupational, or other important activities.
Has to reflect dysfunction, an impairment (making the life problematic for the person).
When is it not a mental disorder?
It is not a mental disorder if you have an expectable approved response to a common stressor or loss, such as the death of a loved one.
How does mental disorders look like in a typological conception?
If we look at borderline in a typological way, we imply that there are people with this disorder and people without. On a graph, it would have two “bumps” – people with and people without.
Why can’t mental disorders be typological?
Treating personality disorders as representing different type of people don’t seem scientific right. It is having a certain number of differences and traits.
The dispute between the typological versus dimensional conception shows that there aren’t different types of people – those with disorders and those without (therefore, it can’t be categorical/typological).
Is the view on personality psychology typological or dimensional?
We’re moving towards dimensional perspective on psychopathology – especially on personality disorders.
The relation between the trait domains from DSM 5 and the Big Five.
Negative affectivity (Neuroticism)
Detachment (low Extraversion)
Antagonism (low Agreeableness)
Disinhibition vs compulsivity (low or high Conscientiousness)
Psychoticism (apophenia, openness) – the least relation to the Big Five. Not related at all to the intellect domain of Openness.
How can we think of personality disorders?
Personality disorders can be thought of as maladaptive variations or combinations of normal personality traits.
What are some big differences between “normal” people and people with a personality disorder?
- Extreme lack of motivation for intimacy.
- An exaggerated need for power over others.
- The extreme need to be superior and receive the praise of others.
What is moral insanity and what does it impair?
A person who did not suffer any impairment of intellect but was impaired in terms of feelings, temperament or habits.
What is a psychopathic personality?
Behaviour patterns that caused the person and the community to suffer.
How does the DSM-5 view a personality disorder?
As a durable and inflexible way of thinking and experiencing emotions that significantly and most often negatively affects how an individual functions in daily life.
What are the three clusters in the DSM-5 called?
Cluster A: the odd and eccentric.
Cluster B: the dramatic, emotional.
Cluster C: the anxious or fearful.