Lecture 14 Flashcards

1
Q

What is ‘temperament’ in Cloninger’s Tridimensional Model (1993)?

A

o Temperament: Biological biases in automatic responses to emotional stimuli (present throughout life)

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2
Q

What is ‘character’ in Cloninger’s Tridimensional Model (1993)?

A

o Character: The way an individual understands themselves in their (social) world through insight, learning, and experience (humanistic psychology)

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3
Q

What are the 4 temperament factors in Cloninger’s Tridimensional model (1993)?

A

♣ Novelty Seeking (impulsiveness, disorderliness, excitability)
♣ Harm Avoidance (anticipatory worry, fear of uncertainty, shyness)
♣ Reward Dependence (dependence, attachment, sentimentality)
♣ Persistence

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4
Q

What are the 3 character factors in Cloninger’s Tridimensional model (1993)?

A

♣ Self-directedness (self-esteem, personal integrity, leadership, responsibility)
♣ Cooperativeness (morality, ethics, compassion)
♣ Self-transcendence (spirituality, religiosity)

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5
Q

What is Cloninger’s Tridimensional model?

A
  • Consists of 4 temperament factors and 3 character factors
    o Temperament: Biological biases in automatic responses to emotional stimuli (present throughout life)
    ♣ Moderately heritable
    ♣ Relatively stable through life
    ♣ Independent of culture or life experiences
    ♣ Functions similarly to traits in adults
    o Character: The way an individual understands themselves in their (social) world through insight, learning, and experience (humanistic psychology)
    ♣ Not (directly) biologically based
    ♣ Represents emotions, habits, goals, and abilities, formed in response to the outside world
    ♣ (Fully) develop after the development of the temperament factors
  • Temperament Development of disorder (pathogenesity)
  • Character Specific type of disorder expressed (pathoplasticity)
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6
Q

What are the core features of all personality disorders according to Cloninger’s TCI?

A
  • Low self-directedness and cooperativeness are core features of all personality disorders
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7
Q

How are personality factors viewed in terms of the aetiology, development and manifestation of personality disorders?

A
  • Personality factors are seen as vulnerability to the aetiology, development and manifestation of personality disorders
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8
Q

What are personality disorders representative of in the personality continuum (the Eysenckian model)?

A

o Personality disorders represent one extreme end of the personality continuum (the Eysenckian model)

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9
Q

What two personality traits contribute to the pathoplasticity of a disorder?

A

Extraversion and introversion

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10
Q

What is the Diathesis Stress model?

A

o Diathesis Stress model
♣ Under influence of a stressor, more likely to develop a disorder (if have certain traits and intensities)
♣ Diathesis ≈ disposition

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11
Q

What effect can extreme stress have on normal personality traits?

A
  • Under extreme stress, normal personality traits may appear or become psychopathological
    o Certain stressors psych certain traits into such an extreme that we can develop a problem
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12
Q

Do traits exist in clinical or non-clinical samples?

A
  • Traits exist in both non-clinical and clinical samples (e.g. anxiety, aggression, depressivity, or impulsivity)
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13
Q

What traits and/or attachment styles have the most consistent associations with personality disorders?

A

o (Elements of) neuroticism, extraversion, agreeableness, and insecure attachment (anxiety dysregulation) styles have the most consistent associations with personality disorders

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14
Q

Are biology (and heritability) the same for disordered and normal personality traits?

A

o Biology (and heritability) are the same for disordered and normal personality traits (30%-60%)

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15
Q

Are the biological systems responsible for normal traits and personality disorders the same?

A

o (Exactly) the same biological systems are responsible for normal traits and personality disorders

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16
Q

Describe the cross-cultural significance of traits and personality disorders

A

o Cross-cultural similarity of traits and personality disorders

17
Q

What role do personality traits play in personality disorders?

A
  • Personality traits play a role in the persistence or long-term stability of personality disorders
  • Personality traits (can) predict symptom profile differences and help explain heterogeneity in personality disorder expressions
    o Personality traits can influence how a disorder is expressed
18
Q

What role does personality have in response to mental illness?

A
  • Personality has a direct role in determining how people respond to their mental illness
    o E.g. Willingness/resistance to seek help or follow (or resistance to) treatment
19
Q

What are the three main cognitive/behavioural dimensional differences between personality disorders and normal personality traits (Millon, 2011)?

A
  1. Rigidity and inflexibility in behaviour and thought
    ♣ Inability or unwillingness to adapt (extreme end of personality)
  2. Increased levels of habitual engagement with self-defeating behaviour
    ♣ Harm themselves directly/indirectly (e.g. alienating people)
  3. Structural instability and fragility of the self
    ♣ Especially under stress
20
Q

What are the three ecological/evolutionary dimensions of personality differentiation?

A

o Aim of existence (the Pain-Pleasure polarity)
♣ Life preservation (pain-avoidance)
♣ Life enhancement (pleasure-seeking)
o Modes of adaptation (the Passive-Active polarity)
♣ Ecological accommodation (passive orientation)
♣ Ecological modification (active orientation)
o Strategies of replication (the Self-Other polarity)
♣ Reproductive nurturance (constructively loving others, k-strategy)
♣ Reproductive propagation (individuating and actualising self, r-strategy)

21
Q

Are the ecological/evolutionary dimensions of personality differentiation a dichotomous classification?

A

No

22
Q

How should all the dimensions exist in normal individuals?

A
  • All dimensions (should) exist to a balanced degree in normal individuals
    o The way you express yourself in these dimensions shows the mental illness
    ♣ These dimensions are good but how you express them could be bad and result in abnormality
23
Q

How are the dimensions of personality differentiation explained within evolutionary adaptations?

A

o Cannot have dimension that doesn’t promote fitness
♣ E.g. Can’t have: Pain-seeking &raquo_space; Pain-avoidance &raquo_space; Pleasure-seeking
• “Pain-seeking” is not an adaptation for fitness