78 results on '"depressive personality"'
Search Results
2. Do malignant self-regard and depressive personality account for appearance evaluation? Preliminary results
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R. Cavalli, G. Rogier, and P. Velotti
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depressive personality ,appearance evaluation ,malignant self-regard ,Psychiatry ,RC435-571 - Abstract
Introduction Despite the growing number of studies focusing on the relationship between appearance evaluation and personality dimension, few is known regarding the role of depressive personality and malignant self-regard regarding this topic. Moreover, there is a lack of studies investigating the potential role of both clarity of self-concept and interpersonal exclusion feelings in this relationship. Objectives To extend the knowledge regarding the relationships between malignant self-regard, depressive personality and appearance evaluation. Methods We administered to a very large sample of adults a battery of self-report questionnaires including the subscale Appearance evaluation of the Multidimensional Body-Self Relations Questionnaire, the Self Concept Clarity Scale, the Malignant self-regard questionnaire, the Depressive Personality Inventory and the Core Exclusion Schema Questionnaire. Results We found that depressive personality negatively predicted positive appearance evaluation whereas the inverse pattern of results was obtained in relation to malignant self-regard. Moreover, we found that both poor self-concept clarity and feelings of exclusion mediate the relationship between malignant self-regard and positive appearance evaluation. Conclusions Depressive personality and Malignant self-regard appear to be promising construct to investigate in the field of eating disorders. Disclosure No significant relationships.
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- 2022
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3. Depressive personality vulnerability in chronic physical pain: Centrality of sociotropy.
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Shahar, Golan, Lerman, Sheera F., Topaz, Maayan, Brill, Silviu, Shalev, Hadar, and Rudich, Zvia
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SOCIOTROPY , *PSYCHOLOGICAL vulnerability , *CHRONIC pain , *PERSONALITY disorders , *MENTAL depression , *AUTONOMY (Psychology) , *PERSONAL criticism , *ANXIETY - Abstract
Objective: Chronic physical pain is one of modern medicine's principal challenges. Recently, there has been a keen research interest in the role of depressive personality vulnerability (DPV) in the course of chronic pain. This is the first attempt to examine the role of three leading DPV dimensions-sociotropy, autonomy, and self-criticism-in chronic pain.Method: Chronic pain patients (N = 428) were assessed four times as to their pain, disability, anxious depression, and pain-based catastrophizing. At Time 1, sociotropy, autonomy, and self-criticism were also assessed. The effects of sociotropy, autonomy, and self-criticism on pain, disability, anxious depression, and pain-based catastrophizing were examined using structural equation modeling analyses.Results: All DPV dimensions uniquely predicted Time 1, but not Time 2, anxious depression. Sociotropy predicted Time 1 pain and catastrophizing over and above anxious depression, as well as an increase in catastrophizing over time. Autonomy predicted a decrease in catastrophizing and disability, and Time 1 anxious depression predicted an increase in self-criticism.Conclusions: Sociotropy appears to be a unique dimension of DPV in chronic pain. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2018
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4. Expanding the validity of the malignant self-regard construct in an Italian general population sample.
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Pedone, Roberto, Huprich, Steven K., Nelson, Sharon M., Cosenza, Marina, Carcione, Antonino, Nicolò, Giuseppe, Semerari, Antonio, and Colle, Livia
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EXTRAVERSION , *NEUROSES , *SADNESS , *DISEASES , *ADULTS - Abstract
Highlights • Malignant Self-Regard is a type of self-structure that account commonalities in vulnerably narcissistic, depressive, self-defeating, and masochistic personality disorder. • Italian adaptation of the Malignant Self-Regard Questionnaire (MSRQ). • Reliability and the validity in a large sample of non-clinical adults from general population (n = 2574). • MSRQ captures several dimensions of personality pathology that are clinically relevant. Abstract Malignant self-regard (MSR) was proposed as a particular type of self-structure that may account for similarities among a set of clinically relevant Personality Disorders (PDs) such as masochistic/self-defeating and depressive PDs that yet have failed to be adequately represented in the diagnostic manuals. The investigation on the MSR may provide a better framework upon which to understand the nature of these personality types and their discrimination from related constructs. The present study examines the psychometric properties of the Italian adaptation of the Malignant Self-Regard Questionnaire (MSRQ). Reliability and validity indicators are determined in a large sample of adults from general population (n = 2574). The measure was found to be reliable and valid, given its correlations with measures of depressive personality, negative affectivity, self-defeating, and vulnerably narcissistic personalities. MSR also can be meaningfully differentiated from a nomological network of related constructs, including sadness rumination, depression, neuroticism, extraversion, and grandiose narcissism. These findings suggest that MSR may be a personality component which includes a negativistic self-representation, vulnerability and hypersensitivity to judgment, sometimes compensated by perfectionistic tendencies. As a whole, results seem to support the reliability and the validity of the Italian adaptation of the MSRQ as a measure of the MSR. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2018
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5. Are malignant self‐regard and vulnerable narcissism different constructs?
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Huprich, Steven K., Nelson, Sharon, Sohnleitner, Aimee, Lengu, Ketrin, Shankar, Sneha, and Rexer, Kyle
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NARCISSISM , *PERSONALITY , *SELF-esteem , *PATHOLOGICAL psychology , *MENTAL health - Abstract
Abstract: In the clinical and empirical literature, vulnerable narcissism and malignant self‐regard (MSR) have been found to be highly interrelated and associated with theoretically related personality constructs, suggesting that the two constructs may be much more similar than different. The present study set out to test this hypothesis by examining the relationship of vulnerable narcissism and MSR to experiences and expressions of anger, the factor structure of grandiose and vulnerable narcissism with MSR, the associations of MSR and vulnerable narcissism to the five factor model of personality, and to global self‐esteem in self‐report measures within 1168 undergraduate students. A separate study of 158 undergraduates also assessed how MSR and vulnerable narcissism predicted state and trait anxiety and anger after receiving positive or negative feedback, and the extent to which negative feedback interacted with MSR and vulnerable narcissism. Overall, compared with grandiose narcissism, both MSR and vulnerable narcissism were more associated with experiencing anger internally, self‐reports of state and trait anger, high levels of neuroticism and openness, and lower levels of extraversion and global self‐esteem. Both vulnerable narcissism and MSR uniquely predicted trait levels of anger and anxiety and state levels of anger after receiving negative feedback. It is concluded that MSR and vulnerable narcissism are likely identical constructs. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2018
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6. Personality Factors and Depressive Configurations. An Exploratory Study in an Italian Clinical Sample.
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Straccamore, Francesca, Ruggi, Simona, Lingiardi, Vittorio, Zanardi, Raffaella, Vecchi, Sara, and Oasi, Osmano
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PERSONAL criticism ,COMMUNICATION & psychology ,INTERPERSONAL relations ,PERSONALITY ,MENTAL depression - Abstract
Introduction: This study focuses on the relationship between personality configurations and depressive experiences. More specifically, the aim of this study is to investigate the relationship between self-criticism and dependency and personality styles or disorders, exploring the association between personality features and depressive symptoms. The two-configurations model of personality developed by Blatt (2004, 2008) is adopted as a reference point in sharing a valid framework and in understanding the results. Methods: Five instruments are administered to 51 participants with a diagnosis of depressive disorder, in accordance with DSM-IV-TR (American Psychiatric Association, 2000): Self-criticism and dependency dimensions of depression are measured with the Depressive Experiences Questionnaire (DEQ); self-reported depression is assessed with the Beck Depression Inventory-ll (BDI-II); observer-rated depression is assessed with the Hamilton Depression Rating Scale (HDRS); personality is assessed with the Clinical Diagnostic Interview (CDI) and the Shedler Westen Assessment Procedure-200 (SWAP-200). Results: Only self-criticism, and not dependency, is associated with depressive symptoms. In addition, the SWAP Borderline PD Scale and the Dysphoric: Emotionally dysregulated Q-factor emerge as significant in predicting depression. Conclusions: Findings support the assumption that depressive personality configurations can enhance the vulnerability to developing depression. Theoretical and clinical implications of these results are discussed. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2017
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7. Personality‐driven depression: The case for malignant self‐regard (and depressive personalities)
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Steven K. Huprich
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Adult ,Depressive personality ,Depressive Disorder ,Psychotherapist ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Chronic depression ,Personality psychology ,Personality Disorders ,Self Concept ,Clinical Psychology ,Presentation ,Arts and Humanities (miscellaneous) ,Humans ,Personality ,Countertransference ,Literature study ,Psychology ,Depression (differential diagnoses) ,media_common - Abstract
Many patients with chronic depression are not well-treated. In part, this is due to the underlying personality dynamics that maintain the depressive experience are ignored. In this paper, I describe the concept of malignant self-regard, a derivative of the depressive personality. I describe briefly its origins in the clinical and empirical literature and focus upon the presentation of a case of a patient who displays a prototypic manifestation of malignant self-regard. I offer some ideas for how to manage such patients, with a focus on countertransference experiences that can be used to inform treatment.
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- 2019
8. Expanding the utility of the malignant self-regard construct.
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Lengu, Ketrin J., Evich, Carly D., Nelson, Sharon M., and Huprich, Steven K.
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PERSONALITY disorders , *SELF-defeating behavior , *PSYCHOMETRICS , *QUESTIONNAIRES , *MENTAL depression - Abstract
The empirical and theoretical literature suggest that several proposed personality disorders (PDs) – Masochistic/Self-Defeating, Depressive, and Vulnerably Narcissistic – may be related through a common self-representation know as Malignant Self-Regard (MSR). To assess this construct, the MSR Questionnaire (MSRQ) was developed. Though its initial psychometric properties were very strong, the present study extended these findings by examining the relationship of the MSRQ with measures of other PDs and depressive subtypes, and by establishing four-week and eight-week test–retest reliability in two samples ( Ns =840, 911) of undergraduate students. The MSRQ was internally consistent and temporally stable over four and eight weeks. It was positively correlated with measures of introjective and anaclitic depression, measures of Self-Defeating, Depressive, and Vulnerably Narcissistic personalities ( rs ranging between 0.60 and 0.82), and other select PDs. After controlling for depressive symptoms and self-esteem, the highest remaining partial correlations were with Vulnerably Narcissistic, Self-Defeating, Depressive, and Avoidant personalities. A factor analysis of the MSRQ with measures of other PDs yielded a two-factor solution, with MSR loading most strongly on one factor, along with Vulnerably Narcissistic, Avoidant, Depressive, and Self-Defeating personalities. It is concluded that MSR is a psychometrically supported construct that might have good clinical utility in explaining personality pathology that has historically been difficult to assess. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2015
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9. TIPOS PSICOLÓGICOS Y TRASTORNOS DEPRESIVOS.
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Amezaga, Pilar and Saiz, Mario
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Copyright of Ciencias Psicológicas is the property of Universidad Catolica del Uruguay Damaso Antonio Larranaga and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
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- 2015
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10. Malignant Self-Regard: A Self-Structure Enhancing the Understanding of Masochistic, Depressive, and Vulnerably Narcissistic Personalities.
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Huprich, Steven K.
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Several personality disorders have been prominent in the clinical literature but have been inadequately recognized in the diagnostic manuals. This group includes masochistic, self-defeating, depressive, and vulnerably narcissistic personality disorders. The theoretical and empirical relationship of these disorders is reviewed. It is proposed that the construct of malignant self-regard may account for the similarities among them. The construct describes these personality types as being fundamentally related through problematic manifestations of self-structure. The article discusses the diagnostic value of such a construct and the implications of a psychodynamically informed framework for classifying personality pathology. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2014
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11. Strengthening Professional Efficacy Due to Sustainable Development of Social and Individual Competences—Empirical Research Study among Polish and Slovak Employees of the Aviation Sector
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Małgorzata Dobrowolska, Magdalena Ślazyk-Sobol, Maria Flakus, and Adam Wawoczny
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Aviation ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Geography, Planning and Development ,TJ807-830 ,Context (language use) ,Management, Monitoring, Policy and Law ,TD194-195 ,Renewable energy sources ,Empirical research ,positive orientation ,the aviation sector ,GE1-350 ,depressive personality ,Human resources ,psychological stress ,media_common ,Sustainable development ,Environmental effects of industries and plants ,Renewable Energy, Sustainability and the Environment ,business.industry ,Stressor ,Risk factor (computing) ,Public relations ,Environmental sciences ,sustainable development of individual competences ,sense of threat ,Psychological resilience ,business ,Psychology ,ego resilience - Abstract
Nowadays, taking into account the multidimensionality of the external environment and necessity of the sustainable development of human resources, organizations are obliged to take more care of the psychological resources of their employees, e.g., positive orientation, ego resilience, and emotional stability. Such resources affect how we cope with stress and a sense of threat. The authors of this paper focus on people employed in the aviation sector, who work in the hard-to-cope environment of full automation, demanding working conditions and numerous stressors. The presented study fills a gap in the research on the psychological characteristics of the aviation sector. Moreover, a sense of stress/threat is described in the context of the high specificity of employees representing the 4.0 sector. Therefore, it provides additional insights into the psychological functioning of the employees in the aviation sector. The results show that both positive orientation and ego resilience might be seen as protective factors against a sense of threat and stress, while a type D personality is a risk factor of a higher level of those psychological states. The novelty of the presented research concerns a better understanding of the sense of stress/threat experienced by the employees in this sector, as well as verifying the relationships between psychological variables described in the literature as personal resources.
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- 2020
12. Trait depressivity prediction with EEG signals via LSBoost
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Neil McNaughton, Shenghuan Zhang, Phoebe S.-H. Neo, Brendan McCane, and Shabah M. Shadli
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Depressive personality ,medicine.medical_specialty ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,05 social sciences ,Audiology ,Electroencephalography ,050105 experimental psychology ,Quantitative eeg ,Correlation ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Atmospheric measurements ,medicine ,Resting state eeg ,Trait ,0501 psychology and cognitive sciences ,Psychology ,Gamma band ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery - Abstract
Purpose: This study aims to identify EEG biomarkers that predict the level of depressive personality (where extreme scores indicate disorder), as opposed to the presence or absence of a depressive state or a depression diagnosis.Methods: Fourier features were extracted from 2-second epochs of resting state EEG and used by LSBoost to maximise the correlation with depressive trait tendencies (PID-5 depressivity index).Results: Our method accounted for 25.75% of the variance in PID-5 scores, albeit in females only. The recording channel C3 and frequencies in the gamma band were the most important contributors to the prediction. The findings are consistent with previous psychological studies and suggest that our method is a feasible strategy for developing quantitative EEG biomarkers for trait depressivity in a neuropsychologically interpretable form. We have also shown that there might be different markers for depressivity between males and females.
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- 2020
13. Combining Self-Defeating and Depressive Personality Symptoms into One Construct.
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Huprich, Steven K., Schmitt, Thomas, Zimmerman, Mark, and Chelminski, Iwona
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PERSONALITY disorders , *PATHOLOGICAL psychology , *PSYCHIATRY , *MENTAL depression , *FACTOR analysis - Abstract
In the history of the DSM, two disorders have been proposed for consideration that shared much in common - self-defeating personality disorder (SDPD) and depressive personality disorder (DPD). In a previous paper, it was reported that SDPD (n = 34) and DPD (n = 240) shared a diagnostic overlap of 70%. It was concluded that SDPD could not be empirically supported as a diagnostic category. In this paper, the overlap of the two disorders was explored further in this same sample (n = 1,200) of psychiatric outpatients. We found that symptoms of the two disorders were positively correlated. Confirmatory factor analysis (CFA) provided strong support for a model with two distinct, but very highly correlated constructs. Based on the hypothesis that SDPD and DPD are separate but related, a second-order CFA factor was fit to the data to further examine the strong association between the two disorders. Taken collectively, it is concluded that DPD and SDPD are components of the same construct, and that the current DPD and SDPD diagnoses as proposed in the DSM are actually subtypes of a common personality pathology (i.e. a second-order factor). Copyright © 2011 S. Karger AG, Basel [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2011
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14. Pathological narcissism and the depressive temperament
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Tritt, Shona M., Ryder, Andrew G., Ring, Angela J., and Pincus, Aaron L.
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NARCISSISM , *MENTAL depression , *PSYCHOANALYSIS , *PHENOMENOLOGICAL psychology , *PATHOLOGICAL psychology , *QUESTIONNAIRES - Abstract
Abstract: Background: Although relations between depressive and narcissistic pathologies have been proposed in both psychoanalytic and phenomenological literatures, empirical research generally fails to confirm this link. Common measures of narcissism, however, emphasize grandiose rather than vulnerable traits, and include both adaptive and maladaptive features. We therefore assessed the relation between narcissistic personality and depressive temperament (DT) using a recently developed measure designed to assess a wide range of pathological narcissistic (PN) traits. We also examined the distinctiveness of the association between DT and PN controlling other temperaments. Method: The Pathological Narcissism Inventory (PNI; Pincus et al., 2009), the Temperament Evaluation of the Memphis, Pisa, Paris, and San Diego Auto-questionnaire (TEMPS-A; Akiskal et al., 2005), and a modified Schedule of Fatigue and Anergia (SOFA; Hadzi-Pavlovic et al., 2000), were administered to 228 university students. Results: Principal component analyses yielded two components of PN: Component 1 items reflect narcissistic vulnerability—negative affect when narcissistic needs are not met; Component 2 items reflect narcissistic grandiosity—positive affect related to self-enhancement. Component 1 significantly predicted DT, an effect that remained after controlling for Component 2 and other temperaments in the TEMPS-A and SOFA. A similar effect was observed for the anxious temperament. Limitations: Our study is limited by the use of a homogenous, non-clinical university student sample unscreened for clinical depression, and by reliance on self-report questionnaires. Conclusions: Contrary to past research, DT is associated with narcissistic disturbance, in particular with the avoidance of narcissistic injury, when the PNI is used. Clinical intervention targeting this avoidance might help patients with a DT develop self-esteem that is not overly dependant upon recognition from others. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
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- 2010
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15. What Should Become of Depressive Personality Disorder in DSM-V?
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Huprich, Steven K.
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PERSONALITY disorders , *DIAGNOSIS , *MENTAL illness , *PSYCHOLOGY , *PERSONALITY - Abstract
Depressive personality disorder (DPD) has been under consideration for inclusion in the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders for many years. The wealth of empirical studies on the validity of DPD has raised many questions about the validity of the DPD construct and its measures. This article specifically reviews studies on the validity of that construct and how it is measured. Although the evidence supports the idea that DPD is a viable diagnostic category, there remain significant challenges to its assessment. These findings are discussed in the context of some potential changes that may occur in the classification and diagnosis of personality disorders in DSM-V. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2009
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16. Depressive personality disorder, dysthymia, and their relationship to perfectionism.
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Huprich, Steven K., Porcerelli, John, Keaschuk, Rachel, Binienda, Juliann, and Engle, Benjamin
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PERFECTIONISM (Personality trait) , *MENTAL depression , *DEPRESSED persons , *PERSONALITY disorders , *PSYCHOLOGY - Abstract
This paper reports the results of two studies in a nonclinical (n=105) and primary care outpatient sample (n=110), in which Depressive Personality Disorder (DPD), Dysthymia, and depression were assessed for their distinctive relationship with perfectionism. Results from both studies found that self-reported DPD, Dysthymia, and depressive symptoms were all intercorrelated, and that DPD, Dysthymia, and depressive symptoms were correlated with three dimensions of perfectionism—Concern over Mistakes, Doubts about Actions, and Parental Criticism. In the nonclinical sample, variance in measures of DPD was predicted by measures of perfectionism after controlling for depression and Dysthymia symptoms. A similar pattern of findings was observed in the primary care sample. This relationship with perfectionism did not occur when Dysthymia or depressive symptoms were predicted. Nevertheless, much of the variance in measures of DPD, Dysthymia, and depressive symptoms is associated with each other and not perfectionism. It is concluded that a common factor or set of factors underlies these disorders, but that DPD may be more strongly related to perfectionism than Dysthymia and depression. As a common factor(s) is identified, measures of DPD and Dysthymia may be refined, thereby increasing the discriminant validity of their measures. Depression and Anxiety 0:1–11. © 2007 Wiley-Liss, Inc. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2008
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17. Parental representations, object relations and their relationship to Depressive Personality Disorder and Dysthymia
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Huprich, Steven K., Porcerelli, John H., Binienda, Juliann, Karana, Dunia, and Kamoo, Ray
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PERSONALITY disorders , *INTERPERSONAL relations , *SOCIAL perception , *PATHOLOGICAL psychology - Abstract
Abstract: The purpose of this study was to investigate the extent to which DPD is associated with poorer quality of parental representations and object relations in patients meeting criteria for either Depressive Personality Disorder (DPD) or Dysthymia. One-hundred ten, primary care, African–American women completed measures of DPD, Dysthymia, parental descriptions of their mother and father (), and provided stories to two pictures that were scored with the Social Cognition and Object Relations Scale (). Results indicated that Dysthymia could be predicted by all object relations dimensions except Aggression. DPD was uniquely associated with problems of managing aggression, maternal punitiveness, and low paternal benevolence. Ongoing investigation into the biogenetic underpinnings of these disorders appears warranted, as is examination of the differences between them. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
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- 2007
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18. Depressive Personality Styles and Social Anxiety in Young Adults.
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Shahar, Golan and Gilboa-Shechtman, Eva
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MENTAL depression , *PERSONALITY , *SOCIAL anxiety , *YOUNG adult psychology , *PSYCHOLOGY of college students , *SELF-evaluation - Abstract
We examined the role of three depression-related cognitive personality styles in young adults' social anxiety: evaluation concerns, positive achievement striving, and dependency. Sixty-nine undergraduates were administered measures of the aforementioned personality variables, depressive symptoms, and social anxiety. Controlling for participants' depressive symptoms, we found that evaluation concerns, particularly self-criticism, predicted elevated levels of social anxiety. Dependency also predicted elevated social anxiety, but this effect was small and marginally significant (p = .05). Finally, positive achievement striving predicted low levels of social anxiety but only in the presence of evaluation concerns. Findings are consistent with earlier theoretical conceptualizations of social anxiety as reflecting low self-worth. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2007
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19. LA DEPRESIÓN: ¿UN TRASTORNO DIMENSIONAL O CATEGORIAL?
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Agudelo, Diana, Donald Spielberger, Charles, and Buela-Casal, Gualberto
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MENTAL depression , *PATHOLOGICAL psychology , *PERSONALITY disorders , *DEPRESSED persons , *MENTAL illness , *AFFECTIVE disorders , *PATIENTS - Abstract
One of the crucial subjects, either for the clinical or scientific activity, is the dimensional or categorical character of depression and other mental diseases. Each approach is different from the theoretical and epistemological points of view. At presence, the categorical model for the definition and estimation of the presence of a disorder are reflected in the data on epidemiology, the results of investigations, instruments and the interventions. These elements are related to a system of thinking which results in a particular form of conceiving the psychopathology and intervention. Nevertheless, the strong influence of the categorical model in which the disorders are defined as a group of accomplished criteria has not prevented from development of a dimensional model. The latter postulates the existence of a continuum between the normality and pathology which correspond with dimensions, levels and severity related to the certain behaviours, traits or even symptoms. The interest in the dimensional approach to psychopathology, in general and in mood disorders, is caused by the observation in clinics which indicate, for example, that many patients do not improve with medicines and present residual symptoms during long periods of time. For these reasons, some personality factors which would explain the chronic symptoms of disorders have been proposed in Psychology and Psychiatry. Although the diagnostic manuals consider different types of mood disorders, many investigations have showed the possibility to consider depression as a continuum, where the least severe extreme would be the depressive personality and the most severe, major depression. According to the abovementioned proposal, it is possible that some people present certain vulnerability which would explain the different answers in case of depression. Cognitive factors, together with social and genetic factors increase the risk of chronic depressive symptoms. The catastrophic perception of self, the world and future, the dichotomous thinking and tunnel vision are the cognitive factors associated with the presence of the mood disorders symptoms. Additionally, some studies show the importance of gender, as women are more prone to develop depression and similar disorders which is related to traditional social roles. This can be caused by the need to sacrifice the professional career to dedicate time to housework, or to assume multiple roles. Concerning the genetic factors, the presence of first degree relatives with mood disorders increases the risk of development of depression or dysthymia. The consideration of depressive personality is based on the presence of symptoms which do not fulfil the criteria of severity and frequency of major depression but do affect the mood. The presence of these stable traits is related to major chronicity and worse prognosis. This condition has been described in manuals as dysthymia. Nevertheless, as it remains relatively stable in time it could be understood as a personality disorder. The disorder would be a continuum with the normality similar to this described as neuroticism in which some entities are qualitatively and quantitatively different which represent the categories. The analysis of what has been described above shows the possibility of differentiation between the mood disorders which are related to the dimensional focus where some traits increase the vulnerability to develop them. On the other hand, the categorical focus requires the accomplishment of the diagnostic criteria. The cognitive models also support the existence of depressive personality disorder. These models emphasize the importance of schemes in thinking which are created in childhood together with the attachment to the caretaker.… [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2007
20. The association between depressive personality and treatment outcome for depression following a group cognitive–behavioral intervention.
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Saulsman, Lisa M., Coall, David A., and Nathan, Paula R.
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DEPRESSED persons , *MENTAL depression , *PERSONALITY disorders , *CLINICAL psychology , *SYMPTOMS , *PATIENTS , *REGRESSION analysis , *ANALYSIS of variance , *STATISTICAL correlation - Abstract
The present study investigated the association of depressive personality traits to treatment outcome for depression. One hundred and nineteen patients with a primary diagnosis of major depression were divided into high- and low-depressive personality groups, and depression symptomatology was assessed pre- and postparticipation in a standardized group cognitive–behavioral intervention. Analyses revealed poorer pre-state and end-state functioning for the high-depressive personality group. However, rate of improvement pre- to posttreatment was comparable between the two groups. Subsequent multiple regression analyses revealed that when controlling for pretreatment depression severity, depressive personality was not a predictor of depression treatment outcome. Within the methodological parameters of the current study, depressive personality traits were not associated with a poorer response to cognitive–behavioral treatment for depression. © 2006 Wiley Periodicals, Inc. J Clin Psychol 62: 1181–1196, 2006. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2006
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21. Functional health status and its relationship to depressive personality disorder, dysthymia, and major depression: preliminary findings<FNR></FNR><FN>Portions of this article were presented at the 2005 annual Midwinter Meeting of the Society for Personality Assessment. </FN>
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Huprich, Steven K., Porcerelli, John, Binienda, Juliann, and Karana, Dunia
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MENTAL depression , *PERSONALITY disorders , *AFRICAN Americans , *ANXIETY , *NEUROSES - Abstract
Controversy continues on the extent to which depressive personality disorder (DPD) and dysthymic disorder (DYST) may be differentiated. Although affective disorders often are accompanied by changes in functional health status, to date no study has examined how functional health associated with affective disorders may assist in differentiating the two disorders. In this study, we hypothesized that measures of DPD would have fewer correlations with functional health status than would measures of DYST and major depressive disorder (MDD). African American women (n=110) completed questionnaires that assessed for depressive disorders, somatic concerns, and physical health. Measures of DPD, DYST, and MDD were all significantly correlated with functional health status. When symptoms of MDD were controlled, DYST was more associated with functional health status than was a DSM-IV measure of DPD, although a self-report measure of DPD—the Depressive Personality Disorder Inventory [DPDI; Huprich et al., 1996: J Clin Psychol 52:152–159]—remained significantly correlated with functional health status. When symptoms of DYST were controlled, DSM-IV symptoms of DPD were not strongly associated with functional health status, although measures of MDD and the DPDI were correlated with functional health status. We concluded that despite the overlap in depressive symptoms and functional health status, DPD may be less associated with functional health status in a primary care population than DYST and MDD. Implications for the assessment of DPD are provided. Depression and Anxiety 22:168–176, 2005. © 2005 Wiley-Liss, Inc. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2005
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22. Distimia y personalidad depresiva: diferenciación clínica.
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PERSONALITY disorders , *MENTAL depression , *COMORBIDITY , *SCHIZOID personality ,PSYCHIATRIC research - Abstract
Introducción: Los trastornos de personalidad y depresivos se encuentran asociados frecuentemente en la clínica. Si éstos se cronifican o tienen síntomas residuales, la diferenciación con los rasgos de personalidad es más difícil. Un ejemplo de ello es el debate actual sobre la distimia y el trastorno de personalidad depresiva. A través de este estudio se pretende diferenciarlos clínicamente. Metodología: Tomando una muestra de pacientes ambulatorios que acuden a un CSM, se eligen al azar los trastornos afectivos no psicóticos. Se hacen dos grupos de ellos, según tengan trastorno de personalidad depresiva o distimia. Se buscan las diferencias entre ambas, con variables clínicas y de comorbilidad con otros trastornos de personalidad.Resultados: Los pacientes con trastorno de personalidad depresiva positivos tienen más asociación con trastorno de personalidad del grupo C y el trastorno de personalidad esquizoide, mientras que los distímicos se correlacionan más con los del grupo B (eje II DSM-IV). También se observa una diferenciación dimensional. Conclusiones: El trastorno de personalidad depresiva y la distimia son constructos distintos, aunque se solapan en algunos rasgos. Es necesario el estudio longitudinal para observar más claramente estas diferencias clínicas y de comorbilidad. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2001
23. Expanding the validity of the malignant self-regard construct in an Italian general population sample
- Author
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Roberto Pedone, Steven K. Huprich, Antonio Semerari, Livia Colle, Antonino Carcione, Marina Cosenza, Sharon M. Nelson, Giuseppe Nicolò, Pedone, Roberto, Huprich, Steven K., Nelson, Sharon M., Cosenza, Marina, Carcione, Antonino, Nicolò, Giuseppe, Semerari, Antonio, and Colle, Livia
- Subjects
Adult ,Male ,050103 clinical psychology ,Psychometrics ,Vulnerable narcissism ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Population ,Nomological network ,Personality psychology ,Personality Disorders ,Negative affectivity ,Masochism ,Young Adult ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Surveys and Questionnaires ,medicine ,Humans ,Personality ,0501 psychology and cognitive sciences ,education ,Biological Psychiatry ,media_common ,Neuroticism ,Malignant self-regard ,education.field_of_study ,Extraversion and introversion ,05 social sciences ,Reproducibility of Results ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,Personality disorders ,030227 psychiatry ,Psychiatry and Mental health ,Depressive personality ,Italy ,Narcissism ,Female ,Psychology ,Clinical psychology - Abstract
Malignant self-regard (MSR) was proposed as a particular type of self-structure that may account for similarities among a set of clinically relevant Personality Disorders (PDs) such as masochistic/self-defeating and depressive PDs that yet have failed to be adequately represented in the diagnostic manuals. The investigation on the MSR may provide a better framework upon which to understand the nature of these personality types and their discrimination from related constructs. The present study examines the psychometric properties of the Italian adaptation of the Malignant Self-Regard Questionnaire (MSRQ). Reliability and validity indicators are determined in a large sample of adults from general population (n = 2574). The measure was found to be reliable and valid, given its correlations with measures of depressive personality, negative affectivity, self-defeating, and vulnerably narcissistic personalities. MSR also can be meaningfully differentiated from a nomological network of related constructs, including sadness rumination, depression, neuroticism, extraversion, and grandiose narcissism. These findings suggest that MSR may be a personality component which includes a negativistic self-representation, vulnerability and hypersensitivity to judgment, sometimes compensated by perfectionistic tendencies. As a whole, results seem to support the reliability and the validity of the Italian adaptation of the MSRQ as a measure of the MSR.
- Published
- 2018
24. Self-Strangulation Through A Sphygmomanometer: An Uncommon Suicide
- Author
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Francesco Ventura, Sara Lo Pinto, Alessandro Bonsignore, Francesca Fossati, and Tiziana Tacchella
- Subjects
medicine.medical_specialty ,Forensic pathology ,forensic science ,Sphygmomanometer ,self-strangulation ,Pathology and Forensic Medicine ,03 medical and health sciences ,Self-strangulation ,uncommon suicide method ,0302 clinical medicine ,ADHD syndrome ,forensic pathology ,sphygmomanometer ,Genetics ,medicine ,030216 legal & forensic medicine ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Psychiatry ,Cause of death ,Depressive personality ,Asphyxia ,Cognition ,Mercury sphygmomanometer ,medicine.symptom ,Psychology - Abstract
Suicide by asphyxia is quite a common event in forensic practice and may be implemented in different ways. The authors report a unique case of a 16-year-old youth who committed suicide by means of a standard mercury sphygmomanometer. This manner of suicide has never been described in the literature reviewed. A complete forensic investigation led to the conclusion that the cause of death was mechanical asphyxia, ascribed to self-strangulation by means of an atypical item. The victim suffered from attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) syndrome and was assisted by support teachers. He had a solitary and depressive personality. The exceptional nature of this case suggests that sphygmomanometers may be regarded as possible means of self-strangulation. The case also highlights the importance of managing patients with psychiatric or cognitive disorders; indeed, particular caution is required to keep them away from objects that, although apparently harmless, can become lethal.
- Published
- 2016
25. Personality factors and depressive configurations. An exploratory study in an italian clinical sample
- Author
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Straccamore, F., Ruggi, Simona, Lingiardi, V., Zanardi, R., Vecchi, S., Oasi, Osmano, Ruggi, Simona (ORCID:0000-0001-9261-6758), Oasi, Osmano (ORCID:0000-0003-2134-397X), Straccamore, F., Ruggi, Simona, Lingiardi, V., Zanardi, R., Vecchi, S., Oasi, Osmano, Ruggi, Simona (ORCID:0000-0001-9261-6758), and Oasi, Osmano (ORCID:0000-0003-2134-397X)
- Abstract
Introduction: This study focuses on the relationship between personality configurations and depressive experiences. More specifically, the aim of this study is to investigate the relationship between self-criticism and dependency and personality styles or disorders, exploring the association between personality features and depressive symptoms. The two-configurations model of personality developed by Blatt (2004, 2008) is adopted as a reference point in sharing a valid framework and in understanding the results. Methods: Five instruments are administered to 51 participants with a diagnosis of depressive disorder, in accordance with DSM-IV-TR (American Psychiatric Association, 2000): Self-criticism and dependency dimensions of depression are measured with the Depressive Experiences Questionnaire (DEQ); self-reported depression is assessed with the Beck Depression Inventory-ll (BDI-II); observer-rated depression is assessed with the Hamilton Depression Rating Scale (HDRS); personality is assessed with the Clinical Diagnostic Interview (CDI) and the Shedler Westen Assessment Procedure-200 (SWAP-200). Results: Only self-criticism, and not dependency, is associated with depressive symptoms. In addition, the SWAP Borderline PD Scale and the Dysphoric: Emotionally dysregulated Q-factor emerge as significant in predicting depression. Conclusions: Findings support the assumption that depressive personality configurations can enhance the vulnerability to developing depression. Theoretical and clinical implications of these results are discussed.
- Published
- 2017
26. Introduction to the issue in honor of Sidney Blatt
- Author
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Oasi, Osmano, Auerbach, J., Oasi, Osmano (ORCID:0000-0003-2134-397X), Oasi, Osmano, Auerbach, J., and Oasi, Osmano (ORCID:0000-0003-2134-397X)
- Abstract
Introduction to the issue in honor of Sidney Blatt
- Published
- 2017
27. Introduction to the issue in honor of Sidney Blatt
- Author
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Osmano Oasi and John Auerbach
- Subjects
Settore M-PSI/07 - PSICOLOGIA DINAMICA ,Introduction ,Psychoanalysis ,Psychopathology ,lcsh:BF1-990 ,MEDLINE ,Research in Psychotherapy ,Process and Outcome ,Research in Psychotherapy: Psychopathology ,Psychiatry and Mental health ,Clinical Psychology ,Editorial ,Depressive personality ,lcsh:Psychology ,Honor ,Psychology ,Sidney Blatt - Abstract
Not available.
- Published
- 2017
28. Personality Factors and Depressive Configurations. An Exploratory Study in an Italian Clinical Sample
- Author
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Francesca Straccamore, Osmano Oasi, Raffaella Zanardi, Simona Ruggi, Vittorio Lingiardi, and Sara Vecchi
- Subjects
Settore M-PSI/07 - PSICOLOGIA DINAMICA ,050103 clinical psychology ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Self-criticism ,media_common.quotation_subject ,vulnerability ,Exploratory research ,Sample (statistics) ,Settore M-PSI/08 - PSICOLOGIA CLINICA ,Dependency ,self-criticism ,depressive personality ,depressive symptomatology ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Rating scale ,medicine ,Personality ,Psychology ,0501 psychology and cognitive sciences ,Psychiatry ,Association (psychology) ,General Psychology ,Depression (differential diagnoses) ,Original Research ,media_common ,Depressive personality ,05 social sciences ,030227 psychiatry ,dependency ,Clinical psychology - Abstract
Introduction: This study focuses on the relationship between personality configurations and depressive experiences. More specifically, the aim of this study is to investigate the relationship between self-criticism and dependency and personality styles or disorders, exploring the association between personality features and depressive symptoms. The two-configurations model of personality developed by Blatt (2004, 2008) is adopted as a reference point in sharing a valid framework and in understanding the results. Methods: Five instruments are administered to 51 participants with a diagnosis of depressive disorder, in accordance with DSM-IV-TR (American Psychiatric Association, 2000): Self-criticism and dependency dimensions of depression are measured with the Depressive Experiences Questionnaire (DEQ); self-reported depression is assessed with the Beck Depression Inventory-II (BDI-II); observer-rated depression is assessed with the Hamilton Depression Rating Scale (HDRS); personality is assessed with the Clinical Diagnostic Interview (CDI) and the Shedler Westen Assessment Procedure-200 (SWAP-200). Results: Only self-criticism, and not dependency, is associated with depressive symptoms. In addition, the SWAP Borderline PD Scale and the Dysphoric: Emotionally dysregulated Q-factor emerge as significant in predicting depression. Conclusions: Findings support the assumption that depressive personality configurations can enhance the vulnerability to developing depression. Theoretical and clinical implications of these results are discussed.
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
29. Therapeutic Interaction with an Older Personality Disordered Patient
- Author
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Avihay Sanders, Bernard S. Gorman, and Lawrence Josephs
- Subjects
Psychotherapist ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Avoidant personality disorder ,Personality Disorders ,Rating scale ,medicine ,Humans ,Personality ,Depression (differential diagnoses) ,Aged ,Defense Mechanisms ,media_common ,Depressive personality ,Depressive Disorder, Major ,Psychodynamic psychotherapy ,Mechanism (biology) ,Professional-Patient Relations ,General Medicine ,medicine.disease ,Psychotherapy ,Q-Sort ,Treatment Outcome ,Treatment episode ,Female ,Psychology ,Clinical psychology - Abstract
This study reflects an assessment of the relationship between change in defensive functioning and change in the therapeutic interaction during an eight-year treatment episode of an older personality disordered woman. The patient, Ms. Q, possessed schizoid, avoidant, and depressive personality disor- ders as well as major depression as assessed by the Millon Clinical Multiaxial Inventory-III (MCMI-III). At the end of the treatment episode, Ms. Q still pos- sessed an avoidant personality disorder and significant depressive personal- ity traits but no longer possessed clinically significant schizoid traits or major depression. Ms. Q made significant positive change in her adaptive defensive functioning as assessed by the Defense Mechanism Rating Scale (DMRS). Through time-series analysis it was discovered that positive change in adap- tive defenses was predicted by increases in a specific type of therapeutic inter - action as assessed by the Psychotherapy Q Sort (PQS). In this therapeutic in- teraction the therapist in a didactic and advice-giving manner highlighted the patient's role in a problem in a clear and coherent way that could be perceived as tactless. Time-series analysis revealed a reciprocal relationship in which pos- itive changes in adaptive defenses predicted further increases in that particular quality of therapeutic interaction. This case study reflects a systematic attempt to assess the therapeu- tic interaction and its relationship to defensive functioning during an eight-year treatment episode of an older personality disordered wom- an who was in intensive psychodynamic psychotherapy. The patient, Ms. Q, suffered from schizoid, avoidant, and depressive personality disorders as well as major depression. The patient was a socially isolat
- Published
- 2014
30. Strengthening Professional Efficacy Due to Sustainable Development of Social and Individual Competences—Empirical Research Study among Polish and Slovak Employees of the Aviation Sector.
- Author
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Dobrowolska, Małgorzata, Flakus, Maria, Ślazyk-Sobol, Magdalena, and Wawoczny, Adam
- Abstract
Nowadays, taking into account the multidimensionality of the external environment and necessity of the sustainable development of human resources, organizations are obliged to take more care of the psychological resources of their employees, e.g., positive orientation, ego resilience, and emotional stability. Such resources affect how we cope with stress and a sense of threat. The authors of this paper focus on people employed in the aviation sector, who work in the hard-to-cope environment of full automation, demanding working conditions and numerous stressors. The presented study fills a gap in the research on the psychological characteristics of the aviation sector. Moreover, a sense of stress/threat is described in the context of the high specificity of employees representing the 4.0 sector. Therefore, it provides additional insights into the psychological functioning of the employees in the aviation sector. The results show that both positive orientation and ego resilience might be seen as protective factors against a sense of threat and stress, while a type D personality is a risk factor of a higher level of those psychological states. The novelty of the presented research concerns a better understanding of the sense of stress/threat experienced by the employees in this sector, as well as verifying the relationships between psychological variables described in the literature as personal resources. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
31. Conceptualization and preliminary validation of a depressive personality concept
- Author
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Rui C. Campos
- Subjects
inventory ,validation ,Depressive personality ,Clinical Psychology ,Conceptualization ,depressive personality ,Test validity ,Big Five personality traits ,Psychology ,conceptual proposition ,Developmental psychology - Abstract
This paper proposes a depressive personality organization—a unique set of traits. It proposes a psychodynamic and psychiatric operationalization and reports on a preliminary validation through the construction of a questionnaire and the investigation of its psychometric properties in three nonclinical samples and a clinical sample of depressed patients. Preliminary results support the validity of the instrument and the underlying theoretical conceptualization of a depressive personality.
- Published
- 2013
32. The roles of domain specific hope and depressive personality in predicting depressive symptoms
- Author
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Hal S. Shorey, Christopher R. D. Roberts, and Steven K. Huprich
- Subjects
Depressive personality ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Health Policy ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Psychiatry and Mental health ,medicine ,Personality ,Pshychiatric Mental Health ,Young adult ,Psychiatry ,Psychology ,Depression (differential diagnoses) ,Depressive symptoms ,media_common - Abstract
The present study extended the research on hope (Snyder, 2002) and depression by assessing the impact of domain specific hope on depressive symptoms using a completely cross-lagged longitudinal design across 2-week and 5-week time intervals while controlling for depressive personality. Results from an undergraduate sample (n = 363) indicated that across a 2-week time interval, hope in the social/peer and academic domains, depressive personality and depressive symptoms had reciprocal causal influences on each other, whereas across a 5-week time interval, only hope in the family domain had a significant one-way influence on depressive symptoms. The implications for working with young adults are discussed and suggestions made for future research relating to the personality-based prediction of depressive symptoms. Copyright © 2012 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.
- Published
- 2012
33. Psychometric properties of the Spanish version of the Diagnostic Interview for Depressive Personality
- Author
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Carmen Rodríguez, L.J. Irastorza, P. Rojano, Gabriel Rubio, C. Rodríguez-Rieiro, José María Bellón, T. Gonzalez-Salvador, M.J. Alvarez, C. Rojas, J. Cotobal, Celso Arango, and M. Leira
- Subjects
Adult ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Psychometrics ,Diagnostic interview ,Personality Disorders ,Diagnosis, Differential ,Young Adult ,Cronbach's alpha ,Borderline Personality Disorder ,Depressive personality disorder ,Interview, Psychological ,medicine ,Humans ,Psychiatry ,Reliability (statistics) ,Aged ,Psychiatric Status Rating Scales ,Depressive personality ,Depressive Disorder ,Receiver operating characteristic ,Discriminant validity ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,Personality disorders ,Psychiatry and Mental health ,Spain ,Female ,Psychology ,Personality ,Clinical psychology - Abstract
The aim of this study was to evaluate the reliability and validity of the Spanish-language version of the Diagnostic Interview for Depressive Personality (DIDP). The DIDP was administered to 328 consecutive outpatients and the test–retest and inter-rater reliability were assessed. Factor analysis was used in search of factors capable of explaining the scale and a cutoff point was established. The DIDP scales showed adequate Cronbach's α values and acceptable test–retest and inter-rater reliability coefficients. Convergent and discriminant validity were explored, the latter with respect to avoidant and borderline personality disorders. The results of the factor analysis were consistent with the four-factor structure of the DIDP scales. The receiver operating characteristic (ROC) analysis revealed the area under the curve to be 0.848. We found 30 to be a good cutoff point, with a sensitivity of 74.5% and a specificity of 78.5%. The DIDP proved to be a reliable and valid instrument for assessing depressive personality disorder, at least among our outpatients. The psychometric properties of the DIDP support its clinical usefulness in assessing depressive personality.
- Published
- 2011
34. АСЕРТИВНОСТ И ДЕПРЕСИВНА ЛИЧНОСТ СТУДЕНАТА ПЕДАГОШКОГ И МЕДИЦИНСКОГ УСМЕРЕЊА НА ПОЧЕТКУ СТУДИЈА
- Subjects
Depressive personality ,media_common.quotation_subject ,education ,05 social sciences ,050301 education ,Loneliness ,Mental health ,humanities ,Teacher education ,Scale (social sciences) ,medicine ,Anxiety ,0501 psychology and cognitive sciences ,Assertiveness ,medicine.symptom ,Psychology ,0503 education ,health care economics and organizations ,050104 developmental & child psychology ,Clinical psychology ,media_common ,Social status - Abstract
Assertiveness is the aspect of social competencies which is related to social adaptation, academic and professional achievement and social status but also to the problems of loneliness, anxiety and depressiveness. Since assertiveness and absence of depressive tendencies are important issues in professional competencies of teachers, pre-school teachers, medical doctors and medical technicians, this research was aimed at examining assertiveness and the presence of depressive personality traits in the students of the mentioned orientations. The total sample consisted of 521 subjects (162 students of the Faculty of Education of the UKG, 163 students Faculty of Teacher Education in Užice, 98 students of the Medical College in Ćuprija, 72 students of the Faculty of Medicine science in Kragujevac and 53 students Faculty of Medicine in Belgrade). Assertiveness was measured using the Scale for the assessment of assertiveness (A Scale) by Tovilović and associates, while depressiveness was examined by the Scale for the assessment of depressive personality (DP Scale) by Novović and associates. The results show that the highest percentage of students belongs to the category of average assertiveness and moderate depressiveness. No significant difference was found between the students of medical orientation and students of pedagogical orientation in relation to assertiveness (p=.498) and depressiveness (p=.159). A statistically significant low intensity negative correlation (r= -.287, p=.000) was found between the achievements of students on the assertiveness scale and the depressive personality scale. Despite the fact that the obtained results are encouraging, the percentage of students, prospective teachers and pre-school teachers as well as medical workers, with low and extremely low assertiveness as well as with prominent depressiveness, indicates the necessity for a planned activity towards the development of assertiveness during university studies and the implementation of prevention programs for the protection of mental health of young people during university studies.
- Published
- 2018
35. Commentary on Sprock and Fredendall's (2008), 'Comparison of Prototypic Cases of Depressive Personality Disorder and Dysthymic Disorder'
- Author
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Steven K. Huprich
- Subjects
Depressive personality ,Self-transcendence ,Psychotherapist ,Dysthymic Disorder ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Psychopathy ,Sadistic personality disorder ,medicine.disease ,Personality disorders ,Clinical Psychology ,Arts and Humanities (miscellaneous) ,Depressive personality disorder ,medicine ,Personality ,Psychology ,Clinical psychology ,media_common - Abstract
In this commentary, the author discusses the merits and contributions of Sprock and Fredendall's (2008) study of depressive personality and dysthymia using a prototype methodology with experienced clinicians. Their article demonstrates the difficulty in differentiating depressive personality disorder from dysthymia, though it seems to raise even more salient questions about the current ways by which personality disorders are assessed and diagnosed. In light of these findings, the author offers some ways by which personality disorder assessment could be improved. © 2008 Wiley Periodicals, Inc. J Clin Psychol 64:1–5, 2008.
- Published
- 2008
36. Personalized Therapy for the Pessimistic/Depressive Personality Patterns
- Author
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Theodore Millon and Seth Grossman
- Subjects
Depressive personality ,Psychotherapist ,Depressive neurosis ,media_common.quotation_subject ,medicine ,Personalized therapy ,Pessimism ,Psychology ,medicine.disease ,Personality disorders ,Depressive symptomatology ,Clinical psychology ,media_common - Published
- 2007
37. TIPOLOGY AND DEPRESSIVE DISORDERS
- Author
-
Mario Saiz and Pilar Amézaga
- Subjects
Typology ,Depressive personality ,Extraversion and introversion ,Depressive Personality ,Personalidad Depresiva ,Mechanical Engineering ,media_common.quotation_subject ,MBTI ,lcsh:BF1-990 ,Energy Engineering and Power Technology ,Management Science and Operations Research ,Analytical Psychology ,Tipos Psicológicos ,Developmental psychology ,lcsh:Psychology ,Clinical diagnosis ,Sensation ,Trastornos Depresivos ,Depressive Disorders ,Personality ,Personality Type ,Psychology ,media_common ,Intuition ,Psicología Analítica - Abstract
Este trabajo tiene como objetivo general investigar la tipología Junguiana, (Jung, 1921); a partir de los resultados del Inventario Tipológico Forma G (MBTI, 1995) de Briggs-Myers, en una muestra de pacientes con Trastorno Depresivo, analizando a su vez, las relaciones con la Personalidad Depresiva y con los diferentes Patrones Clínicos de la Personalidad en una muestra de 82 pacientes con diagnóstico clínico de Trastorno Depresivo. Se estudia en primer lugar la relación entre el patrón tipológico y la depresión. En segundo lugar, la relación entre tipología y los diferentes patrones clínicos de personalidad, y en tercer lugar, comparamos la tipología en pacientes con y sin personalidad depresiva. Los resultados obtenidos muestran una clara preferencia por la Introversión sobre la Extroversión y de la Sensación sobre la Intuición en los Trastornos Depresivos (BDI-I, 1979) y en casi todos los Patrones Clínicos de la Personalidad (MCMI-III, 2007). A medida que aumenta la sintomatología depresiva se observa un mayor predominio de la introversión This study has as main objective to investigation (investigate) Jungian typology from the results of the Briggs-Myers Typology Inventory Form G, (1995) in a sample of patients with Depressive Disorder, analyzing in turn, relations with Depressive Personality and different Clinical Patterns of Personality. Starting with a sample of 82 patients with clinical diagnosis of Depressive Disorder, we studied first the typological pattern and its behavior in relation to depression. Second, the Relationship between typology and the different Clinical Patterns of Personality and third, we compared the typology of patients with and without Depressive Personality. Results show that patients with Depressive Disorder (BDI-I, 1979) and in most Clinical Patterns of Personality (MCMI-III,2007) have a clear preference for Introversion over Extroversion and for Sensation over Intuition. As severity of Depression increases, the preference for Introversion also increases
- Published
- 2015
38. Optimistic BIAS and Pessimistic Realism in Judgments of Contingency with Aversive or Rewarding Outcomes
- Author
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AKIfflTO Sonoda
- Subjects
media_common.quotation_subject ,Attribution bias ,050109 social psychology ,Pessimism ,Depressive realism ,Judgment ,Cognition ,Optimism ,Reward ,Surveys and Questionnaires ,Explanatory style ,Humans ,0501 psychology and cognitive sciences ,General Psychology ,media_common ,Depressive personality ,Depression ,05 social sciences ,050301 education ,Affect ,Female ,Psychology ,Contingency ,0503 education ,Social psychology ,Realism - Abstract
A depressive personality influences judgments of contingency. This is called “depressive realism.” The present experiment examined whether optimistic traits, as measured by various scales, are correlated with judgments of contingency. The valences of the target stimuli were aversive or rewarding (noise avoidance or gaining points). Analysis indicated that the optimistic subjects (as measured by explanatory style for negative events) tend to overestimate noncontingent events; however, optimism measured by other scales did not show such an effect. The findings are discussed in terms of a self-defensive attributional bias.
- Published
- 2002
39. On the Psychoanalytic Treatment of the Depressive Personality
- Author
-
Grigoris Vaslamatzis
- Subjects
Depressive personality ,Psychotherapist ,Psychological intervention ,medicine.disease ,Psychodynamics ,Personality disorders ,Negative therapeutic reaction ,Psychiatry and Mental health ,Clinical Psychology ,medicine ,Psychoanalytic theory ,Psychology ,Competence (human resources) ,Psychopathology ,Clinical psychology - Abstract
In order to discuss the depressive personality we have first to distinguish between this clinical entity and other types of depressive psychopathology that might also be chronic. The character traits and psychodynamics of the depressive personality confirm that there is a special group of patients, who belong to a depressive disorder continuum. The particular technical problems that depressive personality present are: (1) the inability to enjoy anything and the consequences of this on the therapist's experience and interventions, and (2) the negative therapeutic reaction which threatens the analytic process and the therapist's competence. If we combine transference/extratransference interpretations with an "empathetic understanding" approach to systematic confrontation and interpretation, we can therefore justify the need for a slightly modified psychoanalytic technique in the treatment of the depressive personality.
- Published
- 2002
40. Object loss and object relations in depressive personality analogues
- Author
-
Steven K. Huprich
- Subjects
Adult ,Male ,Depressive personality ,Depressive Disorder, Major ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Thematic apperception test ,Pessimism ,medicine.disease ,Object Attachment ,Severity of Illness Index ,Object (philosophy) ,Developmental psychology ,Psychiatry and Mental health ,Clinical Psychology ,Depressive personality disorder ,medicine ,Object relations theory ,Humans ,Female ,Pshychiatric Mental Health ,Psychology ,media_common - Abstract
The author investigated the extent to which self-reported early object loss and Thematic Apperception Test (TAT) measures of object relations differentiated individuals with a depressive personality from dysthymic persons and highly dependent individuals. In an undergraduate analogue sample of 54 students, those with a depressive personality reported a nonsignificantly higher proportion of object loss than did dysthymic and highly dependent participants. Those in the depressive personality and dependent groups had less complex representations of others than did those with dysthymia, and those with a depressive personalitiy and dysthymia tended to view others in a more negative, pessimistic fashion than did the highly dependent individuals. The author concludes that persons with a depressive personality can be identified, in part, by their experience of object loss and their distinctive object relations.
- Published
- 2001
41. Chronic, Low-grade Depression in a Nonclinical Sample: Depressive Personality Or Dysthymia?
- Author
-
R. Michael Bagby, Kenneth L. Dion, and Andrew G. Ryder
- Subjects
Adult ,Male ,Nosology ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Adolescent ,Personality Disorders ,Severity of Illness Index ,Diagnosis, Differential ,Surveys and Questionnaires ,Depressive personality disorder ,Severity of illness ,medicine ,Humans ,Young adult ,Psychiatry ,Depression (differential diagnoses) ,Psychiatric Status Rating Scales ,Depressive personality ,Depressive Disorder ,Dysthymic Disorder ,Reproducibility of Results ,medicine.disease ,Confirmatory factor analysis ,Psychiatry and Mental health ,Clinical Psychology ,Female ,Factor Analysis, Statistical ,Psychology - Abstract
Depressive personality disorder (DPD) is being considered for inclusion in future editions of the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders (DSM). However, there is substantial conceptual and empirical overlap between DPD and dysthymic disorder (Dysthymia) criteria, suggesting that these two constructs may not be distinct. Confirmatory factor analysis of the DPD traits and dysthymia symptoms in a large, nonclinical sample (N = 368) indicated that a two-factor model was a better fit than a one-factor model. However, binary diagnostic analysis revealed that over half of the individuals meeting criteria for DPD also met criteria for dysthymia and that the best-fitting model allowed the psychological symptoms of dysthymia to load on both DPD and dysthymia latent factors. All of the individuals with DPD alone failed to meet criteria for dysthymia because they did not report chronic depressed mood. Our results suggest that although DPD is not synonymous with Dysthymia, it may be a milder subtype.
- Published
- 2001
42. Depressive Personality Traits and Dysthymia: A Commentary on Ryder and Bagby
- Author
-
Thomas A. Widiger
- Subjects
Psychiatric Status Rating Scales ,Depressive personality ,Depressive Disorder ,Psychotherapist ,Inclusion (disability rights) ,media_common.quotation_subject ,medicine.disease ,Personality Disorders ,Diagnosis, Differential ,Psychiatry and Mental health ,Clinical Psychology ,Mood ,Depressive personality disorder ,mental disorders ,Psychiatric status rating scales ,medicine ,Humans ,Dysthymic Disorder ,Literature study ,Psychology ,Clinical psychology ,Skepticism ,media_common - Abstract
Ryder and Bagby (1999) provide an informative and incisive critique of the validity of the American Psychiatric Association (APA) DSM-IV depressive personality disorder (DPD) diagnosis (APA, 1994). Their review is particularly commendable in its thorough coverage of a substantial amount of clinical, theoretical, and empirical literature. The inclusion of DPD in DSM-V will be controversial, and the ultimate decision will be well informed by their review. Ryder and Bagby, however, express considerable skepticism regarding the validity of the diagnosis and argue for its annexation within the mood disorder diagnosis of dysthymia. My concerns are organized with respect to matters historical, empirical, and conceptual, although the boundaries between these issues are somewhat fluid.
- Published
- 1999
43. Mood and global symptom changes among psychotherapy clients with depressive personality
- Author
-
Lars-Gunnar Lundh and Rachel Maddux
- Subjects
medicine.medical_specialty ,Psychotherapist ,Article Subject ,lcsh:RC435-571 ,lcsh:BF1-990 ,lcsh:Psychiatry ,Depressive personality disorder ,medicine ,Psychiatry ,Depression (differential diagnoses) ,Depressive personality ,business.industry ,Disposition ,medicine.disease ,psychotherapy ,Psychiatry and Mental health ,Clinical Psychology ,lcsh:Psychology ,Mood ,Clinical Study ,Analysis of variance ,business ,Depressed mood ,Psychopathology - Abstract
The present study assessed the rate of depressive personality (DP), as measured by the self-report instrument depressive personality disorder inventory (DPDI), among 159 clients entering psychotherapy at an outpatient university clinic. The presenting clinical profile was evaluated for those with and without DP, including levels of depressed mood, other psychological symptoms, and global severity of psychopathology. Clients were followed naturalistically over the course of therapy, up to 40 weeks, and reassessed on these variables again after treatment. Results indicated that 44 percent of the sample qualified for DP prior to treatment, and these individuals had a comparatively more severe and complex presenting disposition than those without DP. Mixed-model repeated-measures analysis of variance was used to examine between-groups changes on mood and global severity over time, with those with DP demonstrating larger reductions on both outcome variables, although still showing more symptoms after treatment, than those without DP. Only eleven percent of the sample continued to endorse DP following treatment. These findings suggest that in routine clinical situations, psychotherapy may benefit individuals with DP.
- Published
- 2012
44. Dejected Styles, Forlorn Types, Melancholic Disorders: The DFM Spectrum
- Author
-
Theodore Millon
- Subjects
Depressive personality ,Psychotherapist ,media_common.quotation_subject ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Cognitive therapy ,medicine ,Learned helplessness ,Pessimism ,Psychology ,Depression (differential diagnoses) ,media_common ,Clinical psychology - Published
- 2011
45. Depressive personality disorder, dysthymia, and their relationship to perfectionism
- Author
-
Steven K. Huprich, Juliann Binienda, Benjamin Engle, John H. Porcerelli, and Rachel A. Keaschuk
- Subjects
Adult ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Adolescent ,Personality Inventory ,Psychometrics ,Pilot Projects ,Primary care ,Comorbidity ,Models, Psychological ,medicine.disease_cause ,Personality Disorders ,Depressive personality disorder ,medicine ,Ambulatory Care ,Humans ,Psychiatry ,Temperament ,Depressive symptoms ,Depression (differential diagnoses) ,Aged ,Depressive personality ,Psychiatric Status Rating Scales ,Depressive Disorder, Major ,Motivation ,Primary Health Care ,Discriminant validity ,Reproducibility of Results ,Perfectionism (psychology) ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,Self Concept ,Psychiatry and Mental health ,Clinical Psychology ,Anxiety ,Regression Analysis ,Female ,medicine.symptom ,Dysthymic Disorder ,Psychology ,Goals ,Clinical psychology - Abstract
This paper reports the results of two studies in a nonclinical (n=105) and primary care outpatient sample (n=110), in which Depressive Personality Disorder (DPD), Dysthymia, and depression were assessed for their distinctive relationship with perfectionism. Results from both studies found that self-reported DPD, Dysthymia, and depressive symptoms were all intercorrelated, and that DPD, Dysthymia, and depressive symptoms were correlated with three dimensions of perfectionism—Concern over Mistakes, Doubts about Actions, and Parental Criticism. In the nonclinical sample, variance in measures of DPD was predicted by measures of perfectionism after controlling for depression and Dysthymia symptoms. A similar pattern of findings was observed in the primary care sample. This relationship with perfectionism did not occur when Dysthymia or depressive symptoms were predicted. Nevertheless, much of the variance in measures of DPD, Dysthymia, and depressive symptoms is associated with each other and not perfectionism. It is concluded that a common factor or set of factors underlies these disorders, but that DPD may be more strongly related to perfectionism than Dysthymia and depression. As a common factor(s) is identified, measures of DPD and Dysthymia may be refined, thereby increasing the discriminant validity of their measures. Depression and Anxiety 0:1–11. © 2007 Wiley-Liss, Inc.
- Published
- 2007
46. “Um mundo à volta da depressão ”
- Author
-
Ferreira Santos, S., Lapa Esteves, M., Ferreira Santos, S., and Lapa Esteves, M.
- Abstract
Depression is the loss or lowering of pressure soul, resulting in diminishing the vital and psychic energy, libido, motivation and interest in the real. It is a disease that makes a person incapable, may have comorbidity with other diseases, has a risk of suicide, with numerous social and economic con- sequences. The memory deficits are reported as the major cognitive difficulties in symptomatic patients with depressive illness due to the role of the hippocampus in the formation and consolidation of new memories and their importance for the regulation of motivation and emotion. There is a distinction between depressive personality and depression itself, seen from the study of depressive states. Admittedly depressivity and depression, depressive personality and depressive access are combined situations, phenomena that ride: the feeling of failure is at a subjective level as a loss, a ‘loss of which has yet to gain’, and the other on the desire of loss - that the anger of depressivity imposes. Thus, health professionals have a role in recognition of the disturbance. Given the presence of symp- toms to neuropsychological assessment becomes a crucial tool in the diagnosis of these individuals., Depressão é a perda ou abaixamento da pressão anímica, traduzindo-se por diminuição da energia psíquica e vital, da libido, da motivação e do interesse pelo real. É uma doença que torna uma pessoa incapaz, pode apresentar comorbilidade com outras doenças, apresenta risco de suicídio, com numerosas consequências sociais e económicas. Os défices da memória são relatados como as maiores dificuldades cognitivas em pacientes sintomáticos e com doença depressiva devido ao papel fundamental do hipocampo na formação e consolidação de memórias novas assim como a sua importância para o regulamento da motivação e da emoção. Existe uma distinção entre a personalidade depressiva e a depressão propriamente dita, verificada a partir do estudo dos estados depressivos. É certo que depressividade e depressão, personalidade depressiva e acesso depressivo, são situações conjugadas, fenómenos que se cavalgam: o sentimento de falta é, no plano subjectivo já uma perda, uma «perda do que ainda não foi ganho»; e, por outro lado o desejo da perda – que a raiva da depressividade impõe. Assim, o profissional de saúde tem um papel preponderante no reconhecimento da perturbação. Perante a presença de sintomas a avaliação neuropsicológica torna-se a ferramenta decisiva no diagnóstico destes indivíduos.
- Published
- 2010
47. The overlap of depressive personality disorder and dysthymia: a categorical problem with a dimensional solution
- Author
-
R. Michael Bagby, Deborah R. Schuller, and Andrew G. Ryder
- Subjects
Research literature ,Depressive personality ,Depressive Disorder ,Psychotherapist ,Sadistic personality disorder ,Reproducibility of Results ,Models, Psychological ,medicine.disease ,Personality Disorders ,Diagnosis, Differential ,Psychiatry and Mental health ,Depressive personality disorder ,medicine ,Humans ,Dysthymic Disorder ,Psychology ,Categorical variable ,Personality - Abstract
In this paper we review the research literature on depressive personality. We begin with a brief discussion of the historical antecedents of the current debate, noting the long-standing uncertainty about the relation of this construct to both major mood disorders and normal temperament. Then we examine the DSM-IV Appendix B construct of depressive personality disorder, in particular its controversial overlap with dysthymic disorder. This overlap is discussed within the construct validation criteria proposed by Robins and Guze (1970), highlighting recent developments and responding to criticisms of our previous theoretical review. Finally, we examine dimensional alternatives to the current proposed depressive personality disorder construct using the framework of the five-factor model. We conclude that, despite persuasive evidence for the existence of depressive personality traits, support is insufficient for the inclusion of depressive personality disorder as currently defined. Instead, we propose that depressive traits are best conceptualized dimensionally, and as part of an overarching model of personality structure, rather than as a discrete diagnostic entity. Since this conclusion could also be drawn for many existing personality disorders, the issues raised here are relevant to the construction of DSM-V.
- Published
- 2002
48. Disentangling the relationship between depression, depressive personality, vulnerable narcissism, and malignant self-regard
- Author
-
Steven K. Huprich and A.L. Smith
- Subjects
Depressive personality ,Psychiatry and Mental health ,Clinical Psychology ,Psychotherapist ,Narcissism ,medicine ,medicine.symptom ,Psychology ,Depression (differential diagnoses) - Published
- 2014
49. Rubidium Chloride in Chronic Mood Disorders
- Author
-
Massimo Casacchia, P. Stratta, and S. De Cataldo
- Subjects
Depressive personality ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Monoamine oxidase inhibitor ,Dysthymic Disorder ,business.industry ,medicine.drug_class ,Rubidium chloride ,medicine.disease ,behavioral disciplines and activities ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,chemistry ,Mood disorders ,mental disorders ,medicine ,Neurotic Depression ,Psychiatry ,business ,Atypical depression - Abstract
The introduction of the concepts of “Dysthymic Disorder” in DSM III and “Dysthymia” in DSM III-R excited relevant interest and some doubts. Dysthymic disorder is the new diagnostic category that substituted the concept of neurotic depression and depressive personality in the American Psychiatric Association official nomenclature.
- Published
- 1993
50. State and Trait Depression and Suicidality
- Author
-
David Lester
- Subjects
Adult ,Male ,Depressive personality ,Depressive Disorder ,Human factors and ergonomics ,Poison control ,Suicide, Attempted ,medicine.disease ,Suicide prevention ,Predictive Value of Tests ,Injury prevention ,Trait ,medicine ,Humans ,Female ,Medical emergency ,medicine.symptom ,Psychology ,Suicidal ideation ,General Psychology ,Depression (differential diagnoses) ,Clinical psychology - Abstract
In a sample of 68 undergraduates, current depression scores predicted current suicidal ideation while depressive personality scores predicted prior suicidal ideation.
- Published
- 1999
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