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Dimensional Models of Personality Disorders

Refining the Research Agenda for DSM-V
Sofort lieferbar | Lieferzeit: Sofort lieferbar I

408

ISBN-13:
9781585626731
Veröffentl:
2007
Seiten:
315
Autor:
Thomas A. Widiger
eBook Typ:
EPUB
eBook Format:
EPUB
Kopierschutz:
2 - DRM Adobe
Sprache:
Englisch
Beschreibung:

DSM-IV and ICD-10 both diagnose personality disorders categorically, yet studies indicate that many patients meet criteria for an excessive number of diagnoses, raising the question of whether personality disorders are discrete conditions or rather distinctions along dimensions of general personality functioning. This collection of papers renews long-standing proposals for a dimensional model of personality disorder, describing alternative models, addressing questions about their clinical application and utility, and suggesting that future research seek to integrate such models within a common hierarchical structure.
ContributorsDisclosure statementForewordPrefaceIntroductionChapter 1. Alternative dimensional models of personality disorder: finding a common groundChapter 2. Commentary on Widiger and Simonsen: toward a consensus personality trait structureChapter 3. Commentary on Widiger and Simonsen: working out a dimensional frameworkChapter 4. Commentary on Widiger and Simonsen: from ICD-10 and DSM-IV to ICD-11 and DSM-VChapter 5. Behavioral and molecular genetic contributions to a dimensional classification of personality disorderChapter 6. Commentary on Livesley: genetic contributions to a dimensional classification: problems and pitfallsChapter 7. Neurobiological dimensional models of personality: a review of three modelsChapter 8. Commentary on Paris: personality as a dynamic psychobiological systemChapter 9. Commentary on Paris: the problem of severity in personality disorder classificationChapter 10. Temperament and personality as broad-spectrum antecedents of psychopathology in childhood and adolescenceChapter 11. Commentary on Mervielde et al.: toward a developmental perspective on personality disordersChapter 12. Personality dimensions across culturesChapter 13. Commentary on Allik: the lexical approach to the study of personality structureChapter 14. Commentary on Allik: a historical perspective on personality disorderChapter 15. Commentary on Allik: cross-cultural diagnosis of personality disorderChapter 16. Continuity of Axes I and II: toward a unified model of personality, personality disorders, and clinical disordersChapter 17. Commentary on Krueger: what to do with the old distinctionsChapter 18. Commentary on Krueger: traits versus types in the classification of personality pathologyChapter 19. Dimensional models: coverage and cutoffsChapter 20. Commentary on Trull: drizzling on the 5 ± 3 factor paradeChapter 21. Commentary on Trull: just do it: replace Axis II with a diagnostic system based on the Five-Factor Model of PersonalityChapter 22. Commentary on Trull: reservations and hopesChapter 23. Clinical utility of dimensional models for personality pathologyChapter 24. Commentary on Verheul: focusing on the clinician's need for a better modelChapter 25. Commentary on Verheul: clinical utility of dimensional models for personality pathologyChapter 26. Personality disorder research agenda for DSM-VIndex

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