Personality Disorders and the Five-factor Model of Personality
American Psychological Association (Publisher)
2nd Edition
Published on 1. November 2001
Book
Hardback
680 pages
978-1-55798-826-3 (ISBN)
Description
The 1994 edition of this title has provided a resource for both researchers and clinicians interested in the applications of the five-factor model to personality disorders. Since the publication of the first edition, a steady flow of empirical research has been conducted, and key theoretical developments have occurred. This revised second edition updates the book and offers nine new chapters. Additional new chapters cover: the history and conceptual background of the FFM; five-factor translations of DSM-III-R and DSM-IV personality disorders; empirical findings on the structure and symptomatology of personality disorders from the five-factor perspective; and application of the FFM to a variety of patient populations among others.
More details
Edition
2nd Revised edition
Language
English
Place of publication
Washington DC
United States
Target group
College/higher education
Professional and scholarly
Edition type
Revised edition
Illustrations
Illustrations
Dimensions
Height: 279 mm
Width: 222 mm
Thickness: 32 mm
Weight
1656 gr
ISBN-13
978-1-55798-826-3 (9781557988263)
Copyright in bibliographic data is held by Nielsen Book Services Limited or its licensors: all rights reserved.
Schweitzer Classification
Other editions
Previous edition
Paul T. Costa | Thomas A. Widiger | Paul T. Costa Jr
Personality Disorders and the Five-factor Model of Personality
Book
01/1994
American Psychological Association
€75.65
Article exhausted; check for reprint
Content
Introduction - Personality Disorders and the Five-Factor Model of Personality, Paul T. Costa Jr and Thomas A. Widiger; Historical Antecedents of the Five-Factor Model, John M. Digman; Toward a Dimensional Model for the Personality Disorders, Thomas A. Widiger and Allen J. Frances; A Five-Factor Perspective of Personality Disorder Research, Timothy J. Trull and Robert R. McCrae; Five-Factor Model Personality Disorder Research, Thomas A. Widiger and Paul T. Costa Jr; A Discription of the DSM-IV Personality Disorders With the Five-Factor Model of Personality, Thomas A. Widiger, Timothy J. Trull, John F. Clarkin, Cynthia Sanderson, and Paul T. Costa Jr; Personality Structure and the Structure of Personality Disorders, Jerry S. Wiggins and Aaron L. Pincus; Personality Disorder Symptomatology from the Five-Factor Model Perspective, Lee Anna Clark, Lu Vorhies and Joyce L. McEwen; Dimensions of Personality Disorder and the Five-Factor Model of Personality, Marsha L. Schroeder, Janice A. Wormworth and W. John Livesley; Two Approaches to Identifying the Dimensions of Personality Disorder - Convergence on the Five-Factor Model, Lee Anna Clark and W. John Livesley; The Big Five, Alternative Five, and Seven Personality Dimensions - Validity in Substance-Dependent Patients, Samuel A. Ball; Constellations of Dependency Within the Five-Factor Model of Personality, Aaron L. Pincus; Personality Disorders and the Five-Factor Model in Chinese Psychiatric Patients, Jian Young, Xiaoyang Dai, Shuqiao Yao, Taisheng Cai, Beiling Gao, Robert R. McCrae, and Paul T. Costa Jr; Tests of General and Specific Models of Personality Disorder Configuration, Brian P. O'Connor and Jamie A. Dyce; Personality Trait Characteristics of Opioid Abusers With and Without Comorbid Personality Disorders, Robert K. Brooner, Chester W. Schmidt Jr, and Jeffray H. Herbst; The NEO Personality Inventory and the Millon Clinical Multiaxial Inventory in the Forensic Evaluation of Sex Offenders, Gregory K. Lehne; A Case of Borderline Personality Disorder, Stephen Bruehl; Narcissism From the Perspective of the Five-Factor Model, Elizabeth M. Corbitt; Personality of the Psychopath, Timothy J. Harpur, Stephen D. Hart, and Robert D. Hare; Psychopathy from the Perspective of the Five-Factor Model of Personality, Donald R. Lynam; Further Use of the Revised NEO Personality Inventory Personality Dimensions in Differential Treatment Planning, Cynthia Sanderson and John F. Clarkin; Using Personality Measurements in Clinical Practice, K. Roy MacKenzie; Implications of Individual Differences Science for Clinical Work of Personality Disorders, Allan R. Harkness and John L. McNulty; Treatment of Personality Disorders From the Perspective of the Five-Factor Model, Michael H. Stone; Proposal for Axis II - Diagnosing Personality Disorders Using the Five-Factor Model, Thomas A. Widiger, Paul T. Costa Jr and Robert R. McCrae.