Dsm-5 alternative model of personality disorder dysfunctional personality traits as predictors of self-reported aggression in an italian sample of consecutively admitted, personality-disordered psychotherapy patients

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Abstract

In order to assess the relationships between DSM-5 Alternative Model of Personality Disorder (AMPD) maladaptive personality traits and self-reports of aggression, 508 Italian adult participants who met at least one DSM-IV Axis II/DSM-5 Section II personality disorder (PD) diagnosis were administered the Personality Inventory for DSM-5 (PID-5) and the Aggression Questionnaire (AQ). Analysis results showed that multiple regression results, PID-5 Hostility, Callousness, and Risk Taking trait scale scores explained a large amount of variance in AQ Physical Aggression (PA) scores. Moreover, PID-5 Hostility, Callousness, and Risk Taking explained more than 20% of the variance in the AQ Physical Aggression scale scores that was left unexplained by selected continuously scored DSM-IV Axis II/ DSM-5 Section II PDs, whereas SCID-II Paranoid, Narcissistic, Borderline, and Antisocial PDs added only 4% of variance to the amount of variance in AQ Physical Aggression scores that was already explained by the PID-5 trait scale scores.

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Somma, A., Krueger, R. F., Markon, K. E., Alajmo, V. B. M., Arlotta, E., Beretta, S., … Fossati, A. (2020). Dsm-5 alternative model of personality disorder dysfunctional personality traits as predictors of self-reported aggression in an italian sample of consecutively admitted, personality-disordered psychotherapy patients. Journal of Personality Disorders, 34, 5–24. https://doi.org/10.1521/pedi_2019_33_430

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