Aesthetic preference and DSM-IIIR personality disorders

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Abstract

This report tested whether those individuals with a cluster B DSM-IIIR personality disorder (narcissistic, borderline, antisocial or histrionic) had higher scores for aesthetic preference for visually complex drawings using the Barron-Welch Art Scale. In a sample of 141 patients and controls, the 56 subjects who met the criteria for one of the cluster B personality disorder diagnoses displayed higher Barron-Welch Art Scale Scores. A multiple regression analysis showed that narcissistic and borderline personality disorder contributed positively, while dependent personality disorder, negatively to preference for complexity. The findings support the notion that aesthetic choices and values reflected through the dimension of openness to experience may contribute to the behavioral manifestations of the personality disorders. © 1995.

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King, R., Villeneuve, E., Post, L., Flowers, C., & Moonshine, K. (1995). Aesthetic preference and DSM-IIIR personality disorders. Personality and Individual Differences, 18(6), 797–799. https://doi.org/10.1016/0191-8869(95)00012-U

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