| Literature DB >> 31783703 |
J Nicolás I Martínez-López1, María-Elena Medina-Mora2, Rebeca Robles-García2, Eduardo Madrigal3, Francisco Juárez4, Carlos-Alfonso Tovilla-Zarate5, Cosette Reyes1, Nadja Monroy6, Ana Fresán1.
Abstract
The concept of psychopathy has shifted from people who commit crimes to those with a particular personality and deviant behaviors. Although antisocial personality disorder is associated with psychopathy, it also seems common in individuals with narcissistic personality traits. Psychopathy may be the expression of earlier, persistent patterns of individual characteristics as personality. The psychobiological model of personality can be useful for determining whether the expression of psychopathy differs in accordance with personality dimensions and specific personality disorders. The aim was to compare temperament and character dimensions between individuals with psychopathy with comorbid predominant antisocial or narcissistic personality traits and control subjects and to determine which dimensions distinguish these groups. Control subjects (n = 80) and individuals with psychopathy (n = 80) were assessed using the Psychopathy Checklist-Reviewed, the Structured Clinical Interview for DSM-IV Axis II disorders and the Temperament and Character Inventory-Revised. Reward dependence and Self-Directedness distinguish psychopathic individuals with predominant narcissistic personality traits whereas Novelty Seeking and Self-Transcendence characterize those with antisocial personality traits. Individuals with antisocial or narcissistic psychopathy could be identified by their temperament and character traits. The expression of psychopathy differed in accordance with biologically based, environmentally shaped personality traits.Entities:
Keywords: antisocial; character; narcissistic; psychopathy; temperament
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31783703 PMCID: PMC6926669 DOI: 10.3390/ijerph16234761
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Environ Res Public Health ISSN: 1660-4601 Impact factor: 3.390
Demographic and clinical characteristics between individuals with psychopathy with comorbid antisocial or narcissistic personality disorder.
| Control | Antisocial Psychopathy | Narcissistic Psychopathy | Statistics | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| ||||
| Male | 41 51.2 | 23 57.5 | 18 45.0 | χ2 = 1.2, |
| Female | 39 48.8 | 17 42.5 | 22 55.0 | |
|
| ||||
| None | 1 1.3 | 16 40.0 | 3 7.5 | |
| Housewife | 6 7.5 | 1 2.5 | 2 5.0 | χ2 = 40.3, |
| Student | 16 20.0 | 9 22.5 | 9 22.5 | |
| Employed | 57 71.3 | 14 35.0 | 26 65.0 | |
|
| 34 42.5 | 31 77.5 | 3 7.5 | χ2 = 40.1, |
| High school or less | 46 57.5 | 9 22.5 | 37 92.5 | |
| Bachelor’s degree or higher | ||||
|
|
|
| ||
|
| 32.9; 10.6; 18–57 | 30.3; 10.2; 18–57 | 35.5; 10.5; 20–57 | F = −2.2, |
|
| ||||
| Factor 1 | 2.3; 2.2; 0–9 | 14.6; 1.7; 10–16 | 15.0; 1.0; 13–16 | F = 908.7, |
| Factor 2 | 2.0; 1.5; 0–5 | 14.9; 2.5; 10–20 | 9.9; 2.0; 7–15 | F = 637.7, |
| Total | 4.2; 3.3; 0–13 | 31.4; 3.5; 25–39 | 35.5; 10.5; 20–57 | F = 1239.7, |
A comparison of demographic characteristics (Table 1) showed that those with PsyAP were more likely to be unemployed and have lower educational attainment than those with PsyNP and control subjects.
Figure 1Temperament and character dimensions between control, antisocial psychopathy, and narcissistic psychopathy groups.