| Literature DB >> 34909563 |
Robert D Latzman1, Robert F Krueger2, Colin G DeYoung2, Giorgia Michelini3.
Abstract
Traditionally, personality has been conceptualized in terms of dimensions of human experience - habitual ways of thinking, feeling, and behaving. By contrast, psychopathology has traditionally been conceptualized in terms of categories of disorder - disordered thinking, feeling, and behaving. The empirical literature, however, routinely shows that psychopathology does not coalesce into readily distinguishable categories. Indeed, psychopathology tends to delineate dimensions that are relatively similar to dimensions of personality. In this special issue of Personality Neuroscience, authors took up the challenge of reconceptualizing personality and psychopathology in terms of connected and interrelated dimensions, and they considered the utility of pursuing neuroscientific inquiry from this more integrative perspective. In this editorial article, we provide the relevant background to the interface between personality, psychopathology, and neuroscience; summarize contributions to the special issue; and point toward directions for continued research and refinement. All told, it is evident that quantitatively derived, integrative models of personality-psychopathology represent a particularly promising conduit for advancing our understanding of the neurobiological foundation of human experience, both functional and dysfunctional.Entities:
Keywords: Clinical neuroscience; Personality–psychopathology; Quantitative models
Year: 2021 PMID: 34909563 PMCID: PMC8640674 DOI: 10.1017/pen.2021.3
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Personal Neurosci ISSN: 2513-9886
Figure 1.Proposed research landscape connecting normal range personality traits, maladaptive personality/psychopathology dimensions in the Hierarchical Taxonomy or Psychopathology (HiTOP) model, and constructs included in Research Domain Criteria (RDoC), Addictions Neuroclinical Assessment (ANA), and the National Institute on Drug Addiction’s Phenotyping Battery (NIDA PhAB). Normal personality dimensions reflect the Big Five model. Negative emotionality, incentive salience, and executive function are included in both ANA and NIDA PhAB, whereas the sleep domain is specific to NIDA PhAB. The links between HiTOP and RDoC are the strongest with the most empirical support, to date (see Michelini et al., 2021, for a comprehensive review). Less prominent or supported links are not shown. Due to paucity of relevant studies, it was not possible to link the recently introduced RDoC sensorimotor domain to any HiTOP spectra, nor the HiTOP somatoform spectrum to any RDoC domains. Negative associations between HiTOP and RDoC are presented in red and positive associations in blue. Double arrows indicate that, within an RDoC domain, some constructs show positive links, whereas others show negative links to the HiTOP spectrum (see Michelini et al., 2021, for details). Associations between normal personality and HiTOP dimensions, as well as between RDoC and ANA or NIDA PhAB domains, are shown with black symbols for approximate equality (≈). The gray approximate equality symbol depicts the fact that not all components of openness are roughly equivalent to HiTOP thought disorder (those related to intellectual engagement are largely unrelated). The links between RDoC and NIDA PhAB domains of metacognition and interoceptive processes are unclear and are not shown here.