Moving beyond Ordinary Factor Analysis in Studies of Personality and Personality Disorder: A Computational Modeling Perspective

被引:2
|
作者
Haines, Nathaniel [1 ]
Beauchaine, Theodore P. [1 ]
机构
[1] Ohio State Univ, Dept Psychol, 1835 Neil Ave, Columbus, OH 43210 USA
基金
美国国家卫生研究院;
关键词
Personality; Personality disorders; Factor analysis; Bayesian modeling; Computational modeling; TRAIT IMPULSIVITY; HETEROTYPIC COMORBIDITY; EMOTION DYSREGULATION; CONDUCT PROBLEMS; PSYCHOPATHOLOGY; ANXIETY; DECISION; REWARD; SELF; CONNECTIVITY;
D O I
10.1159/000508539
中图分类号
R749 [精神病学];
学科分类号
100205 ;
摘要
Almost all forms of psychopathology, including personality disorders, are arrived at through complex interactions among neurobiological vulnerabilities and environmental risk factors across development. Yet despite increasing recognition of etiological complexity, psychopathology research is still dominated by searches for large main effects causes. This derives in part from reliance on traditional inferential methods, including ordinary factor analysis, regression, ANCOVA, and other techniques that use statistical partialing to isolate unique effects. In principle, some of these methods can accommodate etiological complexity, yet as typically applied they are insensitive to interactivefunctional dependencies(modulating effects) among etiological influences. Here, we use our developmental model of antisocial and borderline traits to illustrate challenges faced when modeling complex etiological mechanisms of psychopathology. We then consider how computational models, which are rarely used in the personality disorders literature, remedy some of these challenges when combined with hierarchical Bayesian analysis.
引用
收藏
页码:157 / 167
页数:11
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [31] Childhood antecedents of personality disorder: An alternative perspective
    Widiger, Thomas A.
    De Clercq, Barbara
    De Fruyt, Filip
    DEVELOPMENT AND PSYCHOPATHOLOGY, 2009, 21 (03) : 771 - 791
  • [32] Personality disorder and the law in Scotland: a historical perspective
    Darjee, R
    Crichton, J
    JOURNAL OF FORENSIC PSYCHIATRY & PSYCHOLOGY, 2003, 14 (02): : 394 - 425
  • [33] FEMALE PERSPECTIVE OF BORDERLINE PERSONALITY DISORDER AND DEPRESSION
    di Giacomo, E.
    Alamia, A.
    Manzutto, S.
    Aspesi, F.
    Lazzari, M.
    Riboldi, G.
    Clerici, M.
    EUROPEAN PSYCHIATRY, 2013, 28
  • [34] COMMENTARY ON ALLIK A Historical Perspective on Personality Disorder
    Lopez-Ibor, Juan J.
    DIMENSIONAL MODELS OF PERSONALITY DISORDERS: REFINING THE RESEARCH AGENDA FOR DSM-V, 2006, : 139 - 142
  • [35] A developing world perspective on homicide and personality disorder
    Mela, Mansfield
    Audu, Moses
    Tesfaye, Markos
    Gurmu, Samson
    MEDICINE SCIENCE AND THE LAW, 2014, 54 (03) : 132 - 138
  • [36] Depressive personality disorder: Rates of comorbidity with personality disorders and relations to the frve-factor model of personality
    Bagby, RM
    Schuller, DR
    Marshall, MB
    Ryder, AG
    JOURNAL OF PERSONALITY DISORDERS, 2004, 18 (06) : 542 - 554
  • [37] The general factor of personality: What lies beyond?
    Loehlin, John C.
    PERSONALITY AND INDIVIDUAL DIFFERENCES, 2012, 53 (04) : 463 - 467
  • [38] The computational analyses of handwriting in individuals with psychopathic personality disorder
    Gawda, Barbara
    PLOS ONE, 2019, 14 (12):
  • [39] PROTOTYPICAL ANALYSIS OF ANTISOCIAL PERSONALITY-DISORDER - DSM-IV AND BEYOND
    ROGERS, R
    DUNCAN, JC
    LYNETT, E
    SEWELL, KW
    LAW AND HUMAN BEHAVIOR, 1994, 18 (04) : 471 - 484
  • [40] Dependent personality disorder in the DSM-IV and beyond
    Bornstein, RF
    CLINICAL PSYCHOLOGY-SCIENCE AND PRACTICE, 1997, 4 (02) : 175 - 187