Searching for a vulnerable dark triad: comparing Factor 2 psychopathy, vulnerable narcissism, and borderline personality disorder.
about
Parallel syndromes: two dimensions of narcissism and the facets of psychopathic personality in criminally involved individuals.Gender, psychopathy factors, and intimate partner violenceNarcissism dimensions differentially moderate selective attention to evaluative stimuli in incarcerated offenders.Empathy in narcissistic personality disorder: from clinical and empirical perspectives.Borderline personality disorder as a female phenotypic expression of psychopathy?Evidence for the criterion validity and clinical utility of the Pathological Narcissism Inventory.Trait-based assessment of borderline personality disorder using the NEO Five-Factor Inventory: Phenotypic and genetic supportExamining Dark Triad traits in relation to mental toughness and physical activity in young adults.An integrative approach to the assessment of narcissism.A Meta-Analytic Test of Redundancy and Relative Importance of the Dark Triad and Five-Factor Model of Personality.Looking ahead through a fragile lens: Vulnerable narcissism and the future self.Psychopathic Personality Traits in the Military: An Examination of the Levenson Self-Report Psychopathy Scales in a Novel Sample.The Narcissism Spectrum Model.On the Measure and Mismeasure of Narcissism: A Response to "Measures of Narcissism and Their Relations to DSM-5 Pathological Traits: A Critical Reappraisal".The Malevolent Side of Human Nature.Is there an association between the level of grandiose narcissism severity of psychopathology?Psychopathy and Machiavellianism: A Distinction Without a Difference?Rejoinder: A Construct Validity Approach to the Assessment of Narcissism.Pathological narcissism and somatic symptoms among men and women attending an outpatient mental health clinic.The five-factor narcissism inventory: a five-factor measure of narcissistic personality traits.A test of the construct validity of the Five-Factor Narcissism Inventory.Grandiose and vulnerable narcissism and the DSM-5 pathological personality trait model.Can the Five Factor Model of Personality Account for the Variability of Autism Symptom Expression? Multivariate Approaches to Behavioral Phenotyping in Adult Autism Spectrum Disorder.Schizotypal Traits and the Dark Triad From an Ecological Perspective: A Nonclinical Sample Study.Ratings of affective and interpersonal tendencies differ for grandiose and vulnerable narcissism: A replication and extension of Gore and Widiger (2016).Expanding the Nomological Net of the Pathological Narcissism Inventory: German Validation and Extension in a Clinical Inpatient Sample.Hostile Attribution Bias as a Mediator of the Relationships of Psychopathy and Narcissism With Aggression.Are Narcissists More Likely to Be Involved in Cyberbullying? Examining the Mediating Role of Self-Esteem.Vulnerable Narcissism Is (Mostly) a Disorder of Neuroticism.Intimate partner violence perpetration corresponds to a dorsal-ventral gradient in medial PFC reactivity to interpersonal provocation.The double-edged sword of grandiose narcissism: implications for successful and unsuccessful leadership among U.S. Presidents.How to spot a narcissist: Mental health literacy with respect to Narcissistic Personality Disorder.Pathological narcissism and depressive symptoms in psychiatric outpatients: mediating role of dysfunctional attitudes.Validity of the Self-Report Psychopathy Scales (SRP-III Full and Short Versions) in a Community Sample.Grandiose and vulnerable narcissism: a nomological network analysis.Genetic and environmental overlap between borderline personality disorder traits and psychopathy: evidence for promotive effects of factor 2 and protective effects of factor 1.The higher order factor structure and gender invariance of the Pathological Narcissism Inventory.A Comparison of the Nomological Networks Associated With Forced-Choice and Likert Formats of the Narcissistic Personality Inventory.The Bright, the Dark, and the Blue Face of Narcissism: The Spectrum of Narcissism in Its Relations to the Metatraits of Personality, Self-Esteem, and the Nomological Network of Shyness, Loneliness, and Empathy.Are Psychopathic and Borderline Personality Disorder Distinct, or Differently Gendered Expressions of the Same Disorder? An Exploration Using Concept Maps
P2860
Q34208084-EFCBD6ED-2DAF-4C29-8D00-7860C02CC8F9Q34245615-297CD780-5B21-4A5B-BDAD-F907E435F764Q34943671-C21D21F6-1435-45A4-A3C6-FB58512929D5Q35556692-1006CBD6-F155-4E03-A39A-30662DDCAA16Q35881642-8FCEC9A0-F5C5-4DF4-A229-C54CBD6AD828Q35965637-4AFE752B-687E-4D3C-B878-DCC4F7F620EAQ36296948-EEC96C24-8118-42A5-A221-619D4FE52848Q36533197-B9AE5A33-038F-4A68-BF2A-9CB2EDF406D9Q38085624-880CE1BD-9031-4292-9105-A72588389FA1Q38244337-CC87C78F-25FD-420B-AC5C-75E29A72D14FQ38651133-47CB5BB8-6B1C-4592-86A7-E3FF6643733EQ38681433-E58B8473-65C5-4F04-BF3A-C7CDE398C628Q38764655-F45F6D11-A445-464A-BF9C-DCEE3F37184DQ38976511-C02B23EF-9603-42D9-ACFB-8CC9A19F5AB2Q39202166-0255BF08-8765-4033-9ED4-5C984080589EQ39279723-A5795B9F-A90C-4144-B52F-2C5FDB4EC0AAQ39924922-CE53BE25-3E45-4F64-9AFF-48562676D91EQ40435803-BE2219C7-8C07-4790-93F8-69FBA2500F50Q40686483-DB092F8F-A721-4EAC-955F-D4CF1339A84FQ43531658-391C89FD-1E33-452A-B835-88DFF54DEF8CQ45758263-409742ED-D9E5-4751-885B-672A50BFA4D0Q45946607-E9CA291C-64A5-4CC6-AA14-0F21650F0559Q46037664-7CD62E6A-F7E6-4024-A58F-FABB239C5079Q47180790-141CD1CD-E125-4B48-B143-A75A7488EB6FQ47321012-B6BC9AFE-41F2-4E39-8DAC-1C0848FD28C4Q47584276-FF6888A9-4C6C-43F7-9277-BD22F099459EQ47599516-03D58911-687D-45F3-9774-F10757F49E76Q47703330-8DA0DAAE-F012-49CD-A265-B6B7A7A4F77DQ47766027-0A2D2F1B-DAF4-4F24-81E0-4F20AF6B7BA7Q47852028-DDE38159-596A-49BC-8179-7E92E3820874Q48156039-E7381C83-0523-4BAD-BC10-9B24687F0F59Q48199058-2A994500-AF80-417D-A64F-458219D65779Q48431493-BD354EA4-A5E6-41E9-87AB-AC06FFBB97E6Q49112219-ADB01D71-004E-4B54-BDC9-B6C8FEF36D5CQ50650233-CA05B0C0-A03E-488F-B541-6F18F1AA0D37Q51104527-2A9E6C7F-7E8F-4611-B559-69465D9D847FQ51679325-CCDAE3D1-991C-4853-A76B-496BA312E3DEQ54324235-915D73E9-6474-4541-BDE1-F38F0C1B7BC4Q55017127-004B487A-530B-4B10-B045-F2D95D731C7FQ57775689-211B741D-4084-4EDB-B2BF-454AB8D29242
P2860
Searching for a vulnerable dark triad: comparing Factor 2 psychopathy, vulnerable narcissism, and borderline personality disorder.
description
2010 nî lūn-bûn
@nan
2010年の論文
@ja
2010年学术文章
@wuu
2010年学术文章
@zh
2010年学术文章
@zh-cn
2010年学术文章
@zh-hans
2010年学术文章
@zh-my
2010年学术文章
@zh-sg
2010年學術文章
@yue
2010年學術文章
@zh-hant
name
Searching for a vulnerable dar ...... rderline personality disorder.
@en
Searching for a vulnerable dar ...... rderline personality disorder.
@nl
type
label
Searching for a vulnerable dar ...... rderline personality disorder.
@en
Searching for a vulnerable dar ...... rderline personality disorder.
@nl
prefLabel
Searching for a vulnerable dar ...... rderline personality disorder.
@en
Searching for a vulnerable dar ...... rderline personality disorder.
@nl
P2093
P2860
P1476
Searching for a vulnerable dar ...... rderline personality disorder.
@en
P2093
Brittany Gentile
Joshua D Miller
Lauren R Pryor
Lauren Wilson
W Keith Campbell
P2860
P304
P356
10.1111/J.1467-6494.2010.00660.X
P50
P577
2010-07-20T00:00:00Z