Deck 13: Personality Disorders

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Question
More convicted felons are diagnosed with antisocial personality disorder than psychopathy.
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Question
Borderline personality disorder tends to be comorbid with mood disorders.
Question
Personality disorders are diagnosed on Axis II of DSM-5.
Question
Personality disorders may be best diagnosed in a dimensional manner.
Question
Narcissistic personality disorder is more common than histrionic personality disorder.
Question
Both histrionic and narcissistic personality disorders have self-centeredness as a key symptom.
Question
University students are most likely to be diagnosed with narcissistic personality disorder.
Question
Schizotypal personality disorder is well-differentiated from other personality disorders.
Question
People with personality disorders are often not distressed about their behaviour.
Question
Cluster A personality disorders are related to schizophrenia.
Question
Linehan's diathesis-stress theory is the most widely accepted explanation of the etiology of borderline personality disorder.
Question
The key distinguishing feature between antisocial personality disorder and psychopathy is how people experience emotion.
Question
Schizotypal personality disorder is more common among children of schizophrenics.
Question
The traits of people with personality disorders are different than the traits of people without personality disorders.
Question
People with schizoid personality disorder are likely to be perceived by others as loners.
Question
Antisocial personality disorder and psychopathy are the same thing.
Question
People with paranoid personality disorder experience less dysfunction than those with paranoid schizophrenia.
Question
Personality disorder not otherwise specified (PDNOS)is the most common personality disorder diagnosis.
Question
The term "borderline" in borderline personality refers to people who experience it being on the borderline between sane and insane.
Question
The best way to diagnose personality disorders is to have people complete the NEO (Five-Factor Model).
Question
Obsessive-compulsive personality disorder is often comorbid with obsessive-compulsive disorder.
Question
Low reliability for a personality disorder suggests:

A)People with the disorder did not, in fact, have problems functioning normally in daily life.
B)Clinicians diagnosing patients had difficulty agreeing on whether a patient had the disorder or not.
C)People with the disorder at one point in time had recovered by the follow-up assessment.
D)People with the disorder often had other personality disorders as well.
Question
The reliability of personality disorders has improved by:

A)Improving the theoretical basis for each personality disorder
B)Showing an interrelationship with Axis I disorders
C)Developing clear diagnostic criteria
D)Paying closer attention to their possible presence
Question
Psychodynamic treatment for personality disorders tend to focus on childhood problems.
Question
One goal of therapy for people with borderline personality disorder is for them to stop splitting.
Question
Dependent personality disorder is more prevalent in North America than elsewhere in the world.
Question
Which of the following life task failures has not been identified by Livesley (1998)as being indicative of a personality disorder?

A)Engaging in prosocial behaviours
B)Establishing autonomy
C)Forming stable representations of self and others
D)Developing relationships
Question
Compared to normal people, the personalities of people with personality disorders are:

A)Remarkably similar
B)Out of touch with reality
C)Categorically different but not out of touch with reality
D)More extreme
Question
Dialectical behaviour therapy is a combination of psychodynamic and cognitive-behavioural therapies.
Question
Avoidant personality disorder is often comorbid with social phobia.
Question
The Psychopathy Checklist-Revised (PCL-R)is one of the best predictors of recidivism.
Question
Personality disorders differ from normal personality traits by:

A)Longstanding and dysfunctional behaviour
B)A loss of contact with reality
C)Involving personality traits that have become entirely self-defeating in nature
D)All of the above
Question
Most people who have been diagnosed as having a personality disorder:

A)Would be better described using one of the Axis I disorders.
B)Have a pervasive developmental disorder as well.
C)Have more than one personality disorder.
D)Have only one personality disorder.
Question
People are typically distressed and seek treatment for personality disorders.
Question
Tests of the continuity versus discontinuity of personality disorders have found evidence suggesting that ________ may represent a discrete, discontinuous category.

A)narcissistic personality disorder
B)paranoid personality disorder
C)antisocial personality disorder
D)passive-aggressive personality disorder
Question
Antisocial personality disorder is virtually impossible to treat.
Question
Personality disorders are defined as:

A)Maladaptive behaviour that consistently violates the rights of others
B)Inflexible patterns of behaviour which impair social and occupational functioning
C)Any psychological disorder having an onset before age 12 and recurring at least three times during adult life
D)A chronic pattern of extreme instability in relationships, mood, and self-image
Question
According to Livesley and his colleagues from the University of British Columbia, how do people with personality disorders compare to normal people?

A)People with personality disorders have extreme forms of the same personality structures.
B)People with personality disorders differ qualitatively from normal people in the traits they exhibit.
C)People with personality disorders are more egosyntonic than normal people.
D)Only those people with severe personality disorders differ qualitatively from normals, while those with clinical personality disorders exist on a continuum with normal people.
Question
The disorders in the anxious/fearful cluster are thought to have their roots in parent-child relationships.
Question
Ivy is fairly easy going and seems to be able to adapt to whatever life throws at her, whereas her friend Katelyn has a much harder time adjusting to new situations. Who is more likely to have a personality disorder?

A)Ivy, because she's too wishy-washy and does whatever others want
B)Katelyn, because she's too rigid
C)They are equally likely, as flexibility and rigidity are linked to personality disorders
D)Neither of them - flexibility and rigidity aren't linked to personality disorders
Question
How stable are personality disorders?

A)Fairly stable once a person reaches adulthood
B)Fairly unstable throughout the lifespan
C)Stable during adulthood; unstable adolescence and old age
D)There is no clear answer to this question
Question
One way to enhance the assessment and diagnosis of personality disorders is to:

A)Have the client answer questions under hypnosis
B)Conduct a retrospective review of school records
C)Have the client's significant other contribute information
D)Conduct the interview in a neutral location
Question
A new scale was developed for the proposed changes to personality disorders in DSM-5. Two dimensions emerged that were different from the five-factor model. They are:

A)Negative affect and disinhibition
B)Antagonism and psychoticisim
C)Detachment and antagonism
D)Psychoticism and disinhibition
Question
Research by John Livesley has shown that when people with personality disorders take a general personality disorder test their profile is:

A)Strikingly similar to normal people's profile
B)Vastly different to normal people's profile
C)Similar to normal people's profile but more extreme
D)Different from normal people's profile on neuroticism
Question
The personality disorder with the highest test-retest reliability when the reliability of the diagnosis is assessed is:

A)Psychopathy personality disorder
B)Antisocial personality disorder
C)Paranoid personality disorder
D)Obsessive-compulsive personality disorder
Question
Which of the following is one of the five-factors from the NEO-Personality Inventory-Revised?

A)Narcissism
B)Emotionality
C)Obsessionality
D)Agreeableness
Question
A five-factor personality analysis by Alden and associates led them to conclude that avoidant personality disorder is the only personality disorder characterized by:

A)High neuroticism and high extraversion
B)High neuroticism and high introversion
C)High agreeableness and high conscientiousness
D)Low agreeableness and low openness
Question
Which trait have researchers suggested needs more consideration when it comes to personality disorders?

A)psychopathy
B)narcissism
C)dependence
D)perfectionism
Question
Livesley and Jackson (2002)developed the DAPP-BQ self-report personality questionnaire:

A)To reflect factors of neuroticism, extroversion/introversion, openness to experience, agreeableness/antagonism, conscientiousness
B)To reflect factors of emotional dysregulation, dissocial behaviour, inhibitedness and compulsivity
C)Which differentiates neuroticism and emotional dysregulation and differentiates dissocial behaviour from psychoticism
D)Which exemplifies a categorical approach to personality assessment unlike the dimensional approach of the NEO-Personality Inventory-Revised
Question
In DSM-5, personality disorders are diagnosed:

A)On Axis II
B)Categorically
C)Dimensionally
D)Based on test results
Question
Borderline Personality Disorder would be associated most likely with which factor from the five-factor model of personality?

A)Extraversion/introversion
B)Openness to experience
C)Neuroticism/antagonism
D)Agreeableness/antagonism
Question
The 18 personality trait scales of the Dimensional Assessment of Personality Pathology - Basic Questionnaire (DAPP - BQ)reflect the following higher order factors:

A)Emotional dysregulation, narcissism, inhibitedness, compulsivity
B)Emotional dysregulation, callousness, impulsivity, compulsivity
C)Emotional dysregulation, dissocial behaviour, impulsivity, compulsivity
D)Emotional dysregulation, dissocial behaviour, inhibitedness, compulsivity
Question
What is the Alternative Model for Personality Disorders?

A)A new method of diagnosing personality disorders based solely on partner report
B)A new method of diagnosing personality disorders based on observations by the therapist
C)An alternative method for diagnosing personality disorders in DSM-5 that incorporates a dimensional model
D)An alternative method for diagnosing personality disorders in DSM-5 that is based on a categorical model
Question
Durbin and Klein (2006)examined the stability of personality diagnoses in a mood disorder population and found that:

A)Ten-year stability coefficients using categorical diagnoses was relatively good
B)Stability coefficients increased as the time interval increased
C)Consistent with previous research, cluster A personality disorders had the greatest stability over time
D)Stability coefficients are highest when a dimensional approach is taken
Question
Andrea has been diagnosed with psychopathy. According to research conducted by Harpur, Hart, and Hare (1994), how would we describe her personality in terms of McCrae and Costa's five-factor model?

A)Low levels of neuroticism and agreeableness
B)High levels of neuroticism and low levels of agreeableness and conscientiousness
C)High levels of agreeableness but low levels of conscientiousness
D)Low levels of introversion, neuroticism, and conscientiousness
Question
Personality disorders and episodic disorders:

A)Can co-occur in the same person
B)Cannot occur simultaneously in the same person
C)Are coded on different axes of DSM-5
D)Were coded on the same axis of DSM-IV
Question
A major problem that remains in diagnosing personality disorders is:

A)Low reliability on retest
B)Poor interrater reliability
C)Unstructured diagnostic criteria
D)Very low occurrence in the population for most of the disorders
Question
Which of the following statements about the links between psychopathy and the five-factor model is true?

A)Psychopaths are low in neuroticism
B)Psychopaths are high on conscientiousness
C)Psychopaths are high on antagonism
D)Psychopaths are low in agreeableness
Question
Meta-analysis research (Verheul & Widiger, 2004)found that the third most prevalent personality disorder diagnosed via structured interviews is ______________, with prevalence rates ranging from 8% to 13% of clinical samples.

A)borderline personality disorder
B)antisocial personality disorder
C)narcissistic personality disorder
D)personality disorder not otherwise specified
Question
According to John Livesley from the University of British Columbia there are three types of life tasks that are important and failure with any one of these tasks warrants a personality disorder diagnosis. Which of the following is not one of the three tasks?

A)The formation of stable, integrated and coherent representations of self and others
B)The development of the capacity for intimacy and positive affiliation with other people
C)Self-regulatory skills which permits for a balanced approach to cope with the stress of life
D)Functioning adaptively in society by engaging in prosocial and cooperative behaviours
Question
"Generation Me" has been used to describe university students as being incredibly self-focussed and possibly having:

A)Dependent personality disorder
B)Narcissistic personality disorder
C)Borderline personality disorder
D)Antisocial personality disorder
Question
Which of the following personality disorders falls in the odd/eccentric cluster?

A)Paranoid
B)Borderline
C)Avoidant
D)Histrionic
Question
Millon and Grossman's (2007)personalized therapy for personality disorders consists of:

A)Modifying therapeutic approaches to fit the unique demands of clients
B)Adjusting CBT to fit the unique needs of clients
C)Modifying therapeutic approaches to fit the clients' personality styles
D)Adjusting psychoanalytic approaches to fit the clients' history
Question
A recent study (Bagby et al., 2008)concluded that two assessment tools were reliable in diagnosing 10 personality disorders. Which assessment tools were they referring to?

A)MMPI-II and NEO- PI(R)
B)NEO-PI(R)and PSY-5
C)PSY-5 and MMPI-II
D)MMPI-II and MCMI-III
Question
What does the updated 2009 version of the MMCI-III now contain?

A)New language to reflect the changing times
B)Therapy-guiding facet scales
C)A new treatment approach called 'personalized therapy'
D)Questions about substance use, since many people with personality disorders also use drugs
Question
Which of the following personality disorders falls in the dramatic/erratic cluster?

A)Paranoid
B)Borderline
C)Avoidant
D)Dependent
Question
According to findings from Trull and colleagues (1995), the PSY-5 constraint scale is robustly associated with:

A)Schizotypal personality disorder
B)Antisocial personality disorder
C)Paranoid personality disorder
D)Borderline personality disorder
Question
Self-report measures of personality disorders:

A)Overestimate the number of cases when the actual number of cases is evaluated with a diagnostic interview
B)Accurately measure the number of cases when the actual number of cases is evaluated with a diagnostic interview
C)Underestimate the number of cases when the actual number of cases is evaluated with a diagnostic interview
D)None of the above; accuracy varies and is not constant across self-report measures
Question
What is the third-most prevalent type of personality disorder diagnosed via structured interviews?

A)Avoidant Personality Disorder
B)Paranoid Personality Disorder
C)Personality Disorder Not Otherwise Specified
D)Narcissistic Personality Disorder
Question
Saying that a personality disorder is egosyntonic means that:

A)The person lacks the ability to seek help
B)The person does not experience personal distress
C)The problems the person experiences do not match his/her knowledge of him/herself
D)The problems the person experiences seem like a minor hassle
Question
The PSY-5 consists of personality disorder dimensions derived from responses to:

A)The Rorschach Inkblot Test
B)The Jackson Basic Personality Inventory
C)The MMPI-2
D)The Schedule for Negative Affect and Positive Affect
Question
According to the MCMI-III, which three personality pathology scales are grouped as severe?

A)Schizoid, sadistic, self-defeating
B)Narcissistic, histrionic, avoidant
C)Schizotypal, borderline, paranoid
D)Antisocial, sadistic, passive-aggressive
Question
University students are more likely to experience:

A)Dependent personality disorder
B)Narcissistic personality disorder
C)Anti-social personality disorder
D)Obsessive-compulsive personality disorder
Question
Millon's Clinical Multiaxial Inventory is used to assess:

A)Severe personality pathology
B)Specific clinical syndromes
C)Response styles such as random responding
D)All of the above
Question
What were the main findings in a University of Alberta study by Sinha and Watson that compared three self-report measures of personality disorders (the MCMI, MMPI, and the CATI)?

A)There was a high degree of correspondence between the scales.
B)While the three scales yielded similar results for women, results for men differed for all three scales.
C)For both women and men, prevalence rates differed depending on which scale was used.
D)The tests differed in terms of their diagnostic reliability.
Question
University students:

A)Are immune to personality disorders
B)Experience personality disorders at a higher rate than non-students
C)Experience personality disorders at a lower rate than non-students
D)Are more likely than not to experience a personality disorder
Question
The PSY-5 assesses:

A)Negative emotionality
B)Low positive emotionality
C)Psychoticism
D)All of the above
Question
A concern with the use of 'cut-off points' in self-report measures to diagnose personality disorders is that they

A)are psychometrically unfeasible.
B)fail to provide a diagnostic category diagnosis.
C)provide over-consistency with structured interview diagnoses.
D)overestimate prevalence.
Question
When a person lacks insight into their own personality, this phenomenon is called:

A)Egosyntonic
B)Egocentric
C)Psychological mindlessness
D)Psychological unawareness
Question
Tyrer et al. (2007)concluded the following regarding the assessment of personality disorders:

A)Assessment is inaccurate and largely unreliable
B)Assessment is infrequently wrong and in need of improvement
C)Assessment is accurate under specific circumstances
D)Assessment is inaccurate unless there are two raters
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Deck 13: Personality Disorders
1
More convicted felons are diagnosed with antisocial personality disorder than psychopathy.
True
2
Borderline personality disorder tends to be comorbid with mood disorders.
True
3
Personality disorders are diagnosed on Axis II of DSM-5.
False
4
Personality disorders may be best diagnosed in a dimensional manner.
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k this deck
5
Narcissistic personality disorder is more common than histrionic personality disorder.
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6
Both histrionic and narcissistic personality disorders have self-centeredness as a key symptom.
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7
University students are most likely to be diagnosed with narcissistic personality disorder.
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8
Schizotypal personality disorder is well-differentiated from other personality disorders.
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9
People with personality disorders are often not distressed about their behaviour.
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10
Cluster A personality disorders are related to schizophrenia.
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11
Linehan's diathesis-stress theory is the most widely accepted explanation of the etiology of borderline personality disorder.
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12
The key distinguishing feature between antisocial personality disorder and psychopathy is how people experience emotion.
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13
Schizotypal personality disorder is more common among children of schizophrenics.
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14
The traits of people with personality disorders are different than the traits of people without personality disorders.
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15
People with schizoid personality disorder are likely to be perceived by others as loners.
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16
Antisocial personality disorder and psychopathy are the same thing.
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17
People with paranoid personality disorder experience less dysfunction than those with paranoid schizophrenia.
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18
Personality disorder not otherwise specified (PDNOS)is the most common personality disorder diagnosis.
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19
The term "borderline" in borderline personality refers to people who experience it being on the borderline between sane and insane.
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20
The best way to diagnose personality disorders is to have people complete the NEO (Five-Factor Model).
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21
Obsessive-compulsive personality disorder is often comorbid with obsessive-compulsive disorder.
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22
Low reliability for a personality disorder suggests:

A)People with the disorder did not, in fact, have problems functioning normally in daily life.
B)Clinicians diagnosing patients had difficulty agreeing on whether a patient had the disorder or not.
C)People with the disorder at one point in time had recovered by the follow-up assessment.
D)People with the disorder often had other personality disorders as well.
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23
The reliability of personality disorders has improved by:

A)Improving the theoretical basis for each personality disorder
B)Showing an interrelationship with Axis I disorders
C)Developing clear diagnostic criteria
D)Paying closer attention to their possible presence
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24
Psychodynamic treatment for personality disorders tend to focus on childhood problems.
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25
One goal of therapy for people with borderline personality disorder is for them to stop splitting.
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26
Dependent personality disorder is more prevalent in North America than elsewhere in the world.
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27
Which of the following life task failures has not been identified by Livesley (1998)as being indicative of a personality disorder?

A)Engaging in prosocial behaviours
B)Establishing autonomy
C)Forming stable representations of self and others
D)Developing relationships
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28
Compared to normal people, the personalities of people with personality disorders are:

A)Remarkably similar
B)Out of touch with reality
C)Categorically different but not out of touch with reality
D)More extreme
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29
Dialectical behaviour therapy is a combination of psychodynamic and cognitive-behavioural therapies.
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30
Avoidant personality disorder is often comorbid with social phobia.
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31
The Psychopathy Checklist-Revised (PCL-R)is one of the best predictors of recidivism.
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32
Personality disorders differ from normal personality traits by:

A)Longstanding and dysfunctional behaviour
B)A loss of contact with reality
C)Involving personality traits that have become entirely self-defeating in nature
D)All of the above
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33
Most people who have been diagnosed as having a personality disorder:

A)Would be better described using one of the Axis I disorders.
B)Have a pervasive developmental disorder as well.
C)Have more than one personality disorder.
D)Have only one personality disorder.
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34
People are typically distressed and seek treatment for personality disorders.
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35
Tests of the continuity versus discontinuity of personality disorders have found evidence suggesting that ________ may represent a discrete, discontinuous category.

A)narcissistic personality disorder
B)paranoid personality disorder
C)antisocial personality disorder
D)passive-aggressive personality disorder
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36
Antisocial personality disorder is virtually impossible to treat.
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37
Personality disorders are defined as:

A)Maladaptive behaviour that consistently violates the rights of others
B)Inflexible patterns of behaviour which impair social and occupational functioning
C)Any psychological disorder having an onset before age 12 and recurring at least three times during adult life
D)A chronic pattern of extreme instability in relationships, mood, and self-image
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Unlock for access to all 218 flashcards in this deck.
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k this deck
38
According to Livesley and his colleagues from the University of British Columbia, how do people with personality disorders compare to normal people?

A)People with personality disorders have extreme forms of the same personality structures.
B)People with personality disorders differ qualitatively from normal people in the traits they exhibit.
C)People with personality disorders are more egosyntonic than normal people.
D)Only those people with severe personality disorders differ qualitatively from normals, while those with clinical personality disorders exist on a continuum with normal people.
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39
The disorders in the anxious/fearful cluster are thought to have their roots in parent-child relationships.
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k this deck
40
Ivy is fairly easy going and seems to be able to adapt to whatever life throws at her, whereas her friend Katelyn has a much harder time adjusting to new situations. Who is more likely to have a personality disorder?

A)Ivy, because she's too wishy-washy and does whatever others want
B)Katelyn, because she's too rigid
C)They are equally likely, as flexibility and rigidity are linked to personality disorders
D)Neither of them - flexibility and rigidity aren't linked to personality disorders
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41
How stable are personality disorders?

A)Fairly stable once a person reaches adulthood
B)Fairly unstable throughout the lifespan
C)Stable during adulthood; unstable adolescence and old age
D)There is no clear answer to this question
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42
One way to enhance the assessment and diagnosis of personality disorders is to:

A)Have the client answer questions under hypnosis
B)Conduct a retrospective review of school records
C)Have the client's significant other contribute information
D)Conduct the interview in a neutral location
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 218 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
43
A new scale was developed for the proposed changes to personality disorders in DSM-5. Two dimensions emerged that were different from the five-factor model. They are:

A)Negative affect and disinhibition
B)Antagonism and psychoticisim
C)Detachment and antagonism
D)Psychoticism and disinhibition
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 218 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
44
Research by John Livesley has shown that when people with personality disorders take a general personality disorder test their profile is:

A)Strikingly similar to normal people's profile
B)Vastly different to normal people's profile
C)Similar to normal people's profile but more extreme
D)Different from normal people's profile on neuroticism
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45
The personality disorder with the highest test-retest reliability when the reliability of the diagnosis is assessed is:

A)Psychopathy personality disorder
B)Antisocial personality disorder
C)Paranoid personality disorder
D)Obsessive-compulsive personality disorder
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46
Which of the following is one of the five-factors from the NEO-Personality Inventory-Revised?

A)Narcissism
B)Emotionality
C)Obsessionality
D)Agreeableness
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Unlock Deck
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47
A five-factor personality analysis by Alden and associates led them to conclude that avoidant personality disorder is the only personality disorder characterized by:

A)High neuroticism and high extraversion
B)High neuroticism and high introversion
C)High agreeableness and high conscientiousness
D)Low agreeableness and low openness
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 218 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
48
Which trait have researchers suggested needs more consideration when it comes to personality disorders?

A)psychopathy
B)narcissism
C)dependence
D)perfectionism
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 218 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
49
Livesley and Jackson (2002)developed the DAPP-BQ self-report personality questionnaire:

A)To reflect factors of neuroticism, extroversion/introversion, openness to experience, agreeableness/antagonism, conscientiousness
B)To reflect factors of emotional dysregulation, dissocial behaviour, inhibitedness and compulsivity
C)Which differentiates neuroticism and emotional dysregulation and differentiates dissocial behaviour from psychoticism
D)Which exemplifies a categorical approach to personality assessment unlike the dimensional approach of the NEO-Personality Inventory-Revised
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 218 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
50
In DSM-5, personality disorders are diagnosed:

A)On Axis II
B)Categorically
C)Dimensionally
D)Based on test results
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 218 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
51
Borderline Personality Disorder would be associated most likely with which factor from the five-factor model of personality?

A)Extraversion/introversion
B)Openness to experience
C)Neuroticism/antagonism
D)Agreeableness/antagonism
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 218 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
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52
The 18 personality trait scales of the Dimensional Assessment of Personality Pathology - Basic Questionnaire (DAPP - BQ)reflect the following higher order factors:

A)Emotional dysregulation, narcissism, inhibitedness, compulsivity
B)Emotional dysregulation, callousness, impulsivity, compulsivity
C)Emotional dysregulation, dissocial behaviour, impulsivity, compulsivity
D)Emotional dysregulation, dissocial behaviour, inhibitedness, compulsivity
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53
What is the Alternative Model for Personality Disorders?

A)A new method of diagnosing personality disorders based solely on partner report
B)A new method of diagnosing personality disorders based on observations by the therapist
C)An alternative method for diagnosing personality disorders in DSM-5 that incorporates a dimensional model
D)An alternative method for diagnosing personality disorders in DSM-5 that is based on a categorical model
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54
Durbin and Klein (2006)examined the stability of personality diagnoses in a mood disorder population and found that:

A)Ten-year stability coefficients using categorical diagnoses was relatively good
B)Stability coefficients increased as the time interval increased
C)Consistent with previous research, cluster A personality disorders had the greatest stability over time
D)Stability coefficients are highest when a dimensional approach is taken
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55
Andrea has been diagnosed with psychopathy. According to research conducted by Harpur, Hart, and Hare (1994), how would we describe her personality in terms of McCrae and Costa's five-factor model?

A)Low levels of neuroticism and agreeableness
B)High levels of neuroticism and low levels of agreeableness and conscientiousness
C)High levels of agreeableness but low levels of conscientiousness
D)Low levels of introversion, neuroticism, and conscientiousness
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56
Personality disorders and episodic disorders:

A)Can co-occur in the same person
B)Cannot occur simultaneously in the same person
C)Are coded on different axes of DSM-5
D)Were coded on the same axis of DSM-IV
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57
A major problem that remains in diagnosing personality disorders is:

A)Low reliability on retest
B)Poor interrater reliability
C)Unstructured diagnostic criteria
D)Very low occurrence in the population for most of the disorders
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58
Which of the following statements about the links between psychopathy and the five-factor model is true?

A)Psychopaths are low in neuroticism
B)Psychopaths are high on conscientiousness
C)Psychopaths are high on antagonism
D)Psychopaths are low in agreeableness
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59
Meta-analysis research (Verheul & Widiger, 2004)found that the third most prevalent personality disorder diagnosed via structured interviews is ______________, with prevalence rates ranging from 8% to 13% of clinical samples.

A)borderline personality disorder
B)antisocial personality disorder
C)narcissistic personality disorder
D)personality disorder not otherwise specified
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60
According to John Livesley from the University of British Columbia there are three types of life tasks that are important and failure with any one of these tasks warrants a personality disorder diagnosis. Which of the following is not one of the three tasks?

A)The formation of stable, integrated and coherent representations of self and others
B)The development of the capacity for intimacy and positive affiliation with other people
C)Self-regulatory skills which permits for a balanced approach to cope with the stress of life
D)Functioning adaptively in society by engaging in prosocial and cooperative behaviours
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61
"Generation Me" has been used to describe university students as being incredibly self-focussed and possibly having:

A)Dependent personality disorder
B)Narcissistic personality disorder
C)Borderline personality disorder
D)Antisocial personality disorder
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62
Which of the following personality disorders falls in the odd/eccentric cluster?

A)Paranoid
B)Borderline
C)Avoidant
D)Histrionic
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63
Millon and Grossman's (2007)personalized therapy for personality disorders consists of:

A)Modifying therapeutic approaches to fit the unique demands of clients
B)Adjusting CBT to fit the unique needs of clients
C)Modifying therapeutic approaches to fit the clients' personality styles
D)Adjusting psychoanalytic approaches to fit the clients' history
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64
A recent study (Bagby et al., 2008)concluded that two assessment tools were reliable in diagnosing 10 personality disorders. Which assessment tools were they referring to?

A)MMPI-II and NEO- PI(R)
B)NEO-PI(R)and PSY-5
C)PSY-5 and MMPI-II
D)MMPI-II and MCMI-III
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65
What does the updated 2009 version of the MMCI-III now contain?

A)New language to reflect the changing times
B)Therapy-guiding facet scales
C)A new treatment approach called 'personalized therapy'
D)Questions about substance use, since many people with personality disorders also use drugs
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66
Which of the following personality disorders falls in the dramatic/erratic cluster?

A)Paranoid
B)Borderline
C)Avoidant
D)Dependent
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67
According to findings from Trull and colleagues (1995), the PSY-5 constraint scale is robustly associated with:

A)Schizotypal personality disorder
B)Antisocial personality disorder
C)Paranoid personality disorder
D)Borderline personality disorder
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68
Self-report measures of personality disorders:

A)Overestimate the number of cases when the actual number of cases is evaluated with a diagnostic interview
B)Accurately measure the number of cases when the actual number of cases is evaluated with a diagnostic interview
C)Underestimate the number of cases when the actual number of cases is evaluated with a diagnostic interview
D)None of the above; accuracy varies and is not constant across self-report measures
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69
What is the third-most prevalent type of personality disorder diagnosed via structured interviews?

A)Avoidant Personality Disorder
B)Paranoid Personality Disorder
C)Personality Disorder Not Otherwise Specified
D)Narcissistic Personality Disorder
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70
Saying that a personality disorder is egosyntonic means that:

A)The person lacks the ability to seek help
B)The person does not experience personal distress
C)The problems the person experiences do not match his/her knowledge of him/herself
D)The problems the person experiences seem like a minor hassle
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71
The PSY-5 consists of personality disorder dimensions derived from responses to:

A)The Rorschach Inkblot Test
B)The Jackson Basic Personality Inventory
C)The MMPI-2
D)The Schedule for Negative Affect and Positive Affect
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72
According to the MCMI-III, which three personality pathology scales are grouped as severe?

A)Schizoid, sadistic, self-defeating
B)Narcissistic, histrionic, avoidant
C)Schizotypal, borderline, paranoid
D)Antisocial, sadistic, passive-aggressive
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73
University students are more likely to experience:

A)Dependent personality disorder
B)Narcissistic personality disorder
C)Anti-social personality disorder
D)Obsessive-compulsive personality disorder
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74
Millon's Clinical Multiaxial Inventory is used to assess:

A)Severe personality pathology
B)Specific clinical syndromes
C)Response styles such as random responding
D)All of the above
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75
What were the main findings in a University of Alberta study by Sinha and Watson that compared three self-report measures of personality disorders (the MCMI, MMPI, and the CATI)?

A)There was a high degree of correspondence between the scales.
B)While the three scales yielded similar results for women, results for men differed for all three scales.
C)For both women and men, prevalence rates differed depending on which scale was used.
D)The tests differed in terms of their diagnostic reliability.
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76
University students:

A)Are immune to personality disorders
B)Experience personality disorders at a higher rate than non-students
C)Experience personality disorders at a lower rate than non-students
D)Are more likely than not to experience a personality disorder
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77
The PSY-5 assesses:

A)Negative emotionality
B)Low positive emotionality
C)Psychoticism
D)All of the above
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78
A concern with the use of 'cut-off points' in self-report measures to diagnose personality disorders is that they

A)are psychometrically unfeasible.
B)fail to provide a diagnostic category diagnosis.
C)provide over-consistency with structured interview diagnoses.
D)overestimate prevalence.
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79
When a person lacks insight into their own personality, this phenomenon is called:

A)Egosyntonic
B)Egocentric
C)Psychological mindlessness
D)Psychological unawareness
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80
Tyrer et al. (2007)concluded the following regarding the assessment of personality disorders:

A)Assessment is inaccurate and largely unreliable
B)Assessment is infrequently wrong and in need of improvement
C)Assessment is accurate under specific circumstances
D)Assessment is inaccurate unless there are two raters
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Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 218 flashcards in this deck.