This paper presents an integrative model of personality and personality disorder which incorporates psychoanalytic concepts with modern neuroscience. In addition, a dynamic, personalized, and context - and time-sensitive diagnosis of personality disorder is introduced. The authors cogently argue that all clinical variants of personality disorder share the same common deficit: fragmented basic units of experience at the nonconscious core of the mind (aka “partial object relations”). The fragmentation propagates through mental faculties (thought, motivation, emotion), as they self-organize into subsystems of personality, e.g., one’s sense of self, identity, character, moral values, rendering them polarized into extreme and thus adaptively sub...
Advances in psychopathological research advocate a personality-centred model of common mental disord...
This article reviews the theoretical and empirical contributions of Blatt's two-polarities model of ...
The DSM‐5 represents a watershed in the history of mental disorder classification systems because it...
Temperament traits of Novelty Seeking, Harm Avoidance, Reward Dependence, and Persistence, are well ...
In this paper, we outline the concept of integrative therapy of borderline personality, also referre...
Several strands of research converge to suggest that personality and psychopathology can be integrat...
Personality disorders are common and present in many medical settings. Prevalence ranges between 4% ...
This chapter gives an account of the different psychoanalytic traditions and their approaches to PD:...
Theories of personality and its disorders need, from time to time, to be revised and updated accordi...
Traditionally, personality has been conceptualized in terms of dimensions of human experience - habi...
The present paper elaborates a process perspective of change in psychotherapy for personality disord...
Narcissistic Personality Disorder is the new borderline personality disorder of our current era. The...
“Narcissistic Personality Disorder is the new borderline personality disorder of our current era” (C...
Individuals with personality disorders are frequently seen in mental health settings. Their symptoms...
Despite the emphasis on evidence-based treatment for psychological disorders, to date, there has bee...
Advances in psychopathological research advocate a personality-centred model of common mental disord...
This article reviews the theoretical and empirical contributions of Blatt's two-polarities model of ...
The DSM‐5 represents a watershed in the history of mental disorder classification systems because it...
Temperament traits of Novelty Seeking, Harm Avoidance, Reward Dependence, and Persistence, are well ...
In this paper, we outline the concept of integrative therapy of borderline personality, also referre...
Several strands of research converge to suggest that personality and psychopathology can be integrat...
Personality disorders are common and present in many medical settings. Prevalence ranges between 4% ...
This chapter gives an account of the different psychoanalytic traditions and their approaches to PD:...
Theories of personality and its disorders need, from time to time, to be revised and updated accordi...
Traditionally, personality has been conceptualized in terms of dimensions of human experience - habi...
The present paper elaborates a process perspective of change in psychotherapy for personality disord...
Narcissistic Personality Disorder is the new borderline personality disorder of our current era. The...
“Narcissistic Personality Disorder is the new borderline personality disorder of our current era” (C...
Individuals with personality disorders are frequently seen in mental health settings. Their symptoms...
Despite the emphasis on evidence-based treatment for psychological disorders, to date, there has bee...
Advances in psychopathological research advocate a personality-centred model of common mental disord...
This article reviews the theoretical and empirical contributions of Blatt's two-polarities model of ...
The DSM‐5 represents a watershed in the history of mental disorder classification systems because it...