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      Methodological advances and developments in the assessment of psychopathy

      Behaviour Research and Therapy
      Elsevier BV

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          A contrarian view of the five-factor approach to personality description.

          Jack Block (1995)
          The 5-factor approach (FFA) to personality description has been represented as a comprehensive and compelling rubric for assessment. In this article, various misgivings about the FFA are delineated. The algorithmic method of factor analysis may not provide dimensions that are incisive. The "discovery" of the five factors may be influenced by unrecognized constraints on the variable sets analyzed. Lexical analyses are based on questionable conceptual and methodological assumptions, and have achieved uncertain results. The questionnaire version of the FFA has not demonstrated the special merits and sufficiencies of the five factors settled upon. Serious uncertainties have arisen in regard to the claimed 5-factor structure and the substantive meanings of the factors. Some implications of these problems are drawn.
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            Development and preliminary validation of a self-report measure of psychopathic personality traits in noncriminal populations.

            Research on psychopathology has been hindered by persisting difficulties and controversies regarding its assessment. The primary goals of this set of studies were to (a) develop, and initiate the construct validation of, a self-report measure that assesses the major personality traits of psychopathy in noncriminal populations and (b) clarify the nature of these traits via an exploratory approach to test construction. This measure, the Psychopathic Personality Inventory (PPI), was developed by writing items to assess a large number of personality domains relevant to psychopathy and performing successive item-level factor analyses and revisions on three undergraduate samples. The PPI total score and its eight subscales were found to possess satisfactory internal consistency and test-retest reliability. In four studies with undergraduates, the PPI and its subscales exhibited a promising pattern of convergent and discriminant validity with self-report, psychiatric interview, observer rating, and family history data. In addition, the PPI total score demonstrated incremental validity relative to several commonly used self-report psychopathy-related measures. Future construct validation studies, unresolved conceptual issues regarding the assessment of psychopathy, and potential research uses of the PPI are outlined.
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              Assessing psychopathic attributes in a noninstitutionalized population.

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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Behaviour Research and Therapy
                Behaviour Research and Therapy
                Elsevier BV
                00057967
                January 1998
                January 1998
                : 36
                : 1
                : 99-125
                Article
                10.1016/S0005-7967(97)10021-3
                88184f74-188b-4098-bacf-df38fe0877a1
                © 1998

                http://www.elsevier.com/tdm/userlicense/1.0/

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