2017
DOI: 10.1002/pmh.1390
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The role of emotion regulation in predicting personality dimensions

Abstract: Dimensional models of personality have been widely acknowledged in the field as alternatives to a trait-based system of nomenclature. While the importance of dimensional models has been established, less is known about the constructs underlying these personality dimensions. Emotion regulation is one such potential construct. The goal of the current study was to examine the relationship between personality dimensions and emotion regulation. More specifically, the predictive capacity of emotion regulation in acc… Show more

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Cited by 19 publications
(11 citation statements)
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“…We also found a negative correlation between the profiles of BMR and cluster C (anxious/fearful) personality disorders. This cluster, entailing avoidant, dependent, and obsessivecompulsive personality disorders, is characterized by detachment, workaholism and propriety (Borges & Naugle, 2017). Similarly with cluster B, this group of personality disorders has previously been associated with obesity (BMI; Dixon-Gordon et al, 2018); however, the current results show no association between its personality trait profile with BMI or RFM, but instead indicate a negative association BMR.…”
Section: Profile Overlap With Psychiatric Phenotypescontrasting
confidence: 67%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…We also found a negative correlation between the profiles of BMR and cluster C (anxious/fearful) personality disorders. This cluster, entailing avoidant, dependent, and obsessivecompulsive personality disorders, is characterized by detachment, workaholism and propriety (Borges & Naugle, 2017). Similarly with cluster B, this group of personality disorders has previously been associated with obesity (BMI; Dixon-Gordon et al, 2018); however, the current results show no association between its personality trait profile with BMI or RFM, but instead indicate a negative association BMR.…”
Section: Profile Overlap With Psychiatric Phenotypescontrasting
confidence: 67%
“…While the previously reported association between BMI and cluster B disorders was unexpected (Vainik et al, 2020), this link with BMR appears more logically consistent with the characteristics of the disorders within this cluster. This cluster entails antisocial, borderline, narcissistic, and histrionic personality disorders and is characterized by impulsivity, disinhibition, aggression, exhibitionism, manipulativeness, and entitlement (Borges & Naugle, 2017). The current analyses suggest that its similarity with BMR is driven by high scores on Assertiveness and Impulsiveness and lower scores on facets of Conscientiousness and Agreeableness.…”
Section: Profile Overlap With Psychiatric Phenotypesmentioning
confidence: 70%
“…Personality traits and ER appear to be intertwined, with evidence showing links between the two in a number of studies [35,36]. For instance, difficulties in ER are implicated in the diagnostic criteria for some personality disorders (e.g., borderline personality disorder) [37].…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Research into these socio-cognitive abilities in PD have begun to reveal impairments in many diagnostic groups. This includes disturbances in the discrimination of emotional facial expressions in Narcissistic (Marissen et al, 2012), Antisocial (Zhang et al, 2016) and Borderline PD (Berenson et al, 2018); reduced imitative control in Borderline PD (Hauschild et al, 2018); an inability to accurately infer the mental states of others in Narcissistic (Bilotta et al, 2018) and Avoidant PD (Moroni et al, 2016); subtle alterations in empathic awareness and expression in Obsessive-Compulsive (Cain et al, 2015) and Narcissistic PD (Baskin-Sommers et al, 2014); and differential patterns of dysfunctional emotion regulation among all Cluster A, B and C diagnoses (Borges and Naugle, 2017; for reviews on social cognition, see Herpertz and Bertsch, 2014;Cotter et al, 2018). Interestingly, in Borderline PD these impairments have been attributed to dysfunctional self-other distinction (Beeney et al, 2016).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%