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Criterion A of the AMPD in HiTOP.

Thomas A WidigerBo BachMichael ChmielewskiLee Anna ClarkColin DeYoungChristopher J HopwoodRoman KotovRobert F KruegerJoshua D MillerLeslie C MoreyStephanie N Mullins-SweattChristopher J PatrickAaron L PincusDouglas B SamuelMartin SellbomSusan C SouthJennifer L TackettDavid WatsonMark H WaughAidan G C WrightJohannes ZimmermannR Michael BagbyDavid C CiceroChristopher C ConwayBarbara De ClercqAnna R DochertyNicholas R EatonKelsie T ForbushJ D HaltiganMasha Y IvanovaRobert D LatzmanDonald R LynamKristian E MarkonUlrich ReininghausKatherine M Thomas
Published in: Journal of personality assessment (2018)
The categorical model of personality disorder classification in the American Psychiatric Association's Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders (5th ed. [DSM-5]; American Psychiatric Association, 2013 ) is highly and fundamentally problematic. Proposed for DSM-5 and provided within Section III (for Emerging Measures and Models) was the Alternative Model of Personality Disorder (AMPD) classification, consisting of Criterion A (self-interpersonal deficits) and Criterion B (maladaptive personality traits). A proposed alternative to the DSM-5 more generally is an empirically based dimensional organization of psychopathology identified as the Hierarchical Taxonomy of Psychopathology (HiTOP; Kotov et al., 2017 ). HiTOP currently includes, at the highest level, a general factor of psychopathology. Further down are the five domains of detachment, antagonistic externalizing, disinhibited externalizing, thought disorder, and internalizing (along with a provisional sixth somatoform dimension) that align with Criterion B. The purpose of this article is to discuss the potential inclusion and placement of the self-interpersonal deficits of the DSM-5 Section III Criterion A within HiTOP.
Keyphrases
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