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Resumo(s)
The Personality Inventory for DSM-5 (PID-5) measures the maladaptive traits of the model for personality and
its disorders, as proposed in section III of the DSM-5. The current study aimed to examine whether the Portuguese PID-5 distinguished non-clinical participants (N = 1223, Mage = 36.73, standard deviation = 15.72)
from clinical participants (N = 202, Mage = 43.82, standard deviation = 11.33) with respect to dysfunctional
personality traits and to explore the PID-5 factor structure in both samples. The PID-5 scale medians were
higher in the clinical sample than in the community sample. All analyses were statistically significant
(p ≤ 0.001) with medium size effects. In the community sample, a five-factor structure emerged, and the factors
resembled the PID-5 domains. However, in the clinical sample, a four-factor structure was retained, in which
the Psychoticism domain did not clearly emerge. The composition of the clinical sample along with its small size
may account for these unexpected results. Overall, the results provide evidence of the PID-5’s ability to
distinguish between psychiatric and community individuals and of the model’s structural similarity in community
samples, across studies and nationalities. More research is required to understand the Portuguese PID-5
structure in clinical samples.
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Contexto Educativo
Citação
Pires, R., Sousa Ferreira, A., Gonçalves, B., Henriques‐Calado, J., & Paulino, M. (2019). The Portuguese version of the Personality Inventory for the DSM‐5 in a community and a clinical sample. Personality and Mental Health, 13(1), 40-52. https://doi.org/10.1002/pmh.1437
Editora
John Wiley & Sons
