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Research Article

Neurogenetic and experiential processes underlying major personality traits: Implications for modelling personality disorders

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Pages 258-281 | Received 15 Jan 2011, Accepted 20 Jan 2011, Published online: 16 Sep 2011
 

Abstract

The association of personality traits to personality disorders (PDs) is assumed by many to fit a dimensional model, where PDs emerge at the extremes of personality dimensions. Nevertheless, attempts to demonstrate such an association have been empirically disappointing and conceptually unilluminating. In this article we attempt to extend such models by outlining the neurobehavioural systems that underlie major personality traits, and highlight the evidence that they are subject to experience-dependent modification that can be enduring through effects on genetic expression, mainly through processes known as epigenetics. It is through such processes that risk for personality disorder may be modified by experience at any point in development, but perhaps especially during early critical periods of development. We conclude by presenting a novel multidimensional model of PDs that relies on the concepts developed earlier in the article. Our goal is to provide a guide for research on the psychobiological nature and pharmacological treatment of PDs.

Declaration of interest: This work was supported by Research Grant NIMH55347 awarded to R.A. Depue. The authors report no conflicts of interest. The authors alone are responsible for the content and writing of the paper.

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