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SPECIAL SECTION: Personality Assessment and the DSM: A Match Made in Heaven?

Advancing the Assessment of Personality Pathology With the Cognitive-Affective Processing System

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Pages 467-477 | Received 01 Oct 2014, Published online: 27 Jul 2015
 

Abstract

The Cognitive-Affective Processing System (CAPS) is a dynamic and expansive model of personality proposed by Mischel and Shoda Citation(1995) that incorporates dispositional and processing frameworks by considering the interaction of the individual and the situation, and the patterns of variation that result. These patterns of cognition, affect, and behavior are generally defined through the use of if … then statements, and provide a rich understanding of the individual across varying levels of assessment. In this article, we describe the CAPS model and articulate ways in which it can be applied to conceptualizing and assessing personality pathology. We suggest that the CAPS model is an ideal framework that integrates a number of current theories of personality pathology, and simultaneously overcomes a number of limits that have been empirically identified in the past.

Notes

1 We are appreciative of this example from an anonymous reviewer.

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