Opačić, Goran

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Disintegration: A reconceptualization of psychosis proneness as a personality trait separate from the Big Five

Knežević, Goran; Savić, Danka A.; Kutlesic, Vesna; Opačić, Goran

(2017)

TY  - JOUR
AU  - Knežević, Goran
AU  - Savić, Danka A.
AU  - Kutlesic, Vesna
AU  - Opačić, Goran
PY  - 2017
UR  - https://vinar.vin.bg.ac.rs/handle/123456789/1785
AB  - A nine-facet hierarchical taxonomy of Disintegration, a trait-like disposition that causes variations in psychotic-like behavior, is proposed, along with the scales to assess it. Strong correlations were demonstrated in students (n = 466) between lower-level dimensions, independent of the assessment method. Disintegration lay beyond the Five-Factor Model (FFM) space. This finding was replicated across informant types (self, mother, and father), samples (students and a national representative sample, n = 1001), and units of analyses (facets and items). The most frequent approach to preserve the FFM taxonomy of both normal and non-normal personality variants - mapping psychotic-like phenomena onto the Openness domain - found little support in our data. Disintegration was normally distributed in the general population. (C) 2017 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
T2  - Journal of Research in Personality
T1  - Disintegration: A reconceptualization of psychosis proneness as a personality trait separate from the Big Five
VL  - 70
SP  - 187
EP  - 201
DO  - 10.1016/j.jrp.2017.06.001
ER  - 
@article{
author = "Knežević, Goran and Savić, Danka A. and Kutlesic, Vesna and Opačić, Goran",
year = "2017",
abstract = "A nine-facet hierarchical taxonomy of Disintegration, a trait-like disposition that causes variations in psychotic-like behavior, is proposed, along with the scales to assess it. Strong correlations were demonstrated in students (n = 466) between lower-level dimensions, independent of the assessment method. Disintegration lay beyond the Five-Factor Model (FFM) space. This finding was replicated across informant types (self, mother, and father), samples (students and a national representative sample, n = 1001), and units of analyses (facets and items). The most frequent approach to preserve the FFM taxonomy of both normal and non-normal personality variants - mapping psychotic-like phenomena onto the Openness domain - found little support in our data. Disintegration was normally distributed in the general population. (C) 2017 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.",
journal = "Journal of Research in Personality",
title = "Disintegration: A reconceptualization of psychosis proneness as a personality trait separate from the Big Five",
volume = "70",
pages = "187-201",
doi = "10.1016/j.jrp.2017.06.001"
}
Knežević, G., Savić, D. A., Kutlesic, V.,& Opačić, G.. (2017). Disintegration: A reconceptualization of psychosis proneness as a personality trait separate from the Big Five. in Journal of Research in Personality, 70, 187-201.
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jrp.2017.06.001
Knežević G, Savić DA, Kutlesic V, Opačić G. Disintegration: A reconceptualization of psychosis proneness as a personality trait separate from the Big Five. in Journal of Research in Personality. 2017;70:187-201.
doi:10.1016/j.jrp.2017.06.001 .
Knežević, Goran, Savić, Danka A., Kutlesic, Vesna, Opačić, Goran, "Disintegration: A reconceptualization of psychosis proneness as a personality trait separate from the Big Five" in Journal of Research in Personality, 70 (2017):187-201,
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jrp.2017.06.001 . .
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