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Intergenerational transmission of personality disorder: general or disorder-specific?

Published version
Peer-reviewed

Type

Article

Change log

Authors

Auty, KM 
Farrington, DP 
Coid, JW 

Abstract

This study investigates intergenerational relationships between the father’s personality disorder (PD) traits and the PD traits of his male and female offspring. We examine whether the intergenerational transmission of PD is due to the father transmitting a general vulnerability to all PDs, or whether the transmission is more specific to particular PDs. Structural Equation Modelling techniques are used to investigate a hypothesised model, based on Livesley’s [(2007). A framework for integrating dimensional and categorical classifications of personality disorder. Journal of Personality Disorders, 21(2), 199–224. https://doi.org/10.1521/pedi.2007.21.2.199] conceptualisation, which reorganises the DSM PD traits into four dimensions: Emotional Dysregulation, Dissocial Behaviour, Inhibitedness, and Compulsivity. General and specific transmission effects are examined for each model. The data comes from the Cambridge Study in Delinquent Development, a large-scale prospective longitudinal survey of 411 males and their biological offspring. Findings revealed that the intergenerational transmission of PD traits from fathers to female offspring appeared to be both general and disorder-specific. Firm conclusions could not be drawn about the intergenerational transmission of PD traits from fathers to male offspring, as the data did not fit the hypothesised model.

Description

Keywords

Intergenerational transmission, Personality disorders, Longitudinal studies, DSM, structural equation modeling

Journal Title

Psychology, Crime and Law

Conference Name

Journal ISSN

1068-316X
1477-2744

Volume Title

Publisher

Informa UK Limited