A conceptual dismantling of the Five Factor Form: Lexical support for the bipolarity of maladaptive personality structure |
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Affiliation: | 1. Department of Psychology, University of Florida, United States;2. Eccles School of Business, University of Utah, United State;1. Department of Child Neurology, Okayama University Hospital, Japan;2. Department of Pediatrics, Jichi Medical University, Japan;3. Division of Neurology, Kanagawa Children’s Medical Center, Japan;4. Japan Clinical Metabolomics Institute, Japan;5. Department of Child Neurology, Okayama University Graduate School of Medicine, Dentistry, and Pharmaceutical Sciences, Japan;6. Division of Genetics, Kanagawa Children’s Medical Center, Japan;1. Baylor University, United States;2. University of California, Davis, United States;3. Fuller Theological Seminary, United States |
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Abstract: | The Five Factor Form (FFF) assesses adaptive and maladaptive variants for both poles of the five-factor model (FFM), consistent with the hypothesis that there are indeed maladaptive variants for all 10 poles of the FFM. The current study dismantled the 30 FFF items. It was hypothesized that for each FFF item, the two maladaptive and adaptive components occupying the same side would be rated as similar in meaning, whereas components occupying opposite sides would be dissimilar (opposite) in meaning. The results supported the FFF scoring for four domains with mixed support for openness. The findings support not only the validity of the FFF but as well the perspective that there are maladaptive variants of all ten poles of the FFM. |
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Keywords: | Five Factor Form Five factor model Personality structure Traits Maladaptive Adaptive |
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