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Can coders detect grandiose narcissism in others?

Current Psychology, 2018
We examined the extent to which coders reach consensus and are accurate in detecting grandiose narcissism in others based on reading transcripts of interviews. We obtained personality questionnaires and semi-structured interviews about reasoning concerning several common, everyday transgressions from 147 people.
Amy B. Brunell   +3 more
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The Many Measures of Grandiose Narcissism

2018
In recent years, there has been a dramatic increase in the number of measures available to researchers who study grandiose narcissism (GN). The purpose of this chapter is to provide a brief overview of some of the more popular measures of GN. Some of these measures attempt to capture GN as a single dimension, some as a multidimensional construct, and ...
Joshua D. Foster   +5 more
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Measuring Grandiose and Vulnerable Narcissism in Children and Adolescents: The Narcissism Scale for Children

Assessment, 2018
Clinical and empirical research have consistently distinguished two dimensions of narcissism: grandiose narcissism and vulnerable narcissism. However, to date there is no psychometrically validated measure of grandiose and vulnerable narcissism for children.
Kate L, Derry   +2 more
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Distinguishing Between Grandiose Narcissism, Vulnerable Narcissism, and Narcissistic Personality Disorder

2018
This chapter draws upon the empirical literature to delineate the distinguishing characteristics of grandiose and vulnerable narcissism and narcissistic personality disorder (NPD). We find that these constructs can be well described using models of general personality such as the five-factor model (FFM) and, in particular, three primary traits ...
Brandon Weiss, Joshua D. Miller
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Thin-skinned or vulnerable narcissism and thick-skinned or grandiose narcissism: similarities and differences

The International Journal of Psychoanalysis, 2018
This paper explores two clinical forms or aspects of narcissism and their psychopathological implications: thin-skinned, or vulnerable, narcissism (VN) and thick-skinned, or grandiose, narcissism (GN). The different names used and the characteristics with which they have been described are reviewed.
Ricardo, Bernardi, Mónica, Eidlin
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[Narcissism-Normal, pathological, grandiose, vulnerable?]

Der Nervenarzt
Personality psychology subdivides the narcissism of healthy persons into the grandiose and the vulnerable types (2 factor model), which can be further described in a more differentiated way with the three personality factors extroversion, intolerance/antagonism and neuroticism (3 factor model).
Tobias, Wilfer   +2 more
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Using the bogus pipeline to investigate grandiose narcissism

Journal of Experimental Social Psychology, 2014
Abstract The present study used a bogus pipeline methodology to investigate the extent to which grandiose narcissism and other narcissism-related constructs were sensitive to bias in reporting. In addition, we sought to test the psychodynamic mask model by examining the association between narcissism variables and deep-seated feelings of self-esteem ...
Amy B. Brunell, Terri D. Fisher
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Grandiose and Vulnerable Narcissism, Materialism, Money Attitudes, and Consumption Preferences

The Journal of Psychology, 2016
Narcissism is increasingly being investigated in the context of consumer attitudes and behavior. Previous research showed that narcissism is reflected in materialistic tendencies and money-related attitudes. However, almost all of these studies concerned the grandiose type of narcissism.
Irena, Pilch   +1 more
openaire   +2 more sources

Using social cognition to understand people's grandiose narcissism

Social and Personality Psychology Compass, 2019
Abstract Grandiose narcissists view the world through a self‐focused lens, which influences the way they perceive and interact with others. A useful strategy for examining narcissism may be to look beyond patterns of behavior to examine the cognitions that motivate narcissists. This review summarizes the cognitive biases that underlie
openaire   +1 more source

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