Article de Périodique
Short-term stability of NEO-PI-R personality trait scores in opioid-dependent outpatients (2001)
(Stabilité à court terme des scores relatifs aux traits de personnalité obtenus d'après l'inventaire NEO-PI-R, chez des patients dépendants aux opioïdes traités en ambulatoire
Auteur(s) :
CARTER, J. A. ;
HERBST J. H. ;
STOLLER, K. B. ;
KING, V. L. ;
KIDORF, M. S. ;
COSTA, P. T. Jr
Année
2001
Page(s) :
255-260
Langue(s) :
Anglais
Thésaurus mots-clés
OPIOIDES
;
DEPENDANCE
;
TRAITEMENT AMBULATOIRE
;
PERSONNALITE
;
EVALUATION
;
TEST
;
VALIDITE
Note générale :
Psychology of Addictive Behaviors, 2001, 15, (3), 255-260
Résumé :
The present study examined the short-term stability of personality trait scores from the Revised NEO Personality Inventory (NEO-PI-R) among 230 opioid-dependent outpatients. The NEO-PI-R is a 240-item empirically developed measure of the five-factor model of personality (Neuroticism, Extraversion, Openness, Agreeableness, and Conscientiousness). Participants completed the NEO-PI-R at admission and again approximately 19 weeks later. Results indicated fair to good stability for all NEO-PI-R factor domain scores, with coefficients ranging from .68 to .74. Stability of NEO-PI-R scores was decreased among potentially invalid response patterns but was not significantly affected by drug-positive versus drug-negative status at follow-up. (Author' s abstract)
Affiliation :
Johns Hopkins Univ. School of Medicine
Etats-Unis. United States.
Etats-Unis. United States.
Historique