Title: Likeability and the Narcissistic Personality Inventory
1Likeability and the Narcissistic Personality
Inventory Jason L. Pagan1, Marci Gleason1, Laurel
Newman1, Eric Turkheimer2, Thomas F.
Oltmanns1 1Washington University in St. Louis,
2University of Virginia
Introduction According to the DSM-IV-TR
definition, narcissistic personality disorder
(NPD) is characterized by a host of features,
including grandiosity, a fragile self-image,
exploitation, lack of empathy, envy, and hostile
reactions. The presence of these NPD features is
presumably associated with significant distress
or impairment in social functioning. In fact,
the presence of harmful dysfunction is crucial
for NPD to be justified as a disorder instead of
just a set of peculiar habits (1, 2, 3). Recent
evidence from personality and social psychology
have demonstrated, however, that many who score
high in NPD traits using the Narcissistic
Personality Inventory (NPI 4) are well-adjusted,
with high self-esteem (5). The apparent
contradiction between pathological traits and
findings of good adjustment may be the result of
having factors within the NPI that relate to both
positive and negative outcomes and adjustment (6,
7). Scoring highly on either the factors related
to positive outcomes (Leadership/Authority
Superiority/Arrogance Self-Absorption/Self-Admira
tion) or the more pathological factor
(Exploitativeness/Entitlement) may identify
someone as narcissist but may not be equally
indicative of social impairments (5). Here, we
utilized data from a larger study of self- and
peer-reported PD traits (8) to examine whether
those who score higher on the various NPI factors
are liked (likeability) by others and whether
these individuals are high on self- or
peer-reported NPD traits. The design of this
study also allowed for the unique opportunity to
examine whether those who are high on the more
pathological exploitativeness/entitlement factor
tend to like other people in their group less
well.
- Mixed Effects Modeling Procedure
- Do people high on the exploitativeness/entitlement
(Exploit) factor of the NPI rate others as less
likable? - Gender, Exploit factor scores, and an interaction
term were entered into a mixed effects modeling
procedure (accounts for dependency between raters
and ratees) to predict how well people at varying
levels of Exploit like others in their group. - Variable B SD t value p value
- Intercept 2.23 0.07
31.44 lt 0.001 - Sex (F 1) -0.07 0.09
-0.76 0.45 - Exploit Factor -0.10 0.05
-2.16 0.03 - Sex Exploit 0.12 0.06
1.92 0.056
-
- Method
- Participants
- 116 first-year law students (49 male) from the
University of Virginia - The average age was approximately 26 (range 23
44) - Tested at the end of their first year in cohorts
of 8-20 students who went through orientation,
studied, and took all of their classes together - Measures
- The Multi-source Assessment of Personality
Pathology (MAPP 8) The MAPP consists of 105
items, 81 of which are lay translations of the 10
DSM-IV PD criteria. It includes both self-report
and peer-report versions of identical items.
Initially, participants were asked to rate (from
0 to 3) how well they LIKE each person in their
group. Next, participants completed the peer
nomination section and then self-reported on the
same items. - The Narcissistic Personality Inventory-Revised
(NPI 9) The NPI is the most widely used measure
of narcissism. The revised version consists of 40
forced-choice items related to narcissism. Scores
range from zero to 40. On average, undergraduates
score between 15 and 16 on this measure (10, 11). - Assessment Procedure and Variable Creation
- Near the end of their first year in law school,
students were brought together to provide some
basic demographic information and to complete
several measures on a computer, including the
ones mentioned above. Students required
approximately two hours to complete the protocol.
- Results and Conclusions
- Means for Liking and Narcissism (NA) Split by
Gender -
- Discussion
- Both males and female law students reported
high levels of narcissistic traits on the NPI
compared to undergraduate samples (10, 11),
particularly those traits related to
exploitativeness and entitlement. - The strong negative association found between
liking and the Exploit factor (but not the other
three) and the positive association between the
Exploit factor and DSM-based narcissism (both
self- and peer-report) is consistent with the
assertion that the Exploit factor is associated
with pathology (5, 7), but only for males! - Higher self-reported narcissism on the
DSM-based MAPP and on the NPI (even when Exploit
is high) were not associated with social
impairment for females. More work is needed to
understand this gender difference. - Males, but not females, high in Exploit also
demonstrated more pathology when assessing the
likeability of others Males higher in Exploit
traits of narcissism derogated others by rating
them as less likeable, which is consistent with
a pathological form of narcissism (DSM-IV-TR).
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- Poster presentation at the annual meeting of
the Society for Research in Psychopathology
(October, 2005). - This research was supported by a grant from
the NIMH ( MH51187).