Abstract
In all 502 adults rated their attractiveness, health, IQ and EQ and completed an established measure of the personality disorders (PDs). The self-ratings were highly inter-correlated and a total self-evaluation score was computed. The self-rated score was correlated with the 14 Personality Disorders showing ten significant, mostly negative, correlations. A regression with self-ratings as the criterion variable showed three PDs positively (Histrionic, Narcissistic and Obsessive Compulsive) and two negatively (Depressive and Schizoid) associated with the positive self-evaluation. Factor analysis suggested two factors (Cluster A, B, and Cluster C) underlying the PDs. Self-evaluations were correlated significantly but differently with both factors: positively with Cluster B (Moving Against People) and negatively with Cluster A+C (Moving Away and Toward People). Implications and limitations are acknowledged.
Keywords
Self-evaluation, Personality disorders, Narcissistic, Schizoid