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paranoid personality disorder A personality disorder characterised by the avoidance of accepting deserved blame and an unwarranted view of others as malevolent. The latter is expressed as suspiciousness, hypersensitivity, and mistrust.
(12 Dec 1998)
CancerWEB ¿µ¿µ ÀÇÇлçÀü À¯»ç °Ë»ö °á°ú : 15 ÆäÀÌÁö: 1
paranoid personality A personality disorder characterised by hypersensitivity, rigidity, unwarranted suspicion, jealousy, and a tendency to blame others and ascribe evil motives to them; though neither a neurosis or psychosis, it interferes with the individual's ability to maintain interpersonal relationships.
(05 Mar 2000)
paranoid disorder A false belief, seen most often in psychosis (for example schizophrenia).
(27 Sep 1997)
grandiose type of paranoid disorder A delusion in which the person believes that he or she possesses some great but unrecognised talent or insight, or has made an important discovery, with subsequent efforts toward official or public recognition.
(05 Mar 2000)
persecutory type of paranoid disorder One of the most common of the types of paranoid disorders, it involves a single theme or series of connected themes, such as being conspired against, cheated, spied on, followed, poisoned or drugged, maligned, harassed, or obstructed in the pursuit of long-term goals; small slights may be exaggerated and become the focus of a delusional system.
See: paranoia.
Compare: paranoid personality disorder.
(05 Mar 2000)
shared paranoid disorder A condition in which two closely related persons, usually in the same family, share the same delusions.
(12 Dec 1998)
erotomanic type of paranoid disorder The false belief that one is loved by another such as a movie star or a casual acquaintance.
(05 Mar 2000)
jealous type of paranoid disorder The false belief that one's spouse or lover is unfaithful and leading to repeated confrontation, or the taking of extraordinary steps to intervene in the imagined infidelity.
(05 Mar 2000)
affective personality disorder A disturbance of feelings or mood expressed as a milder form of depression and related emotional features that colour the whole psychic life and for which psychosocial stressors are believed to play the major role.
(05 Mar 2000)
antisocial personality disorder <psychiatry> An individual who engages in deviant behaviour with lack of remorse.
(13 Jan 1998)
asthenic personality disorder A personality type characterised by low energy level, easy fatigability, incapacity for enjoyment, lack of enthusiasm, and oversensitivity to physical and emotional stress. When appearing in marked form it becomes a psychological disorder (asthenic personality disorder), also called dependent personality.
Synonym: asthenic personality disorder, dependent personality disorder.
(05 Mar 2000)
borderline personality disorder <psychiatry> An individual who is impulsive and unpredictable with fluctuations in intense moods. Occasionally psychotic.
(27 Sep 1997)
passive-aggressive personality disorder A personality disorder characterised by an indirect resistance to demands for adequate social and occupational performance; anger and opposition to authority and the expectations of others that is expressed covertly by obstructionism, procrastination, stubbornness, dawdling, forgetfulness, and intentional inefficiency.
(12 Dec 1998)
personality disorder General term for a group of behavioural disorder's characterised by usually lifelong, ingrained, maladaptive patterns of deviant behaviour, lifestyle, and social adjustment that are different in quality from psychotic and neurotic symptoms; former designations for individuals with these personality disorder's were psychopath and sociopath.
See: antisocial personality disorder.
(05 Mar 2000)
compulsive personality disorder <psychology> A personality disorder which is characterised by the avoidance of feelings, emotion and intimacy within a framework of strict adherence to rules and order.
(05 Jan 1998)
multiple personality disorder A dissociative disorder in which the individual adopts two or more distinct personalities. Each personality is a fully integrated and complex unit with memories, behaviour patterns and social friendships. Transition from one personality to another is sudden.
(12 Dec 1998)
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