Abstract :
The person-oriented approach seeks to match theories and methods that portray development as a holistic, highly interactional, and individualized process.
Over the past decade, this approach has gained popularity in developmental psychopathology research, particularly as model-based varieties of personoriented
methods have emerged. Although these methods allow some principles of person-oriented theory to be tested, little attention has been paid to the fact
that these methods cannot test other principles, and may actually be inconsistent with certain principles. Lacking clarification regarding which aspects of
person-oriented theory are testable under which person-oriented methods, assumptions of the methods have sometimes been presented as testable hypotheses
or interpreted as affirming the theory. This general blurring of the line between person-oriented theory and method has even led to the occasional
perception that the method is the theory and vice versa.We review assumptions, strengths, and limitations of model-based person-oriented methods, clarifying
which theoretical principles they can test and the compromises and trade-offs required to do so.