Title of article :
A source, a cascade, a schizoid: A heuristic proposal from The Longitudinal Study of Personality Disorders
Abstract :
It is argued that personality pathology represents the final emergent product of a complex interaction of underlying neurobehavioral systems as well as
environment inputs. A number of factors may be involved in the developmental pathway and a cascading of effects is plausible, although a unifying cascade for
all personality disorders is not likely. The present study suggests a possible cascade relevant to one personality disorder: schizoid personality disorder in
emerging adulthood. In brief, it is hypothesized that the absence of a relationship characterized by a rich degree of psychological proximal process in early
childhood, which is associated with nurturance and the facilitation of more complex development, predicts impairment in the actualization of the affiliation
system (i.e., that system that facilitates interpersonal connectedness and social bonds in human beings and is under substantial genetic influence), and this
impairment in the affiliation system predicts the appearance of schizoid personality disorder symptoms in emerging adulthood (late teens/early 20s), which
persists over time into emerging adulthood. The impairment in the affiliation system is argued to proceed through childhood sociality as reflected in
temperament on through adult personality as reflected in communal positive emotion. Furthermore, it is also hypothesized that the relationship between
proximal processes and the affiliation system maintains irrespective of other childhood temperament factors that might adversely impact early parent/caregiver
and child relations. The data for a preliminary illustration of this possible cascade are drawn from The Longitudinal Study of Personality Disorders, which is a
prospective, multiwave study of personality disorders, personality, and temperament in a large sample of adults drawn from a nonclinical population.