OBJECTIVE: The authors estimated the heritability of the basic
dimensions of personality disorder and the relative proportions of the
variance attributable to genetic and environmental sources. METHOD: The
subjects were 175 volunteer twin pairs (90 monozygotic and 85 dizygotic)
from the general population. Each twin completed the Dimensional Assessment
of Personality Pathology, a questionnaire that assesses 18 dimensions of
personality disorder. The questionnaire was developed on the basis of
factor analytic studies that identified a stable structure underlying
personality disorders in clinical and nonclinical subjects. Structural
equation model-fitting methods were used to estimate the influence of
additive genetic, common environmental, and unique environmental effects.
RESULTS: The estimates of broad heritability ranged from 0%, for conduct
problems, to 64%, for narcissism. Behaviors associated with submissiveness
and attachment problems had low heritability. For most dimensions, the
best-fitting model was one that specified additive genetic and unique
environmental effects. CONCLUSIONS: These results are similar to those
reported for normal personality and suggest a continuity between normal and
disordered personality.
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