The Hypomanic Personality Scale, the Big Five, and their relationship to depression and mania

The present study investigates (1) if the Hypomanic Personality Scale [Hyp; Eckblad, M., & Chapman, L.J., (1986). Development and validation of a scale for hypomanic personality. Journal of Abnormal Psychology, 95, 214–222.] correlates with other personality traits and (2) whether the Hyp scales or other measures such as Neuroticism and Extraversion are more strongly associated with affective symptoms. The participants (n=224) completed questionnaires including the Hyp scale, the NEO-FFI, and the CES-D and were independently interviewed with the CIDI to assess depression and mania. The results showed that the Hyp scale correlated only with the NEO-FFI dimensions Extraversion and Openness. In contrast to Extraversion, the Hyp scale was significantly associated with symptoms of depression and mania, and was more strongly related to manic symptoms than Neuroticism was. Decile scores of the Hyp scale were not associated with depressive symptoms, but were associated with manic symptoms. Discussion focuses on the question of whether the Hyp scale represents a possible risk factor for bipolar disorder. The possibility of a “manic defense” against depression is also discussed.

[1]  R. Bentall,et al.  Hypomanic personality and attributional style , 1990 .

[2]  H. Cooper,et al.  The happy personality: a meta-analysis of 137 personality traits and subjective well-being. , 1998, Psychological bulletin.

[3]  S. L. Johnson,et al.  Can personality traits predict increases in manic and depressive symptoms? , 2001, Journal of affective disorders.

[4]  D. Lichtermann,et al.  Personality disorders and personality variations in relatives of patients with bipolar affective disorders. , 1995, Journal of affective disorders.

[5]  Emil Kraepelin,et al.  Manic-depressive insanity and paranoia , 1976 .

[6]  J. Nigg,et al.  Parent personality traits and psychopathology associated with antisocial behaviors in childhood attention-deficit hyperactivity disorder. , 1998, Journal of child psychology and psychiatry, and allied disciplines.

[7]  M C Neale,et al.  A longitudinal twin study of personality and major depression in women. , 1993, Archives of general psychiatry.

[8]  W. Iacono,et al.  Neurobehavioral aspects of affective disorders. , 1989, Annual review of psychology.

[9]  T. Meyer Correlates of the hypomanic personality scale: results from a family sample , 2002 .

[10]  F. Goodwin Manic-Depressive Illness , 1990 .

[11]  D. Zerssen "Melancholic" and "manic" types of personality as premorbid structures in affective disorders , 1996 .

[12]  M. Hautzinger,et al.  Erste Ergebnisse zur prädiktiven Validität der Skala Hypomane Persönlichkeit - 3 Jahre später , 2001 .

[13]  R. Depue,et al.  Obsessional personality traits and risk for bipolar affective disorder: an offspring study. , 1985, Journal of abnormal psychology.

[14]  M. Hautzinger,et al.  Hypomane Persönlichkeit - Psychometrische Evaluation und erste Ergebnisse zur Validität der deutschen Version der Chapman-Skala , 2000 .

[15]  J. Scott,et al.  Clinical characteristics of familial and non-familial bipolar disorder. , 2000, Bipolar disorders.

[16]  E. Paykel Handbook of affective disorders , 1982 .

[17]  D. Saklofske,et al.  Neuroticism, depression, and depression proneness , 1995 .

[18]  M. Weissman,et al.  Use of a self-report symptom scale to detect depression in a community sample. , 1980, The American journal of psychiatry.

[19]  M. Lenzenweger,et al.  Confirming the latent structure and base rate of schizotypy: a taxometric analysis. , 1992, Journal of abnormal psychology.

[20]  S. Taylor,et al.  Anxiety sensitivity and the five-factor model of personality. , 1999, Behaviour research and therapy.

[21]  T. Furukawa,et al.  Typus melancholicus is not the premorbid personality trait of unipolar (endogenous) depression , 1997, Psychiatry and clinical neurosciences.

[22]  R. Kessler,et al.  Lifetime and 12-month prevalence of DSM-III-R psychiatric disorders in the United States. Results from the National Comorbidity Survey. , 1994, Archives of general psychiatry.

[23]  L. J. Chapman,et al.  A longitudinal study of high scorers on the hypomanic personality scale. , 2000, Journal of abnormal psychology.

[24]  D. Klein,et al.  Depressive personality: associations with DSM-III-R mood and personality disorders and negative and positive affectivity, 30-month stability, and prediction of course of Axis I depressive disorders. , 1998, Journal of abnormal psychology.

[25]  M. Otto,et al.  Five-factor personality traits in patients with seasonal depression: treatment effects and comparisons with bipolar patients. , 1999, Journal of affective disorders.

[26]  Paul T. Costa,et al.  Personality Disorders and the Five-Factor Model of Personality , 1994 .

[27]  L. J. Chapman,et al.  Development and validation of a scale for hypomanic personality. , 1986, Journal of abnormal psychology.

[28]  S. Akhtar Hypomanic personality disorder , 1988 .

[29]  G. Klerman,et al.  Personality of recovered patients with bipolar affective disorder. , 1986, Journal of affective disorders.

[30]  Peter Borkenau,et al.  Comparing exploratory and confirmatory factor analysis: A study on the 5-factor model of personality , 1990 .

[31]  H. Akiskal Delineating Irritable and Hyperthymic Variants Of the Cyclothymic Temperament , 1992 .

[32]  A. Richards,et al.  Hypomania, anxiety and the emotional Stroop. , 1996, The British journal of clinical psychology.

[33]  Christoph Mundt,et al.  Interpersonal Factors in the Origin and Course of Affective Disorders , 1996 .

[34]  Paul E. Meehl,et al.  Toward an Integrated Theory of Schizotaxia, Schizotypy, and Schizophrenia , 1990 .

[35]  Tyrone D. Cannon,et al.  The latent structure of schizotypy: I. Premorbid indicators of a taxon of individuals at risk for schizophrenia-spectrum disorders. , 1995, Journal of abnormal psychology.

[36]  R. Depue,et al.  A behavioral paradigm for identifying persons at risk for bipolar depressive disorder: a conceptual framework and five validation studies. , 1981, Journal of abnormal psychology.

[37]  L. Alloy,et al.  Depressive personality characteristics: state dependent concomitants of depressive disorder and traits independent of current depression. , 1998, Journal of abnormal psychology.

[38]  T. Petzel,et al.  Divergent validity evidence for Eckblad and Chapman's Hypomanic Personality Scale. , 1990, Journal of clinical psychology.

[39]  D. Lichtermann,et al.  Personality traits in subjects at risk for unipolar major depression: a family study perspective. , 1992, Journal of affective disorders.

[40]  M. Lovejoy,et al.  Subsyndromal Unipolar and Bipolar Disorders II: Comparisons on Daily Stress Levels , 1997, Cognitive Therapy and Research.

[41]  M B Keller,et al.  Personality traits in subjects with bipolar I disorder in remission. , 1996, Journal of affective disorders.

[42]  R. Depue,et al.  General behavior inventory identification of unipolar and bipolar affective conditions in a nonclinical university population. , 1989, Journal of abnormal psychology.

[43]  L. Radloff The CES-D Scale , 1977 .

[44]  F. Holsboer,et al.  Pre-morbid psychometric profile of subjects at high familial risk for affective disorder , 1997, Psychological Medicine.

[45]  R. Bentall,et al.  Emotional Stroop performance and the manic defence. , 1990, The British journal of clinical psychology.

[46]  D. Dunner Handbook of Affective Disorders, 2nd ed , 1993 .

[47]  R. Bentall,et al.  Social cognition and the manic defense: attributions, selective attention, and self-schema in bipolar affective disorder. , 1999, Journal of abnormal psychology.

[48]  G. A. Miller,et al.  Depressive personality in nonclinical subjects. , 1993, The American journal of psychiatry.

[49]  P. Lewinsohn,et al.  Hypomanic personality traits in a community sample of adolescents. , 1996, Journal of affective disorders.

[50]  M. Lenzenweger Deeper into the schizotypy taxon: on the robust nature of maximum covariance analysis. , 1999, Journal of abnormal psychology.