Don't despair if you wish your personality would change. New research shows that there's plenty to look forward to in terms ...
Dimensional models of personality disorders are increasingly popular, but do they obscure real clinical syndromes?
Volatile relationships, reckless impulsivity and an unstable identity are hallmarks of this misunderstood mental health condition. Credit...Vanessa Saba Supported by By Christina Caron On the surface, ...
This post is part 1 of a series. This is the first of a three-part series on analytic approaches to personality organization and how we can use this framework to develop a psychoanalytic formulation ...
Serrano is a contributor for TIME. Serrano is a contributor for TIME. Perhaps you've never wanted to join an intramural basketball league. Maybe you don't identify with a political party or religion.
The conspiracy theories of our time seem fixated on an absence of clues. By Peter C. Baker In Nick Shirley’s mega-viral YouTube videos alleging social-services fraud in Minnesota, the important piece ...
If you imagine the story of the universe as a film endlessly in post-production, cosmologists would be its obsessive editors, constantly tweaking the narrative. The version they are working with is an ...
The world is full of theories of everything. The smartphone theory of everything argues that our personal devices are responsible for the rise of political polarization, anxiety, depression, and ...
President Trump has engaged in a spree of self-aggrandizement unlike any of his predecessors, fostering a mythologized superhuman persona and making himself the inescapable force at home and around ...
Maria V. Cattell, 56, passed away in her Longmont home on Sunday the 2nd of November. She was born in Washington DC on September 16, 1969, and soon after she was adopted by Robert and Brenda Cattell.
This graphic is part of a special report on consciousness. Read the full feature here. Theorists have proposed many explanations for consciousness. They are startlingly diverse, with different goals, ...
Is it possible to spot personality dysfunction from someone’s everyday word use? My colleagues and I have conducted research that suggests you can, and often sooner than you might expect. Whether in a ...