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result(s) for
"Narcissism"
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Correction: Opposite associations of collective narcissism and in-group satisfaction with intergroup aggression via belief in the hedonistic function of revenge
by
PLOS ONE Staff
in
Narcissism
2021
[This corrects the article DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0247814.].
Journal Article
Gruppe in COVID - COVID in Gruppe 1
by
Weimer, Martin
in
Narcissism
2022
Am Beispiel einer Sequenz aus einer analytischen Gruppe wird die Regression der Gruppe auf die Protomentalität einer Grundannahmengruppe nach Bion gezeigt. Als Leiter dieser Gruppe war ich dem Erwartungsdruck der regredierten Gruppe nach einer narzisstischen und/oder paranoiden Führungsfigur ausgesetzt. Die gruppenanalytische Aufgabe bestand dagegen darin, dass Leiter und Gruppe den manchmal quälenden Prozessen auf dem Weg zu einer Gruppe, in der alle „ohne Angst verschieden sein\" können (Adorno), im Analyseprozess durchleben. Das kann als Essenz demokratischer Kultur gesehen werden. In der Grundlagenmatrix dieser Gruppensequenz zeigt sich schließlich angesichts von Vernichtungsängsten die kollektive Regression auf die Warenfiktion, die als triebhaftes Movens des aktuellen sozialen Unbewussten und real als Triebkraftder tödlichen Klimakatastrophe verstanden wird.
Journal Article
Behavioral Inhibition System (BIS), Behavioral Activation System (BAS), and grandiose facets of narcissism
The current study examines the temperamental basis of three forms of grandiose narcissism (i.e., agentic, communal, and antagonistic), employing the Behavioral Inhibition System model and three aspects of Behavioral Activation System (i.e., drive, pleasure-seeking, and sensitivity to reward). Using a self-report study conducted on a general Polish sample (N = 657), we found that all forms of narcissism were positively associated with all three aspects of BAS, while BIS was negatively associated with agentic and antagonistic forms. Communal and antagonistic narcissism did not differ in comparison of their correlations with drive and sensitivity to reward, while agentic narcissism indicated the strongest relations to temperament. A multiple regression indicated that each of the three forms of narcissism has its own specific relationship with BIS and of the aspects of BAS. We discuss our findings as useful in explaining how the three forms of narcissism are related to BIS and BAS with the distinction of the latter into its three aspects, indicating substantial differences between agentic and communal narcissism, and specificity of antagonistic narcissism.
Journal Article
Decoding the Narcissistic Brain
by
Robins, Esther M.
,
Angus, Douglas J.
,
Sedikides, Constantine
in
Admirative and rivalrous narcissism
,
Adolescent
,
Adult
2025
•Less than 1 % of empirical articles on narcissism have addressed its neural basis.•We decoded various forms of narcissism from spontaneous neural oscillations.•Distinct neural oscillatory patterns for agentic versus communal narcissism.•Distinct neural oscillatory patterns for admirative versus rivalrous narcissism.•Vulnerable narcissism negatively related to fast and slow wave frequency bands.
There is a substantial knowledge gap in the narcissism literature: <1 % of the nearly 12,000 articles on narcissism have addressed its neural basis. To help fill this gap, we asked whether the multifacetedness of narcissism could be decoded from spontaneous neural oscillations. We attempted to do so by applying a machine learning approach (multivariate pattern analysis) to the resting-state EEG data of 162 participants who also completed a comprehensive battery of narcissism scales assessing agentic, admirative, rivalrous, communal, and vulnerable forms. Consistent with the agency-communion model of narcissism, agentic and communal forms of grandiose narcissism were reflected in distinct, non-overlapping patterns of spontaneous neural oscillations. Furthermore, consistent with a narcissistic admiration and rivalry concept model of narcissism, we observed largely non-overlapping patterns of spontaneous neural oscillations for admirative and rivalrous forms of narcissism. Vulnerable narcissism was negatively associated with power across fast and slow wave frequency bands. Taken together, the results suggest that the diverse forms of narcissism can be reliably predicted from spontaneous neural oscillations. The findings contribute to the burgeoning field of personality neuroscience.
Journal Article