Abstract
Despite the voluminous research using the Minnesota Multiphasic Personality Inventory, little research has been done evaluating the MMPI for assessing personality profiles and psychopathology in victims of domestic violence. The current study focused on the Psychopathic Deviate scale (scale 4), and the Harris and Lingoes subscales measuring specific aspects of this concept. The objective was to evaluate whether a clinical population of battered women differed from a nonbattered group drawn from a similar clinical setting. The battered group scored higher on the full scale (p <.001), the Authority Problems scale (p <.001), the Social Alienation scale, (p <.01), and the Social Imperturbability scale (p <.05). There was no difference on Self-Alienation. The score on Family Discord (Pd1) was the most elevated for the battered group, falling just below moderately elevated. Within the battered group, the score on Family Discord (M =69.11) was significantly more highly elevated than the score on Self-Alienation (M =60.4) (the next most highly elevated score). These findings suggest that there is an association between elevated scale 4 scores and victimization by domestic violence. However, it is essential that clinicians carefully evaluate such scores in the context of each individual situation before attributing causation.
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Rhodes, N.R. Comparison of MMPI psychopathic deviate scores of battered and nonbattered women. Journal of Family Violence 7, 297–307 (1992). https://doi.org/10.1007/BF00994620
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/BF00994620