Development of Personality Functioning in the Context of Life Events: A Multi-Metric Approach
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Dimensional conceptualizations of personality disorders, including assessing personality functioning, allow for thorough investigations of their development. Although evidence for when and why personality functioning changes is limited, life events are a promising candidate. As such, we used data from a year-long, four-wave study of young adults in Germany (N = 2,105; Mage = 25.38) to address three questions: (1) How does personality functioning normatively change? (2) How are life events related to personality functioning development? (3) Are there predictors of individual differences in event-related changes? We further tested the questions with four metrics: rank-order stability, mean-level change, within-person variability, and ipsative consistency. Results indicated personality functioning was moderately rank-order stable with little to no average change in other metrics over a year. However, the largely null average effects masked considerable heterogeneity in development, which life events partly accounted for. At the between-person level, events were associated with lower rank-order stability, greater mean-level increases, and less within-person variability. At the within-person level, events predicted mean-level decreases and increases in within-person variability. Notable heterogeneity emerged for event-related changes across metrics and these individual differences were explained by some demographic and event-related moderators. We discuss results within the scope of the development of pathological versus normal-range personality, utility of multiple metrics and levels of analysis, and importance of understanding what drives change for theory development and treatment.