RT Journal Article T1 Maladaptive facet trait profiles and psychopathology: a person‑centered assessment approach A1 Rosa Cáceres, Ana María A1 Rossi, Gina A1 Lozano Rojas, Óscar Martín A1 Sánchez García, Manuel A1 Facon, M. A1 Díaz Batanero, María Carmen AB Person-centered approaches in personality allow greater understanding of how different subpopulations with specific personality profiles are linked with relevant outcomes. Studies under the Five Factor Model agree on the observation of a Resilient, an Undercontrolled and an Overcontrolled profile. However, studies using maladaptive traits are much more limited. The present research identify personality profiles based on the 25 maladaptative facet and examined the relationships with personality dysfunctioning, internalizing and externalizing symptoms. A mixed sample composed of community adults (n = 742) and patients (n = 312) completed the Personality Inventory for DSM-5 Short Form, the Inventory of Depression and Anxiety Symptoms-II, Externalizing Spectrum Inventory–Brief From, the 12 items Spanish version of the WHO Disability Assessment Schedule II and Level of Personality Functioning Scale-Brief Form 2.0. Latent profile analysis was performed on PID-5-SF score. The scores on internalizing, externalizing and functioning were compared across the profiles. Four profiles emerged: Resilient, Undercontrolled, Overcontrolled, and Ordinary type. The Overcontrolled and Undercontrolled types showed higher scores on pathology scales. While the Overcontrolled profile appeared more related to internalizing symptoms and impairment in self-functioning, the Undercontrolled profile was more linked to higher scores on externalizing symptoms and interpersonal dysfunctioning. PB Springer SN 1046-1310 SN 1936-4733 (electrónico) YR 2023 FD 2023-11 LK https://hdl.handle.net/10272/22598 UL https://hdl.handle.net/10272/22598 LA eng NO De la Rosa-Cáceres, A., Rossi, G., Lozano, O. M., Sanchez-Garcia, M., Facon, M., & Diaz-Batanero, C. (2023). Maladaptive facet trait profiles and psychopathology: a person-centered assessment approach. Current Psychology, 43(15), 13279–13290. https://doi.org/10.1007/s12144-023-05381-8 NO Funding for open access publishing: Universidad de Huelva/ CBUA This work was supported by the grant “Reliable and clinical relevant change of Inventory of Depression and Anxiety Symptoms II – IDAS-II: a longitudinal clinical utility study (RELY-IDAS-II)”, project PID2020-116187RB-I00 on Proyectos I + D + i 2020 “Retos del Conocimiento” provided by Ministerio de Ciencia e Innovación (Spain). DS Repositorio Institucional de la Universidad de Huelva RD 31 may 2026