What are the causes and symptoms of personality disorders?
Personality disorders are thought to result from a bad interface, so to speak, between a child’s temperament and character on one hand and his or her family environment on the other. Temperament can be defined as a person’s innate or biologically shaped basic disposition. Human infants vary in their sensitivity to light or noise, their level of physical activity, their adaptability to schedules, and similar traits. Even such traits as shyness or novelty-seeking may be at least in part determined by the biology of the brain and the genes one inherits. Character is defined as the set of attitudes and behavior patterns that the individual acquires or learns over time. It includes such personal qualities as work and study habits, moral convictions, neatness or cleanliness, and consideration of others. Since children must learn to adapt to their specific families, they may develop personality disorders in the course of struggling to survive psychologically in disturbed or stressful families