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Psychology

D-Index
101
Citations
37771
World Ranking
600
National Ranking
381

Overview

Joshua D. Miller is affiliated with the University of Georgia in the United States. Their primary research field is Psychology, with a focus on Clinical Psychology, Experimental and Cognitive Psychology, Social Psychology, Sociology and Political Science, and Philosophy.

The scientist's research topics encompass Personality Disorders and Psychopathology, Personality Traits and Psychology, Mental Health Research Topics, Psychopathy, Forensic Psychiatry, Sexual Offending, Bullying, Victimization, and Aggression, Mental Health and Psychiatry, and Psychotherapy Techniques and Applications.

Recent papers authored or coauthored by Joshua D. Miller include:

  • "Narcissism Today: What We Know and What We Need to Learn" (2021), published in Current Directions in Psychological Science
  • "The distinction between symptoms and traits in the Hierarchical Taxonomy of Psychopathology (HiTOP)" (2020), published in Journal of Personality
  • "Examining changes in personality following shamanic ceremonial use of ayahuasca" (2021), published in Scientific Reports
  • "Age and gender differences in narcissism: A comprehensive study across eight measures and over 250,000 participants." (2023), published in Journal of Personality and Social Psychology
  • "A Comparison of the Validity of Very Brief Measures of the Big Five/Five-Factor Model of Personality" (2020), published in Assessment

Joshua D. Miller has collaborated frequently with the following coauthors:

  • Donald R. Lynam
  • Nathan T. Carter
  • Chelsea Sleep
  • Courtland S. Hyatt
  • Leigha Rose

Common venues for the scientist's publications include:

  • Personality Disorders Theory Research and Treatment
  • Assessment
  • Journal of Personality
  • Abstracts with programs - Geological Society of America
  • Journal of Personality Assessment

Best Publications

  • The Hierarchical Taxonomy of Psychopathology (HiTOP): A Dimensional Alternative to Traditional Nosologies

    Roman Kotov;Robert F. Krueger;David Watson;Thomas M. Achenbach

  • Validation of the UPPS Impulsive Behaviour Scale: a Four-factor Model of Impulsivity

    Stephen P. Whiteside;Donald R. Lynam;Joshua D. Miller;Sarah K. Reynolds

  • Grandiose and vulnerable narcissism: a nomological network analysis.

    Joshua D. Miller;Brian J. Hoffman;Eric T. Gaughan;Brittany Gentile

  • Comparing clinical and social-personality conceptualizations of narcissism.

    Joshua D. Miller;W. Keith Campbell

  • Personality and sexual risk taking: a quantitative review.

    Rick H. Hoyle;Michelle C. Fejfar;Joshua D. Miller

  • Personality disorders as extreme variants of common personality dimensions: can the Five-Factor Model adequately represent psychopathy?

    Joshua D. Miller;Donald R. Lyman;Thomas A. Widiger;Carl Leukefeld

  • STRUCTURAL MODELS OF PERSONALITY AND THEIR RELATION TO ANTISOCIAL BEHAVIOR: A META‐ANALYTIC REVIEW*

    Joshua D. Miller;Donald Lynam

  • Searching for a Vulnerable Dark Triad: Comparing Factor 2 Psychopathy, Vulnerable Narcissism, and Borderline Personality Disorder

    Joshua D. Miller;Ally Dir;Brittany Gentile;Lauren Wilson

  • Personality, antisocial behavior, and aggression: A meta-analytic review

    Shayne E. Jones;Joshua D. Miller;Donald R. Lynam

  • Controversies in Narcissism.

    Joshua D Miller;Donald R Lynam;Courtland S Hyatt;W Keith Campbell

  • Psychopathy and the Five-factor model of personality: a replication and extension.

    Joshua D. Miller;Donald R. Lynam

  • An examination of the Psychopathic Personality Inventory's nomological network: a meta-analytic review.

    Joshua D. Miller;Donald R. Lynam

  • A test of the four-factor model of impulsivity-related traits

    Joshua Miller;Kate Flory;Donald Lynam;Carl Leukefeld

  • Assessing the basic traits associated with psychopathy: Development and validation of the Elemental Psychopathy Assessment.

    Donald R. Lynam;Eric T. Gaughan;Joshua D. Miller;Drew J. Miller

  • Progress in achieving quantitative classification of psychopathology

    Robert F. Krueger;Roman Kotov;David Watson;Miriam K. Forbes

  • A test of two brief measures of grandiose narcissism: the narcissistic personality inventory-13 and the narcissistic personality inventory-16.

    Brittany Gentile;Joshua D. Miller;Brian J. Hoffman;Dennis E. Reidy

  • The five-factor narcissism inventory: a five-factor measure of narcissistic personality traits.

    Natalie Glover;Joshua D. Miller;Donald R. Lynam;Cristina Crego

  • Narcissistic Personality Disorder: Relations with distress and functional impairment

    Joshua D. Miller;W. Keith Campbell;Paul A. Pilkonis

  • Personality Pathways to Impulsive Behavior and Their Relations to Deviance: Results from Three Samples

    Donald R. Lynam;Joshua D. Miller

  • The Handbook of Narcissism and Narcissistic Personality Disorder: Theoretical Approaches, Empirical Findings, and Treatments

    W. Keith Campbell;Joshua D. Miller

  • Personality disorders as extreme variants of common personality dimensions : Can the Five-Factor Model adequately represent psychopathy? : Personality dimensions and disorders

    Joshua D. Miller;Donald R. Lynam;Thomas A. Widiger;Carl Leukefeld

Frequent Co-Authors

Donald R. Lynam
Donald R. Lynam Purdue University West Lafayette
W. Keith Campbell
W. Keith Campbell University of Georgia
Thomas A. Widiger
Thomas A. Widiger University of Kentucky
Amos Zeichner
Amos Zeichner University of Georgia
James MacKillop
James MacKillop McMaster University
Douglas B. Samuel
Douglas B. Samuel Purdue University West Lafayette
Stephanie N. Mullins-Sweatt
Stephanie N. Mullins-Sweatt Oklahoma State University
Paul A. Pilkonis
Paul A. Pilkonis University of Pittsburgh
Aidan G. C. Wright
Aidan G. C. Wright University of Pittsburgh
R. Michael Bagby
R. Michael Bagby University of Toronto

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