Monday, July 24, 2023

Brief Narcissistic Personality Inventory (NPI-16)

 

The Narcissistic Personality Inventory (NPI) was developed in 1979 by Raskin and Hall, and since then, has become one of the most widely utilized personality measures for non-clinical levels of the trait narcissism. Since its initial development, the NPI has evolved from 220 items to the more commonly employed NPI-40 (1984) and NPI-16 (2006), as well as the novel NPI-1 inventory (2014). Derived from the DSM-III criteria for Narcissistic personality disorder (NPD), the NPI has been employed heavily by personality and social psychology researchers.

The NPI is not intended for use in diagnosing Narcissistic personality disorder. Rather, it is often said to measure "normal" or "subclinical" (borderline) narcissism (i.e., in people who score very high on the NPI do not necessarily meet all criteria for diagnosis with NPD).

In this post, we will present the shorter NPI version NPI-16

 


Instructions

In each of the following pairs of attitudes‚ choose the one that you MOST AGREE with. Mark your answer by writing EITHER A or B in the space provided. If you do not identify with either statement‚ select the one which is least objectionable or remote. In other words, read each pair of statements and then choose the one that is closer to your own feelings. Only mark ONE ANSWER for each attitude pair.

 

Questions




Analysis

To score:

* For each of the following where you answered A give yourself one point:

1‚ 3‚ 6‚ 8‚ 9‚ 11‚ 14‚ 16

* For each of the following where you answered B give yourself one point:

2‚ 4‚ 5‚ 7‚ 10‚ 12‚ 13‚ 15

* Calculate the total score – number of points.

* Calculate the ratio of your score to the total number of questions.

Naturally, the higher the ratio is – more obvious are the narcissi traits in your personality.