The formal elaboration and separate listing of two- and three-point code types are not discussed, for several reasons. First, research on the MCMI does not have the welldeveloped code-type validity literature found for the MMPI. Instead, many of the MCMI code-type descriptions are based on a conceptual integration of the implications of clusters of scale elevations. In many ways, this is a task that individual practitioners can do themselves by rationally considering the meanings of associated scale elevations. For example, an elevation on Antisocial, combined with a corresponding elevation on Aggressive (Sadistic), would clearly indicate the abusive, combative, and impersonal expression of the person’s antisocial tendencies. Second, given that there are fully 28 MCMI-III scales, the total number of possible code types is both unwieldy to list and unrealistic to fully research. However, a short subsection (Frequent Code Types) under most of the scale descriptions does briefly describe the meanings attached to some of the more important associated scale elevations. Readers are encouraged to read these descriptions and to expand on their meanings by reading the longer interpretive descriptions for the entire associated scale.