1. Interpretation bias in Cluster-C and borderline personality disorders
- Author
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Anoek Weertman, Sjoerd Salet, Arnoud Arntz, Clinical Psychological Science, and RS: FPN CPS III
- Subjects
Adult ,Male ,Obsessive-Compulsive Disorder ,Cognitive theory ,media_common.quotation_subject ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Culture ,Dependent personality disorder ,Experimental and Cognitive Psychology ,Cognitive therapy ,Avoidant personality disorder ,Personality Disorders ,Severity of Illness Index ,CHILDHOOD MALTREATMENT ,Developmental psychology ,Bias ,Surveys and Questionnaires ,medicine ,Humans ,SPECIFICITY ,Borderline personality disorder ,media_common ,Personality disorder ,OBSESSIVE-COMPULSIVE PERSONALITY ,Interpretation ,RECOGNITION ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,Personality disorders ,Cognitive bias ,Obsessive–compulsive personality disorder ,ASSUMPTIONS ,Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders ,DYSFUNCTIONAL BELIEFS ,Psychiatry and Mental health ,Clinical Psychology ,Compulsive Behavior ,HYPERVIGILANCE ,Female ,Worry ,Psychology ,TRAITS ,Personality - Abstract
Cognitive therapy (CT) assumes that personality disorders (PDs) are characterized by interpretational biases that maintain the disorder. Changing interpretations is therefore a major aim of CT of PDs. This study tested whether Borderline PD (BPD), Avoidant and Dependent PD (AV/DEPD), and Obsessive-Compulsive PD (OCPD) are characterized by specific interpretations. Among the 122 participants there were 55 PD patients (17 BPD, 30 AV/DEPD, 29 OCPD diagnoses), 26 axis-1 patients, and 41 nonpatients. Participants put themselves into 10 scripts of negative events and noted feelings, thoughts and behaviors that came to mind. Next, they chose between hypothesized BPD-specific, AV/DEPD-specific, and OCPD-specific interpretations of each event (forced choice). Lastly, participants rated belief in each interpretation. Regression analyses revealed that forced choices and belief ratings supported the CT-model of BPD and AV/DEP: interpretations were specific. The alleged OCPD-beliefs were however not specifically related to OCPD, with relatively high popularity in axis-1 patients and nonpatients. The open responses were classified by judges blind for diagnoses, with the following results. BPD was characterized by low levels of solution-focused and healthy-flexible/accepting responses, and higher levels of criticizing others and malevolent interpretations of others. AV/DEPD was characterized by lower levels of solution-focused responses, and higher levels of self-criticism, negative emotions, guilt and fear of judgment, as well as lower levels of other-criticism. OCPD only showed trends for lower healthy responses, and higher compulsiveness and worry. It is concluded that the assumptions of CT are supported for BPD and AV/DEPD, but not-at least not on the explicit interpretational level-for OCPD. CT of OCPD might need a slightly different approach. (PsycINFO Database Record (c) 2011 APA, all rights reserved) (journal abstract)
- Published
- 2011