Abstract

Many typical symptoms of borderline personality disorder (BPD) occur within interpersonal contexts, suggesting that BPD is characterized by aberrant social cognition. While research consistently shows that BPD patients have biases in mental state attribution (e.g., evaluate others as malevolent), the research focusing on accuracy in inferring mental states (i.e., cognitive empathy) is less consistent. For complex and ecologically valid tasks in particular, emerging evidence suggests that individuals with BPD have impairments in the attribution of emotions, thoughts, and intentions of others (e.g., Preißler et al., 2010). A history of childhood trauma and co-morbid PTSD seem to be strong additional predictors for cognitive empathy deficits. Together with reduced emotional empathy and aberrant sending of social signals (e.g., expression of mixed and hard-to-read emotions), the deficits in mental state attribution might contribute to behavioral problems in BPD. Given the importance of social cognition on the part of both the sender and the recipient in maintaining interpersonal relationships and therapeutic alliance, these impairments deserve more attention.

Highlights

  • Borderline Personality Disorder (BPD) is a severe psychiatric condition characterized by a pervasive pattern of marked impulsivity and instability in affects, self-image and interpersonal relationships (APA, 2000)

  • Empirical research on BPD has far mostly focused on affective instability

  • Affective instability has been well established as a core symptom of BPD, it is not specific to the disorder and does not solely explain it, as it is a common characteristic in other psychiatric conditions [e.g., depressiveand bipolar-spectrum conditions, and posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD), see Koenigsberg, 2010]

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Summary

Social cognition in borderline personality disorder

Stefan Roepke1,2*, Aline Vater 2, Sandra Preißler 3, Hauke R. Reviewed by: Jill Lobbestael, Maastricht University, Netherlands Martin Bohus, Central Institute of Mental Health, Germany

INTRODUCTION
Findings
IMPACT OF CHILDHOOD MALTREATMENT AND TRAUMA ON COGNITIVE EMPATHY IN BPD
Full Text
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