A heterogeneous group of disorders that are long-standing, pervasive, and consist of inflexible patterns of behavior. Affects cognition, affectivity, interpersonal functioning, and/or impulse control.
Personality: not harmful, flexible.
Disorder: rigid, inflexible, self-defeating, structural instability, fragility
Intrapersonal: forming stable, integrated, coherent self-representations of self and others
Interpersonal: to develop a capacity for intimacy
Social-group: to engage in pro-social and cooperative behaviors
Paranoid, Schizoid, Schizotypal
anti-social, borderline, histrionic, narcissistic
Avoidant, dependent, obsessive-compulsive
Dimensional.
Cluster C at 7%
anxiety, mood disorders, substance use, sexual difficulties
- Diagnostic criteria are not sharply defined
- Low reliability and validity
- Hard to fit people in a box
- High level of comorbidity.
1. Clinical interviews
2. Self-reporting personality tests (MMPI or MCMI-4)
Many personality disorders are ego syntonic; person lacks insight
Odd/Eccentric
- Suspicious of others
- Expected to be mistreated or exploited by others
- Tends to blame others
- Can be extremely jealous
- Reluctant to confide in others.
Paranoid PD does not have the hallucinations or delusions that one would have in paranoid schizo. This personality disorder is also not disabling in social settings and not as extreme as schizophrenia.
- Withdrawn
- No desire for or enjoyment of social relationships
- No interest in sex
- Flat affect
- Doesn't experience tons of pleasure
- Extremely high levels of introversion (low warmth and no positive emotions)
- Severe disruption in sociability due to impairment of underlying social and emtional bonds with others
People with schizoid PD view themselves as slef-sufficient loners and other people as intrusive.
Schizoid
Autism spectrum disorder
They have similar interpersonal difficulties such as detachment and restricted affect.
- Odd beliefs or magical thinking
- Recurrent illusions
- Ideas of reference
- Suspiciousness
- Paranoid ideation
- Eccentric behavior and appearance
- Odd speech
Dramatic/eratic
- Overly dramatic and attention-seeking
- Uses physical appearance to draw attention
- Self-centered
- Speech lacks detail
- Inappropriately sexually seductive and provocative.
Maladptive schemas revolving around the need for attention to validate self-worth
Seductiveness was encouraged by parental upbringing.
Depression, Borderline PD, antisocial, narcissistic, dependent Pds.
- Exaggerated sense of self-importance
- Preoccupation with being admired
- Preoccupied with fantasies of unlimited success, power, brilliance, beauty, love.
- Believes to be special or unique and wants to be associated with people of high status.
- Sense of entitlement and need for admiration.
Lack of empathy and unwillingness to recognize or identify with feelings and needs of others
Grandiose and Vulnerable
Extreme grandiosity; oversestimates one's own abilities and accomplishments to underestimate those of others.
- Fragile and unstable self-esteem
- Arrogance and condescension is a facade for intense shame and hypersensitivity to rejection and criticism.
- Manipulation and false victimhood
- Intentional faking empathy
Borderline Personality disorder
Individuals who lack a sense of self-esteem, like those with narcissistic personality disorder tend to look for validation in others by getting them to conform to their appearance, beliefs, and opinions.
You don't know where you end and others begin. One's experience of another person (the object) is no longer individual.
They view themselves as part of the experience rather than individual or separate.
- Mirroring: caregiver should mirror/empathize with child's emotions
- Idealization: child looks up to caregiver
- Twin ship or alter ego: recall phallic stage; child wants to be like caregiver
- Mirror-hungry
- Ideal-hungry
- Alter-ego
- Merger-hungry
- Contact-shunning
Entitlement rage, exploitativeness, grandiose fantasty, self-entitlement, contingent self-esteem, hiding the self, devaluing.
Narcissism, psychopathy, machiavellianism. Add sadism
- Attitudes and feelings toward others vary dramatically
- Emoitnos are erratic and can shift abruptly
- Argumentative, irritable, sarcastic, quick to take offense
- Low of trust
- Experiences intense and unstable social relationships
- Lack of emotional skin
1. Affect instability
2. Dysfunctional relationships
3. Impulsivity (self-harm, suicide)
Attempting suicide may not be due to the person actually wanting to die but merely a cry for help.
Negative experiences in childhood of abuse, neglect, separation or loss, trauma;
Parental psychopathology
Stress can include abandonment, loss/rejectoin, parental failure. Genetic/biological traits such as impulsivity and affectivity can all predispose a person to to developing BPD
Linehan is a psychologist that advocates for the treatment of BPD as an emotional dysregulation disorder. She created the diathesis-stress theory of BPD and dialectical behavior therapy.
Dialectical behavior therapy encourages patients to accept negative affect without engaging in self-destructive or other maladaptive behaviors.
- problem focused
- phone therapy
- group therapy CBT
1. Conduct disorder before 15 years old
2. Pattern of anti-social behavior continues into adulthood
Breaks laws, physically aggressive, works inconsistently, irresponsible behavior
Criminality is heritable; high parental conflict increases negativity; low parental warmth; monozygotic twins.
- Education and occupation
- employment
- divorce and transitions
- neighborhood and school
- stressful events
- childhood antisocial behaviors
- deviant peers
- ineffective parenting
- early arrest
poverty of emotions.
- lack of remorse
- no sense of shame
- superificially charming
- manipulates others for personal gain
All psychopaths can also be diagnosed with APD but not everyone with APD can be diagnosed as a psychopath
- Reduced size of amygdala
- Reduced response to aversive conditioning, fearful, and sad faces
- Reduced amygdala response to negative stimuli
- Decreased prefrontal activity
- Sensitive to possibility of criticism, rejection, or disapproval
- Reluctant to enter relationships unless they will surely be liked
- Higher levels of life impairment compared to other personality disorders
Feeling inept and socially inadequate.
Dependent pd, depression and generalized social phobia
- Inhibited temperament
- Fear of being negatively evaluated
- introversion and neuroticism
- shy and inhibited in novel and ambiguous situations
- Intense need to be taken care of
- Lack of self-reliance
- Overly dependent on others
- Uncomfortable being alone
Bipolar disorder, depression, anxiety disorders, bulimia.
Neuroticism and agreeableness are genetic; predispositions to dependence and anxiousness make them prone to effects of parents who are authoritarian and over protective; underlying maladaptive schemas
- Perfectionistic approach to life
- Preoccupied with details, rules, schedules
- Serious, rigid, formal, inflexible
The PD doesn't have the obsessions and compulsions
Psychoanalytic: fixation at the anal stage.
High levels assertiveness and harm avoidance behavior
Low levels of novelty seeking and reward dependence
People with cluster B and A PDs may not typically come in for treatment due to their low levels of trust, compliance, and potentially high self-esteem. In other words, they might not see anything wrong with their personality/behavior. CBT is the best method to treat PDs because it focuses on reducing subjective stress and modifying maladaptive schemas and automatic thoughts. It teaches behavioral tasks and challenges faulty logic.