| Literature DB >> 23342955 |
M Hagenhoff1, N Franzen, L Gerstner, G Koppe, G Sammer, P Netter, B Gallhofer, S Lis.
Abstract
A heightened sensitivity towards negative emotional stimuli has been described for Borderline Personality Disorder (BPD). We investigated whether a faster and more accurate detection of negatively valent information in BPD can be confirmed by means of a visual search task which required subjects to detect a face with an incongruent emotional expression within a crowd of neutral faces. Twenty eight BPD patients and 28 nonpatients were asked to indicate whether a set of schematic neutral faces (3 × 3, 4 × 4 matrices) contained a happy or an angry face. Besides valence, the intensity of the target's emotion was varied in two steps. BPD patients and nonpatients both demonstrated an anger-superiority effect. However, no higher sensitivity towards negative stimuli was observed in BPD compared to nonpatients. BPD patients seem to rely to a stronger extent on controlled, i.e., serial, attention demanding processes when searching more subtle social-emotional information with positive valence.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2013 PMID: 23342955 DOI: 10.1521/pedi.2013.27.1.19
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Pers Disord ISSN: 0885-579X