Literature DB >> 25424403

When I look into my baby's eyes . . . infant emotion recognition by mothers with borderline personality disorder.

Ricki-Leigh Elliot1, Linda Campbell, Mick Hunter, Gavin Cooper, Jessica Melville, Kathryn McCabe, Louise Newman, Carmel Loughland.   

Abstract

Mothers with borderline personality disorder (BPD) have disturbed relationships with their infants, possibly associated with poor nonverbal cue perception. Individuals with BPD are poor at recognizing emotion in adults and tend to misattribute neutral (i.e., no emotion) as sad. This study extends previous research by examining how mothers with BPD perceive known (own) and unknown (control) infant stimuli depicting happy, sad, and neutral emotions. The sample consisted of 13 women diagnosed with BPD and 13 healthy control mothers. All participants completed clinical and parenting questionnaires and an infant emotion recognition task. Compared to control mothers, mothers with BPD were significantly poorer at infant emotion recognition overall, but especially neutral expressions which were misattributed most often as sad. Performance was not related to disturbed parenting but rather mothers' age and illness duration. Neither the BPD nor control mothers showed enhanced accuracy for emotional displays of their own verses unknown infant-face images. Although the sample size was small, this study provides evidence that mothers with BPD negatively misinterpret neutral images, which may impact sensitive responding to infant emotional cues. These findings have implications for clinical practice and the development of remediation programs targeting emotion-perception disturbances in mothers with BPD.
© 2013 Michigan Association for Infant Mental Health.

Entities:  

Mesh:

Year:  2013        PMID: 25424403     DOI: 10.1002/imhj.21426

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Infant Ment Health J        ISSN: 0163-9641


  10 in total

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Review 2.  Parenting in Patients with Borderline Personality Disorder, Sequelae for the Offspring and Approaches to Treatment and Prevention.

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Journal:  Curr Psychiatry Rep       Date:  2019-02-07       Impact factor: 5.285

3.  The Parenting Experience of Those With Borderline Personality Disorder Traits: Practitioner and Parent Perspectives.

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4.  Parenting stress and postpartum depression/anxiety in mothers with personality disorders: indications for differential intervention priorities.

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5.  An intervention for parents with severe personality difficulties whose children have mental health problems: a feasibility RCT.

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6.  Impact of dysfunctional maternal personality traits on risk of offspring depression, anxiety and self-harm at age 18 years: a population-based longitudinal study.

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7.  Subjective ratings and emotional recognition of children's facial expressions from the CAFE set.

Authors:  Marília Prada; Margarida V Garrido; Cláudia Camilo; David L Rodrigues
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9.  Study protocol for a multi-center RCT testing a group-based parenting intervention tailored to mothers with borderline personality disorder against a waiting control group (ProChild*-SP1).

Authors:  Charlotte Rosenbach; Nina Heinrichs; Robert Kumsta; Silvia Schneider; Babette Renneberg
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10.  Factor structure of the parental reflective functioning questionnaire and association with maternal postpartum depression and comorbid symptoms of psychopathology.

Authors:  Katrine I Wendelboe; Johanne Smith-Nielsen; Anne C Stuart; Patrick Luyten; Mette Skovgaard Væver
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  10 in total

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