| Literature DB >> 30258202 |
Momoko Sato1, Peter Fonagy2, Patrick Luyten2,3.
Abstract
The current study investigated the effects of social interactions on effortful control (EC) and mentalizing in individuals with borderline personality disorder (BPD) features. 123 nonclinical participants completed the emotional Stroop task to assess EC and the modified Reading the Mind in the Eyes Test (RMET) to assess mentalizing capacities before and after having social interactions. The Cyberball paradigm was used to generate socially inclusive and exclusive interactions. Results indicated the high BPD group made more errors on the Stroop task following exclusive social interactions than the low BPD group. The high BPD group, compared to the low BPD group, associated fewer emotional words with facial cues following inclusive social interactions but overanalysed facial cues (hypermentalizing) following the exclusive social interaction. Exclusive social interactions hindered the inhibitory capacities in individuals with high BPD features, but inclusive social interactions facilitated. Individuals with high BPD features responded to exclusive social interactions by hypermentalizing. Thus, it was found social rejection could activate cognitive-affective processes which led to hypermentalizing and impairments in EC which in combination could explain the disruptive effects on social interactions in people with BPD features.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 30258202 PMCID: PMC6158252 DOI: 10.1038/s41598-018-32775-7
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Figure 1A flowchart of the sampling and study procedure.
Mean scores of two groups before and after the interaction.
| Variable | Before interaction | After interaction | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Low BPD | High BPD | Low BPD | High BPD | |
|
| 51.99 (15.35) | 51.93 (16.06) | 54.47 (14.26) | 54.79 (13.25) |
| Inclusion | 52.84 (16.90) | 50.48 (16.15) | 56.72 (14.04) | 51.77 (11.00) |
| Exclusion | 50.39 (13.36) | 52.95 (14.72) | 52.21 (14.36) | 58.26 (14.90) |
|
| 12.28 (2.41) | 12.10 (2.31) | 13.03 (2.28) | 13.41 (2.28) |
| Inclusion | 12.41 (2.52) | 12.40 (2.01) | 12.93 (2.27) | 13.54 (2.43) |
| Exclusion | 11.91 (2.17) | 11.67 (2.53) | 13.13 (2.32) | 13.25 (2.12) |
|
| 126.98 (31.49) | 121.21 (31.27) | 111.72 (25.30) | 102.80 (22.41) |
| Inclusion | 135.11 (31.16) | 113.88 (29.72) | 118.13 (26.89) | 99.45 (21.95) |
| Exclusion | 116.76 (29.23) | 127.69 (31.65) | 105.52 (22.38) | 107.00 (22.67) |
|
| 66.68 (5.80) | 65.53 (4.80) | 65.47 (6.35) | 65.31 (5.83) |
| Inclusion | 66.44 (5.69) | 66.74 (4.20) | 63.90 (6.62) | 67.00 (4.78) |
| Exclusion | 66.97 (5.99) | 64.28 (5.15) | 67.03 (5.76) | 63.15 (6.42) |
Note. PAIBOR = Personality Assessment Inventory-Borderline Feature scale. RMET = Reading the Mind in the Eyes Test.
Figure 2Interaction effects between conditions and the level of BPD features on the total reaction time of the emotional Stroop task. Note. BPD = Borderline Personality Disorder. p < 0.05, P < 0.01.
Figure 3Interaction effects between conditions and the level of BPD features on the emotional Stroop task accuracy. Note. BPD = Borderline Personality Disorder. p < 0.05, P < 0.01.
Figure 4Interaction effects between time and the level of BPD features on the RMET accuracy. Note. BPD = Borderline Personality Disorder. RMET = Reading the Mind in the Eyes Test.
Figure 5Interaction effects between conditions and the level of BPD features on the RMET total score. Note. BPD = Borderline Personality Disorder. RMET = Reading the Mind in the Eyes Test. p < 0.05, P < 0.01.