Literature DB >> 31597579

Personalized models of personality disorders: using a temporal network method to understand symptomatology and daily functioning in a clinical sample.

Hailey L Dotterer1, Adriene M Beltz1, Katherine T Foster1, Leonard J Simms2, Aidan G C Wright3.   

Abstract

BACKGROUND: An ongoing challenge in understanding and treating personality disorders (PDs) is a significant heterogeneity in disorder expression, stemming from variability in underlying dynamic processes. These processes are commonly discussed in clinical settings, but are rarely empirically studied due to their personalized, temporal nature. The goal of the current study was to combine intensive longitudinal data collection with person-specific temporal network models to produce individualized symptom-level structures of personality pathology. These structures were then linked to traditional PD diagnoses and stress (to index daily functioning).
METHODS: Using about 100 daily assessments of internalizing and externalizing domains underlying PDs (i.e. negative affect, detachment, impulsivity, hostility), a temporal network mapping approach (i.e. group iterative multiple model estimation) was used to create person-specific networks of the temporal relations among domains for 91 individuals (62.6% female) with a PD. Network characteristics were then associated with traditional PD symptomatology (controlling for mean domain levels) and with daily variation in clinically-relevant phenomena (i.e. stress).
RESULTS: Features of the person-specific networks predicted paranoid, borderline, narcissistic, and obsessive-PD symptom counts above average levels of the domains, in ways that align with clinical conceptualizations. They also predicted between-person variation in stress across days.
CONCLUSIONS: Relations among behavioral domains thought to underlie heterogeneity in PDs were indeed associated with traditional diagnostic constructs and with daily functioning (i.e. stress) in person-specific networks. Findings highlight the importance of leveraging data and models that capture person-specific, dynamic processes, and suggest that person-specific networks may have implications for precision medicine.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Connectivity; externalizing; internalizing; person-specific; personality disorder

Year:  2019        PMID: 31597579     DOI: 10.1017/S0033291719002563

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Psychol Med        ISSN: 0033-2917            Impact factor:   7.723


  7 in total

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Review 2.  Future Challenges in Psychotherapy Research for Personality Disorders.

Authors:  Ueli Kramer; Catherine F Eubanks; Katja Bertsch; Sabine C Herpertz; Shelley McMain; Lars Mehlum; Babette Renneberg; Johannes Zimmermann
Journal:  Curr Psychiatry Rep       Date:  2022-10-13       Impact factor: 8.081

3.  Symptoms as rapidly fluctuating over time: Revealing the close psychological interconnections among borderline personality disorder symptoms via within-person structures.

Authors:  Malek Mneimne; Leah Emery; R Michael Furr; William Fleeson
Journal:  J Abnorm Psychol       Date:  2021-02-04

4.  Individualized learning potential in stressful times: How to leverage intensive longitudinal data to inform online learning.

Authors:  Natasha Chaku; Dominic P Kelly; Adriene M Beltz
Journal:  Comput Human Behav       Date:  2021-03-04

5.  Bridging the gap between complexity science and clinical practice by formalizing idiographic theories: a computational model of functional analysis.

Authors:  Julian Burger; Date C van der Veen; Donald J Robinaugh; Rick Quax; Harriëtte Riese; Robert A Schoevers; Sacha Epskamp
Journal:  BMC Med       Date:  2020-04-08       Impact factor: 8.775

6.  Connections that characterize callousness: Affective features of psychopathy are associated with personalized patterns of resting-state network connectivity.

Authors:  Hailey L Dotterer; Luke W Hyde; Daniel S Shaw; Emma L Rodgers; Erika E Forbes; Adriene M Beltz
Journal:  Neuroimage Clin       Date:  2020-08-28       Impact factor: 4.881

7.  How are you doing? The person-specificity of daily links between neuroticism and physical health.

Authors:  Dominic P Kelly; Alexander Weigard; Adriene M Beltz
Journal:  J Psychosom Res       Date:  2020-07-15       Impact factor: 3.006

  7 in total

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