| Literature DB >> 33914216 |
Jane McLachlan1,2, Mani Mehdikhani3, Beth Larham4, Luna C Muñoz Centifanti5.
Abstract
Borderline Personality Disorder (BPD) is associated with emotion dysregulation. The emotion regulation strategies people adopt may depend on one's belief about emotion as either fixed or changeable (termed "implicit theory"). We test this experimentally by modifying beliefs about emotions using virtual reality (VR). A sample of 29 adolescents (ages 14-17 years) were recruited from two adolescent inpatient units for an uncontrolled pilot trial of a new brief intervention. We measured BPD traits, beliefs about emotion, treatment preference, cognitive reappraisal and rumination, before the VR game and 14-31 days later. Adolescents with higher levels of BPD traits endorsed fixed beliefs of emotion and reported higher levels of rumination and lower levels of cognitive reappraisal. After a one-time message delivered via VR, adolescents evidenced an increase in belief that their emotions were changeable. These findings suggest beliefs about emotions may have an important role in interventions for adolescents with BPD traits.Entities:
Keywords: Adolescents; Borderline personality; Cognitive reappraisal; Implicit theories; Rumination
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 33914216 PMCID: PMC9470600 DOI: 10.1007/s10578-021-01169-8
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Child Psychiatry Hum Dev ISSN: 0009-398X
Sample characteristics
| Variable | Time 1 | Time 2 |
|---|---|---|
| Participants | 30 | 19 |
| Male, n | 9 | 6 |
| Female, n | 20 | 12 |
| Transgender male, n | 1 | 1 |
| Age, mean (SD) | 15.9 (1.2) | 15.7 (1.3) |
| White, n (%) | 25 (83%) | 15 (78%) |
| Mixed race, n (%) | 2 (7%) | 2 (11%) |
| Asian, n (%) | 1 (3%) | 0 (0%) |
| Undisclosed, n (%) | 2 (7%) | 2 (11%) |
| Medication, n (%) | 5 (13%) | 3 (16%) |
| Psychological therapy, n (%) | 6 (20%) | 3 (16%) |
| Combination, n (%) | 17 (57%) | 10 (52%) |
| Monitoring only, n (%) | 3 (10%) | 3 (16%) |
| Autism Spectrum Disorder (%) | 4 (13%) | 3 (16%) |
| Adjustment Disorder (%) | 1 (3%) | 0 (0%) |
| ADHD (%) | 2 (7%) | 1 (5%) |
| Depression (%) | 2 (7%) | 2 (11%) |
| Eating disorder (%) | 1 (3%) | 1 (5%) |
| Previous psychotic episode (%) | 3 (10%) | 2 (11%) |
| PTSD (%) | 2 (7%) | 2 (11%) |
| OCD (%) | 1 (3%) | 0 (0%) |
| 14 (47%) | 8 (42%) |
SD standard deviation
Descriptive statistics for primary study variables at Time 1 and Time 2
| Time 2 (n = 18) | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Cronbach’s | Mean (SD) | Cronbach’s | Mean (SD) | |
| Rumination | 0.884 | 3.534 (0.293) | 0.695 | 3.597 (0.083) |
| Cognitive reappraisal | 0.808 | 2.103 (0.241) | 0.864 | 2.292 (0.254) |
| BPFS | 0.794 | 3.478 (0.403) | 0.798 | 3.382 (0.409) |
| Implicit beliefs—self | 0.875 | 3.560 (00.325) | 0.821 | 3.431 (0.404) |
| Implicit beliefs—General | 0.798 | 3.190 (0.215) | 0.645 | 3.014 (0.233) |
| Flow—fluency | 0.811 | 4.874 (0.566) | 0.655 | 4.630 (0.639) |
| Flow—absorption | 0.270 | 4.698 (0.174) | − 0.274 | 4.583 (0.962) |
| Flow- Total | 0.777 | 4.803 (0.443) | 0.706 | 4.611 (0.732) |
Spearman correlations between variables of interest at Time 1 and Time 2
| 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6 | 7 | 8 | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1.BPD Traits | 0.164 | 0.580* | − 0.054 | 0.189 | − 0.172 | 0.339 | − 0.356 | |
| 2.Implicit beliefs—General | 0.233 | 0.042 | − 0.101 | 0.007 | 0.264 | − 0.196 | 0.033 | |
| 3.Implicit beliefs—self | 0.435* | 0.453* | − 0.593* | 0.364 | − 0.177 | 0.156 | − 0.338 | |
| 4.Cognitive reappraisal | − 0.477* | − 0.262 | − 0.724* | − 0.596* | 0.106 | 0.071 | − 0.152 | |
| 5.Rumination | 0.354 | − 0.029 | 0.381* | − 0.384* | − 0.071 | 0.113 | 0.315 | |
| 6.Age (Time 1) | 0.098 | 0.214 | − 0.221 | 0.084 | − 0.175 | – | – | – |
| 7.Gender (Time 1) | 0.235 | − 0.149 | 0.011 | − 0.184 | 0.066 | – | – | – |
| 8.Psychiatric diagnosis (Time 1) | − 0.172 | − 0.375* | − 0.304 | 0.147 | 0.189 | – | – | – |
Correlation coefficients for Time 1 are below the diagonal and Time 2 are above the diagonal, with covariance measures reported on the diagonal and in bold. Age, gender, and psychiatric diagnosis were only measured at Time 1
*p < .05
Spearman correlations between variables of interest at Time 1 and Time 2 controlling for psychiatric diagnosis
| 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6 | 7 | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1.BPD Traits | 0.201 | 0.503* | − 0.119 | 0.311 | − 0.197 | 0.407 | |
| 2.Implicit beliefs—General | 0.136 | 0.053 | − 0.139 | − 0.030 | 0.186 | − 0.186 | |
| 3.Implicit beliefs—self | 0.403* | 0.341 | − 0.678* | 0.501* | − 0.182 | 0.192 | |
| 4.Cognitive reappraisal | − 0.474* | − 0.167 | − 0.723* | − 0.538* | 0.184 | 0.041 | |
| 5.Rumination | 0.382* | 0.057 | 0.463* | − 0.413* | − 0.054 | 0.073 | |
| 6.Age (Time 1) | 0.035 | 0.229 | − 0.292 | 0.152 | − 0.145 | – | – |
| 7.Gender (Time 1) | 0.240 | − 0.210 | − 0.004 | − 0.189 | 0.079 | – | – |
Correlation coefficients for Time 1 are below the diagonal and Time 2 are above the diagonal, with covariance measures reported on the diagonal and in bold. Age and gender were only measured at Time 1
*p < .05
Descriptive statistics for key variables and analysis of change from Time 1 to Time 2
| Variable | Mean (SD) | Paired sample t-test | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Time 1 | Time 2 | t | df | p | d | |
| Implicit Beliefs -self | 3.560 (0.965) | 3.431 (0.835) | 3.305 | 17 | 0.004 | 0.779 |
| Implicit Beliefs—General | 3.190 (0.850) | 3.014 (0.597) | 1.578 | 17 | 0.133 | 0.372 |
| BPD Traits | 83.483 (11.627) | 81.167 (11.873) | 0.21 | 17 | 0.836 | 0.05 |
| Rumination | 14.138 (4.711) | 14.389 (3.381) | 0.357 | 17 | 0.726 | 0.084 |
| Cognitive reappraisal | 8.276 (2.987) | 9.167 (4.033) | − 1.661 | 17 | 0.115 | − 0.391 |