Neustadter Eli S, Fotopoulou Aikaterini, Steinfeld Matthew, Fineberg Sarah K
Yale University School of Medicine Department of Psychiatry.
University College London.
J Conscious Stud. 2021 Jan 1;28(3-4):126-157.
Aberrations of self-experience are considered a core feature of Borderline Personality Disorder (BPD). While prominent etiologic accounts of BPD, such as the mentalization based approach, appeal to the developmental constitution of self in early infant-caregiver environments, they often rely on a conception of self that is not explicitly articulated. Moreover, self-experience in BPD is often theorized at the level of narrative identity, thus minimizing the role of embodied experience. In this article, we present the hypothesis that disordered self and interpersonal functioning in BPD result, in part, from impairments in "embodied mentalization," that manifest foundationally as alterations in minimal embodied selfhood, i.e. the first-person experience of being an individuated embodied subject. This account of BPD, which engages early intersubjective experiences has the potential to integrate phenomenological, developmental, and symptomatic findings in BPD, and is consistent with contemporary theories of brain function.
自我体验的异常被认为是边缘型人格障碍(BPD)的一个核心特征。虽然BPD的一些重要病因学解释,如基于心理化的方法,诉诸于早期婴儿-照顾者环境中自我的发展构成,但它们往往依赖于一种未明确阐述的自我概念。此外,BPD中的自我体验通常在叙事身份层面进行理论化,从而最小化了具身体验的作用。在本文中,我们提出一个假设,即BPD中自我和人际功能的紊乱部分源于“具身心理化”的损害,这种损害在根本上表现为最小具身自我感的改变,即作为一个个体化具身主体的第一人称体验。这种涉及早期主体间经验的BPD解释有可能整合BPD中的现象学、发展和症状学发现,并且与当代脑功能理论相一致。