School of Psychology, University of Wollongong, Wollongong, New South Wales, Australia.
PLoS One. 2024 Mar 28;19(3):e0301196. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0301196. eCollection 2024.
A disturbed, negative sense of self is associated with various interpersonal difficulties and is characteristic of disorders such as borderline personality disorder (BPD). Negative self-views may affect an individuals' ability to build positive relationships, including a therapeutic relationship. However, it is not yet well understood how identity disturbances give rise to interpersonal difficulties. Using an experimental analogue design, we tested whether identity disturbances are associated with interpersonal difficulties.
Participants were university students (N = 43, age M = 20.51 (SD = 3.08), women N = 32 (74.4%)) who reported moderate to high levels of BPD features, with 34.9% reporting significant BPD features as measured by the Borderline scale of the Personality Assessment Inventory (PAI-BOR). In a within-subject experimental paradigm using a Social Feedback Task, participants received negative, intermediate, and positive evaluations, supposedly from a panel. Using multilevel models, we tested whether negative self-views were associated with how much the participants liked, trusted, and felt close to each of the three panel members who provided either predominantly negative, intermediate, or positive feedback.
People with more negative self-views reported lower mood in response to positive feedback. In addition, where people with more positive self-views felt better when receiving feedback that was congruent with their self-views, people with more negative self-views did not report a better mood. Importantly, people with negative self-views felt lower desire to affiliate with the member who provided predominantly positive feedback. Affiliation was not affected when feedback was given by the negative member and intermediate member to those with negative self-views.
The findings validated that those with more negative self-views anticipated and expected more negative responses from others. Negative self-views, as relevant for BPD, may explain how people relate differently to those giving different types of feedback. Pervasive negative self-views may interfere with building new relationships including the therapeutic alliance. It may be helpful for clinicians to be aware of the potential challenges around creating a supportive therapeutic relationship for patients with negative self-views. Overly positive affirmations made by clinicians may inadvertently lower the patient's mood and may impede alliance formation.
自我感觉失调和消极与各种人际困难有关,是边缘型人格障碍(BPD)等障碍的特征。消极的自我观念可能会影响个体建立积极关系的能力,包括治疗关系。然而,目前尚不清楚身份障碍如何导致人际困难。我们使用实验模拟设计来测试身份障碍是否与人际困难有关。
参与者为大学生(N=43,年龄 M=20.51(SD=3.08),女性 N=32(74.4%)),他们报告了中度至高度 BPD 特征,其中 34.9%的人在人格评估量表的边界量表(PAI-BOR)中报告了显著的 BPD 特征。在使用社会反馈任务的个体内实验范式中,参与者收到了来自一个小组的负面、中间和积极的评价。使用多层次模型,我们测试了消极的自我观念是否与参与者对每个提供主要负面、中间或积极反馈的三个小组成员的喜爱、信任和亲近程度有关。
自我观念更消极的人对积极反馈的反应情绪更低。此外,自我观念更积极的人在收到与自我观念一致的反馈时感觉更好,而自我观念更消极的人则没有报告情绪更好。重要的是,自我观念消极的人对提供主要积极反馈的成员的隶属意愿较低。当消极成员和中间成员向自我观念消极的人提供反馈时,隶属关系不会受到影响。
这些发现验证了那些自我观念更消极的人预期和期望来自他人的更多负面反应。BPD 相关的消极自我观念可能解释了人们如何与提供不同类型反馈的人建立不同的关系。普遍存在的消极自我观念可能会干扰建立新的关系,包括治疗联盟。临床医生意识到对自我观念消极的患者建立支持性治疗关系的潜在挑战可能会有所帮助。临床医生过度积极的肯定可能会无意中降低患者的情绪,并可能阻碍联盟的形成。