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Chapter Sixteen: Personality Disorders

  • Personality: A set of uniquely expressed characteristics that influence our behaviors, emotions, thoughts, and interactions

  • Personalities are flexible

  • Personality Disorder: When people display an enduring, rigid pattern of inner experience and outward behavior that impairs their sense of self, emotional experiences, goals, capacity for empathy, and/or capacity for intimacy

    • Have personality traits that are much more extreme and dysfunctional

    • Leads to significant problems and psychological pain for themselves or others

  • Symptoms last for years

  • Typically becomes recognizable in adolescence or early adulthood

  • Among the most difficult psychological disorders to treat

  • Many people with these disorders aren’t even aware of their personality problems

  • Around 15% of all adults in the US display a personality disorder at some point

  • Comorbidity: When a person with a personality also suffers from another disorder

  • Categorical approach

    • Problematic personality traits are either present or absent in people

    • A personality disorder is either displayed or not displayed by a person

    • A person who suffers from a personality disorder is not markedly troubled by personality traits outside of that disorder

  • Symptoms of personality disorders overlap so much that clinicians often find it hard to distinguish between disorders

  • Dimensional Approach: Disorders are classified by the severity of personality traits rather than by the presence or absence of specific traits

“Odd” Personality Disorders

  • Typically have odd or eccentric behaviors

  • Extreme suspiciousness, social withdrawal, and peculiar ways of thinking and perceiving things

  • Related to schizophrenia

    • Often qualify for an additional diagnosis of schizophrenia

    • Often have close relatives with schizophrenia

Paranoid Personality Disorder

  • People deeply distrust other people and are suspicious of others’ motives

  • Believe that everyone intends them harm

  • Shun close relationships

  • More likely to read hostile intentions into the actions of others

  • More often choose anger as the appropriate response

  • Remain cold and distant

  • Suspicions are not usually delusional

  • Critical of weakness and fault in others

  • Unable to recognize their own mistakes

  • Extremely sensitive to criticism

  • Blame others for the things that go wrong in their lives

  • More common in men than in women

  • Theories

    • Psychodynamic theories

      • Distant, rigid fathers

      • Overcontrolling, rejecting mothers

      • Some people come to view their environment as hostile as a result of their parents’ persistently unreasonable demands

    • Cognitive-behavioral theories: People hold broad maladaptive assumptions

    • Biological theories: Genetic causes

  • Treatments

    • Do not typically see themselves as needing help, and few come to treatment willingly

    • View the role of patient as inferior and distrust and rebel against their therapists

    • Object Relations Therapists: Try to see past the patient’s anger and work on what they view as their deep wish for a satisfying relationship

    • Self-therapists: Try to help clients reestablish self-cohesion

    • Cognitive-Behavioral Therapy

      • Master anxiety-reduction techniques

      • Improve skills at solving interpersonal problems

      • Develop more realistic interpretations of other people’s words and actions

      • Become more aware of other people’s POVs

    • Antipsychotic drug therapy is of limited help

Schizoid Personality Disorder

  • People persistently avoid and are removed from social relationships and demonstrate little in the way of emotion

  • Don’t have close ties with other people

  • Genuinely prefer to be alone

  • Make no effort to start or keep friendships, take little interest in having sexual relationships, and seem indifferent even to their families

  • Social skills tend to be weak

  • Focus mainly on themselves and are generally unaffected by praise or criticism

  • Rarely show any feelings

  • Seem to have no need for attention or acceptance

  • Men are slightly more likely to experience it

  • Men may be more impaired

  • Theories

    • Psychodynamic theories

      • Schizoid personality disorder has its roots in an unsatisfied need for human contact

      • Parents have been unaccepting or abusive of their children

      • Children left unable to give or receive love and cope by avoiding all relationships

    • Cognitive-behavioral theories

      • Suffer from deficiencies in their thinking

      • Unable to pick up emotional cues from others

      • Cannot respond to emotions

      • Develop language and motor skills very slowly

  • Treatments

    • Social withdrawal prevents most people with this disorder from entering therapy

    • Likely to remain emotionally distant from the therapist, seem not to care about their treatment, and make limited progress at best

    • Cognitive-behavior therapists

      • With this therapy, clients experience more positive emotions and more satisfying social interactions

      • Present clients with lists of emotions to think about

      • Have them write down and remember pleasurable experiences

      • Teach social skills

    • Group therapy is useful when it offers a safe setting for social contact

    • Drug therapy is of limited help

Schizotypal Personality Disorder

  • People display a range of interpersonal problems marked by extreme discomfort in close relationships, very odd patterns of thinking and perceiving, and behavioral eccentricities

  • Seek isolation

  • Have few close friends

  • More severe than the paranoid and schizoid personality disorders

  • Thoughts and behaviors can be noticeably disturbed

    • Ideas of Reference: Beliefs that unrelated events pertain to them in some important way

    • Bodily Illusions: Sensing an external force or presence

    • See themselves as having special extrasensory abilities

    • Believe that they have magical control over others

  • Emotions may be inappropriate, flat, or humorless

  • Often have great difficulty keeping their attention focused

  • Conversation is typically digressive and vague

  • Tend to drift aimlessly and lead an idle, unproductive life

  • Slightly more males than females

  • Theories

    • Symptoms are often linked to family conflicts and to psychological disorders in parents

    • Defects in attention and short-term memory may contribute

    • Perform poorly on backward masking - have a hard time shutting out the first stimulus in order to focus on the second

    • Linked schizotypal personality disorder to some of the same biological factors found in schizophrenia

    • Also been linked to disorders of mood

      • Around ⅔ of ppl with schizotypal personality disorder also suffer from major depressive disorder or bipolar disorder

      • Relatives of ppl with depression have a higher than usual rate of schizotypal personality disorder and vice versa

  • Treatments

    • Need to help these clients reconnect with the world and recognize the limits of their thinking and their powers

    • Work on helping the clients recognize where their views end and those of the therapist begin

    • Increase positive social contacts, ease loneliness, reduce overstimulation, help the individuals become more aware of their personal feelings

    • Cognitive-behavioral therapists

      • Help people function more effectively

      • Cognitive interventions

      • Evaluate their unusual thoughts or perceptions objectively

      • Ignore the inappropriate thoughts and perceptions

    • Antipsychotic drugs in low doses reduces certainty of their thought problems

“Dramatic” Personality Disorders

  • More commonly diagnosed than the others

Antisocial Personality Disorder

  • A personality disorder marked by a general pattern of disregard for and violation of other people’s rights

  • Most closely linked to adult criminal behavior

  • A person must be at least 18 to receive this diagnosis

  • People with antisocial personality disorder lie repeatedly

  • Usually careless with money

  • Often impulsive

  • Irritable, aggressive, and quick to start fights

  • Little regard for their own safety or for that of others

  • Self-centered

  • Likely to have trouble maintaining close relationships

  • Think of their victims as weak and deserving

  • Four times more common among men than women

  • At least 35% of people in prison meet the diagnostic criteria

  • Criminal behavior of many people with this disorder declines after age 40

  • People with antisocial personality disorder have higher rates of alcoholism and other substance use disorders than do the rest of the population

    • More than 80% of ppl with this disorder display a substance use disorder at some point in their lives

    • A number also display gamblind disorder

  • Children with conduct disorder and ADHD have a heightened risk of developing antisocial personality disorder

    • Conduct Disorder - Persistently lie and violate rules and other people’s rights

    • ADHD - Lack foresight and judgment and fail to learn from experience

  • Theories

    • Psychodynamic Factors

      • Begins with an absence of parental love during infancy, leading to a lack of basic trust

      • Some children respond to the early inadequacies by becoming emotionally distant, and they bond with others through the use of power and destructiveness

      • People with this disorder are more likely than others to have had significant stress in their childhoods

    • Cognitive-Behavioral Factors

      • May be learned through principles of modeling and imitation

      • Operant conditioning - Some parents unintentionally teach antisocial behavior by regularly rewarding a child’s aggressive behavior

        • Parents may give in to restore peace

        • May be teaching the child to be stubborn and violent

      • Hold attitudes that trivialize the importance of other people’s needs

      • People with this disorder have genuine difficulty recognizing POVs or feelings other than their own

    • Biological Factors

      • People may inherit a biological predisposition to the disorder

      • May be linked to particular genes

      • Lower serotonin activity

        • Linked to impulsivity and aggression

      • Deficient functioning in their prefrontal cortex and anterior cingulate cortex

        • Help people to plan and execute realistic strategies

        • Help people to have personal characteristics

      • Deficient functioning in the amygdala, hippocampus, and temporal cortex

        • Contributes to the individual’s inability to follow rules

      • Often respond to warnings or expectations of stress with low brain and bodily arousal

        • Enables them to readily tune out threatening or emotional situations

        • Makes them unaffected by them

        • More likely than others to take risks and seek thrills

      • Ultimately related to poor functioning by a brain circuit

        • Poor communication between the structures in this circuit may produce chronic low reactions to stress

  • Treatments

    • Typically ineffective

    • Most of those in therapy have been forced to participate

    • Cognitive-behavioral therapists try to guide clients to think about moral issues and about the needs of other people

    • Psychotropic drugs

    • Antipsychotic drugs

Borderline Personality Disorder

  • People display great instability, including major shifts in mood, an unstable self-image, and impulsivity

  • Relationships are very unstable

  • Swing in and out of very depressive, anxious, and irritable states

  • Emotions seem to always be in conflict with the world around them

  • Prone to bouts of anger

  • Direct their impulsive anger inward and inflict bodily harm on themselves

  • 85% also experience another psychological disorder

  • Impulsive, self-destructive activities

  • Many engage in self-injurious or self-mutilation behaviors

  • Those with bpd often feel as if the physical discomfort offers relief from their emotional suffering

  • 75% of ppl with bpd attempt suicide at least once

  • Frequently form intense, conflict-ridden relationships in which their feelings aren’t necessarily shared by the other person

    • Come to idealize another person’s qualities and abilities after just a brief first encounter

    • Violate the boundaries of relationships

    • Quickly feel rejected and become furious when their expectations aren’t met

    • Have recurrent fears of impending abandonment

  • Dramatic identity shifts

    • Unstable sense of self

    • Occasionally have a sense of dissociation from their own thoughts or bodies

  • 75% are women

  • Instability and risk of suicide peaks during young adulthood and gradually wanes with advancing age

  • Tends to interfere with job performance even more than most other personality disorders

  • Theories

    • Psychological Factors

      • Object Relations Theorists: Early lack of acceptance by parents may lead to a loss of self-esteem, increased dependence, and an inability to cope with separation

      • Their parents neglected or rejected them, verbally abused them, or otherwise behaved inappropriately

      • Early sexual abuse is a common contributor to the development of BPD

    • Biological Factors

      • Biological predisposition to develop BPD

      • Lower brain serotonin activity

        • Linked repeatedly to depression, suicide, aggression, and impulsivity

      • Tied to abnormal activity and anatomy of certain brain structures

    • Sociocultural Factors

      • Cases of bpd are particularly likely to emerge in cultures that change rapidly

      • As a culture loses its stability, it leaves many of its members with problems of identity

    • Integrative Explanations

      • Biosocial explanation: BPD results from a combination of internal and external forces

        • Internal forces: Difficulty identifying and controlling one’s emotions, social skill deficits, abnormal neurotransmitter activity

        • External forces: An environment in which a child’s emotions are punished, ignored, trivialized, or disregarded

        • Received some, but not consistent, research support

      • Developmental Psychopathology Explanation: Believe that internal and external factors intersect over the course of a person’s life to help produce this disorder

        • Early parent-child relationships are particularly influential in the development of BPD

        • Children who experience early trauma and abuse and whose parents are markedly inattentive, uncaring, confusing, threatening, and dismissive, are likely to develop a disorganized attachment style

        • Central psychological deficit is the person’s inability to mentalize

        • Mentalization: People’s capacity to understand their own mental states and those of other people

        • People subjected to early dysfunctional attachment relationships emerge from their childhood with a weakened ability to mentalize and a poor ability to control their emotions, attention, thinking, and behavior

        • Cannot accurately understand either their own or other people’s underlying mental states

  • Treatments

    • Psychotherapy can eventually lead to some degree of improvement

    • Wildly fluctuating interpersonal attitudes of clients with the disorder can make it difficult for therapists to establish collaborative working relationships with them

    • Clients with BPD may violate the boundaries of the client-therapist relationship

    • Traditional psychoanalytic therapy has not been effective

    • Contemporary psychodynamic approaches have been more effective than traditional psychoanalytic approaches

    • Dialectical Behavior Therapy: A comprehensive treatment approach, applied particularly in cases of borderline personality disorder and/or suicidal intent; includes both individual therapy sessions and group sessions

      • Cognitive-behavioral interventions

      • Social skill-building and support

      • Received considerable research support

      • Now considered the treatment of choice for people with bpd

    • Antidepressant, antibipolar, antianxiety, and antipsychotic drugs

      • Help calm the emotional and aggressive storms of some ppl with bpd

      • Use of drugs on an outpatient basis is unwise

      • Should be used largely as an adjunct to psychotherapy approaches

Histrionic Personality Disorder

  • People are emotionally charged and continually seek to be the center of attention

  • Keep changing themselves to attract and impress an audience

  • Speech is scanty in detail and substance

  • Lack a sense of who they really are

  • Overreact to any minor event that gets in the way of their quest for attention

  • Some make suicide attempts, often to manipulate others

  • May draw attention to themselves by exaggerating their physical illnesses or fatigue

  • Exaggerate the depth of their relationships

  • Once believed to be more common in women than in men

  • Males and females are equally affected

  • Theories

    • Psychodynamic perspective

      • Parents were cold and controlling and left their children feeling unloved and afraid of abandonment

      • Children learned to behave dramatically so their parents would pay attention to them

      • Omg guys this reminds me of buck from 911, though i wouldn’t say he has histrionic personality disorder

    • Cognitive-Behavioral Perspective

      • People are less and less interested in knowing the world at large because they’re so self-focused and emotional

      • Hold a general assumption that they’re helpless to care for themselves

      • Constantly seek out others who will meet their needs

      • Wow this one reminds me of harry styles in ‘confessions of a gay disney prince’ though, again, i don’t think that character has histrionic personality disorder

    • Sociocultural perspective

      • Produced in part by cultural norms and expectations

      • Vain, dramatic, and selfish behavior may actually be an exaggeration of femininity as our culture once defined it

      • Diagnosed less in cultures that discourage overt sexualization

  • Treatments

    • More likely to seek out treatment on their own

    • Working with them can be very difficult because of their demands

    • May pretend to have important insights or to change during treatment merely to please the therapist

    • Therapists must remain objective and maintain strict professional boundaries

    • Cognitive-behavioral therapists - change their belief that they’re helpless and develop better, more deliberate ways of thinking and solving problems

    • Psychodynamic therapy

    • Group therapy

    • Ultimate goal: Help their clients recognize their excessive dependency, find inner satisfaction, and become more self-reliant

    • Drug therapy is less successful

Narcissistic Personality Disorder

  • People are generally grandiose, need much admiration, and feel no empathy with others

  • Expect constant attention and admiration from those around them

  • Exaggerate their achievements and talents

  • Expect others to recognize them as superior

  • Often appear arrogant

  • Often make favorable first impressions but can rarely maintain long-term relationships

  • Seldom interested in the feelings of others

  • Theories

    • Psychodynamic theories

      • Cold, rejecting parents

      • People with narcissistic personality disorder spend their lives defending against feeling rejected and wary of the world

      • Repeatedly tell themselves that they’re actually perfect and desirable

      • Seek admiration from others

    • Object Relations Theorists: Grandiose self-image is a way for these people to convince themselves that they’re totally self-sufficient and without need of warm relationships with their parents or anyone else

    • Children who are neglected, abused, and/or lose their parents are at particular risk for the later development of narcissistic personality disorder

    • Cognitive-behavioral theories

      • Narcissistic personality disorder develops when people are treated too positively in early life

      • Admiring or doting parents teach them to overvalue their self-worth

      • Repeatedly rewarded for minor or no accomplishments

    • Sociocultural theories: Link between narcissistic personality disorder and eras of narcissism

      • Family values and social ideals in certain societies periodically break down

      • Produces generations of young people who are self-centered and materialistic

      • Western cultures are considered likely to produce generations of narcissism

  • Treatments

    • One of the most difficult to treat

      • Clients are unable to acknowledge weakness

      • Clients are unable to appreciate the effect of their behavior on others

      • Clients are unable to incorporate feedback from others

    • Clients may try to manipulate the therapist

    • Psychodynamic therapists help them recognize and work through their basic insecurities and defenses

    • Cognitive-behavioral therapists try to redirect the clients’ focus onto the opinions of others and increase their ability to emphasize

    • No approaches have had clear success

“Anxious” Personality Disorders

  • Typically display anxious and fearful behavior

  • Research support for explanations is very limited

  • Treatments are considerably more helpful than that for other personality disorders

Avoidant Personality Disorder

  • People are very uncomfortable and inhibited in social situations, overwhelmed by feelings of inadequacy, and extremely sensitive to negative evaluation

  • So fearful of being rejected that they give no one an opportunity to reject them

  • Actively avoid occasions for social contact

  • Believe themselves to be unappealing or inferior to others

  • Few or no close friends

  • Similar to social anxiety disorder

    • High comorbidity rate

    • People with social anxiety disorder primarily fear social circumstances

    • People with avoidant personality disorder primarily fear social relationships

  • 2.4% of adults have avoidant personality disorder

  • Theories

    • Often assumed to have the same causes as anxiety disorders

    • Psychodynamic Theories

      • Shame and insecurity tied to childhood experiences

      • If parents repeatedly punish/ridicule their child, the child may develop a negative-self image

      • Leads to the child feeling unlovable and distrusting the love of others

    • Cognitive-Behavioral Theories

      • Harsh criticism and rejection in early childhood may lead certain people to assume that others in their environment will always judge them negatively

      • Come to expect rejection

      • Fail to develop effective social skills

  • Treatments

    • Often distrust the therapist’s sincerity and start to fear their rejection

    • Treated similarly to people with social anxiety disorder and other anxiety disorders

Dependent Personality Disorder

  • People have a pervasive, excessive need to be taken care of

  • Clinging and obedient

  • Fear separation from people with whom they’re in a close relationship

  • Rely on others so much that they can’t make decisions for themselves

  • Constantly need assistance with everything and have extreme feelings of inadequacy and helplessness

  • Theories

    • Psychodynamic Theories:

      • Unresolved conflicts during the oral stage can give rise to a lifelong need for nurturance

      • Early parental loss or rejection may prevent normal experiences of attachment and separation

      • Many parents of people with this disorder were over involved and overprotective, increasing their children’s dependency and separation anxiety

        • Buster Bluth

    • Cognitive-Behavioral Theories:

      • Behavior

        • Parents unintentionally rewarded their children’s clinging and loyal behavior

        • Parents punished acts of independence

        • Some parents’ dependent behaviors may have served as models

      • Cognitive

        • Maladaptive attitudes

          • I am inadequate and helpless

          • I must find a person to provide protection

          • Jerry - Rick and Morty

        • Dichotomous thinking

  • Treatments

    • Help patients accept responsibility for themselves

    • Couple or family therapy

    • Psychodynamic therapy focuses on the same issues as therapy for depressed people

    • Cognitive-Behavioral Therapists

      • Combine behavioral and cognitive interventions to help the clients take control of their lives

      • Assertiveness training

      • Challenge and change their assumptions of incompetence and helplessness

    • Antidepressant drug therapy

    • Group therapy format

Obsessive-Compulsive Personality Disorder

  • People are so preoccupied with order, perfection, and control that they lose all flexibility, openness, and efficiency

  • 7.9% of the population

  • Men are twice as likely

  • May became so focused on organization and details that they fail to grasp the point of the activity

  • Set unreasonably high standards for themselves and others

  • Rigid and stubborn

  • Theories

    • Freud

      • People with OCPD are anal retentive

      • Fixated at the anal stage

      • Become filled with anger

      • Persistently resist both their anger and their instincts to have bowel movements

      • Become extremely orderly and restrained

      • Any early struggles with parents over control and independence may ignite the aggression

    • Cognitive-Behavioral Theories

      • Illogical thinking processes help keep OCPD going

      • Dichotomous thinking may produce rigidity and perfectionism

      • People with OCPD tend to misread or exaggerate the potential outcomes of mistakes or errors

  • Treatments

    • Ppl with OCPD don’t think there’s anything wrong with them

    • Often respond well to psychodynamic or cognitive-behavioral therapy

    • SSRIs

Multicultural Factors: Research Neglect

  • Lack of multicultural research

  • Gender and other cultural differences may be particularly important in both the development and diagnosis of borderline personality disorder

    • 75% of all people who have a diagnosis of bpd are female

    • Could be that the traumas women experience as children are prereqs for the development of bpd

      • Should be viewed and treated as a special form of ptsd

    • Could be a reaction to persistent feelings of marginality, powerlessness, and social failure

      • Disorder may be more attributable to social inequalities than to psychological factors

Are There Better Ways to Classify Personality Disorders?

  • Personality disorders differ more in degree than in type of dysfunction

  • Should be classified by dimensions rather than by categories

The “Big Five” Theory of Personality and Personality Disorders

  • Neuroticism, extroversion, openness to experiences, agreeableness, conscientiousness

  • Everyone’s personality can be summarized by a combination of the five traits

  • Would be best to describe all people with personality disorders as being high, low, or in between on the five supertraits

    • Drop the use of personality disorders altogether

DSM-5’s Proposed Dimensional Approach

  • Personality Disorder-Trait Specified (PDTS): A personality disorder currently undergoing study for possible inclusion in a future revision of DSM-5. People would receive this diagnosis if they had significant impairment in their functioning as a result of one or more very problematic traits

  • Negative Affectivity: People experience negative emotions frequently and intensely

    • Emotional Lability: Unstable emotions

    • Anxiousness

    • Separation insecurity

    • Preservation: Repetition of certain behaviors despite repeated failures

    • Submissiveness

    • Hostility

    • Depressivity

    • Suspiciousness

    • Strong emotional reactions (overreactions to emotionally arousing situations)

  • Detachment: People tend to withdraw from other people and social interactions

    • Restricted Emotional Reactivity: Little reaction to emotionally arousing situations

    • Depressivity

    • Suspiciousness

    • Withdrawal

    • Anhedonia: Inability to feel pleasure or take interest in things

    • Intimacy avoidance

  • Antagonism: People behave in ways that put them at odds with other people

    • Manipulativeness

    • Deceitfulness

    • Attention seeking

    • Hostility

  • Disinhibition: People behave impulsively, without reflecting on potential future consequences

    • Irresponsibility

    • Distractibility

    • Risk taking

  • Psychoticism: People have unusual and bizarre experiences

    • Unusual beliefs and experiences

    • Eccentricity

    • Cognitive and perceptual dysregulation: Odd thought processes and sensory experiences

A

Chapter Sixteen: Personality Disorders

  • Personality: A set of uniquely expressed characteristics that influence our behaviors, emotions, thoughts, and interactions

  • Personalities are flexible

  • Personality Disorder: When people display an enduring, rigid pattern of inner experience and outward behavior that impairs their sense of self, emotional experiences, goals, capacity for empathy, and/or capacity for intimacy

    • Have personality traits that are much more extreme and dysfunctional

    • Leads to significant problems and psychological pain for themselves or others

  • Symptoms last for years

  • Typically becomes recognizable in adolescence or early adulthood

  • Among the most difficult psychological disorders to treat

  • Many people with these disorders aren’t even aware of their personality problems

  • Around 15% of all adults in the US display a personality disorder at some point

  • Comorbidity: When a person with a personality also suffers from another disorder

  • Categorical approach

    • Problematic personality traits are either present or absent in people

    • A personality disorder is either displayed or not displayed by a person

    • A person who suffers from a personality disorder is not markedly troubled by personality traits outside of that disorder

  • Symptoms of personality disorders overlap so much that clinicians often find it hard to distinguish between disorders

  • Dimensional Approach: Disorders are classified by the severity of personality traits rather than by the presence or absence of specific traits

“Odd” Personality Disorders

  • Typically have odd or eccentric behaviors

  • Extreme suspiciousness, social withdrawal, and peculiar ways of thinking and perceiving things

  • Related to schizophrenia

    • Often qualify for an additional diagnosis of schizophrenia

    • Often have close relatives with schizophrenia

Paranoid Personality Disorder

  • People deeply distrust other people and are suspicious of others’ motives

  • Believe that everyone intends them harm

  • Shun close relationships

  • More likely to read hostile intentions into the actions of others

  • More often choose anger as the appropriate response

  • Remain cold and distant

  • Suspicions are not usually delusional

  • Critical of weakness and fault in others

  • Unable to recognize their own mistakes

  • Extremely sensitive to criticism

  • Blame others for the things that go wrong in their lives

  • More common in men than in women

  • Theories

    • Psychodynamic theories

      • Distant, rigid fathers

      • Overcontrolling, rejecting mothers

      • Some people come to view their environment as hostile as a result of their parents’ persistently unreasonable demands

    • Cognitive-behavioral theories: People hold broad maladaptive assumptions

    • Biological theories: Genetic causes

  • Treatments

    • Do not typically see themselves as needing help, and few come to treatment willingly

    • View the role of patient as inferior and distrust and rebel against their therapists

    • Object Relations Therapists: Try to see past the patient’s anger and work on what they view as their deep wish for a satisfying relationship

    • Self-therapists: Try to help clients reestablish self-cohesion

    • Cognitive-Behavioral Therapy

      • Master anxiety-reduction techniques

      • Improve skills at solving interpersonal problems

      • Develop more realistic interpretations of other people’s words and actions

      • Become more aware of other people’s POVs

    • Antipsychotic drug therapy is of limited help

Schizoid Personality Disorder

  • People persistently avoid and are removed from social relationships and demonstrate little in the way of emotion

  • Don’t have close ties with other people

  • Genuinely prefer to be alone

  • Make no effort to start or keep friendships, take little interest in having sexual relationships, and seem indifferent even to their families

  • Social skills tend to be weak

  • Focus mainly on themselves and are generally unaffected by praise or criticism

  • Rarely show any feelings

  • Seem to have no need for attention or acceptance

  • Men are slightly more likely to experience it

  • Men may be more impaired

  • Theories

    • Psychodynamic theories

      • Schizoid personality disorder has its roots in an unsatisfied need for human contact

      • Parents have been unaccepting or abusive of their children

      • Children left unable to give or receive love and cope by avoiding all relationships

    • Cognitive-behavioral theories

      • Suffer from deficiencies in their thinking

      • Unable to pick up emotional cues from others

      • Cannot respond to emotions

      • Develop language and motor skills very slowly

  • Treatments

    • Social withdrawal prevents most people with this disorder from entering therapy

    • Likely to remain emotionally distant from the therapist, seem not to care about their treatment, and make limited progress at best

    • Cognitive-behavior therapists

      • With this therapy, clients experience more positive emotions and more satisfying social interactions

      • Present clients with lists of emotions to think about

      • Have them write down and remember pleasurable experiences

      • Teach social skills

    • Group therapy is useful when it offers a safe setting for social contact

    • Drug therapy is of limited help

Schizotypal Personality Disorder

  • People display a range of interpersonal problems marked by extreme discomfort in close relationships, very odd patterns of thinking and perceiving, and behavioral eccentricities

  • Seek isolation

  • Have few close friends

  • More severe than the paranoid and schizoid personality disorders

  • Thoughts and behaviors can be noticeably disturbed

    • Ideas of Reference: Beliefs that unrelated events pertain to them in some important way

    • Bodily Illusions: Sensing an external force or presence

    • See themselves as having special extrasensory abilities

    • Believe that they have magical control over others

  • Emotions may be inappropriate, flat, or humorless

  • Often have great difficulty keeping their attention focused

  • Conversation is typically digressive and vague

  • Tend to drift aimlessly and lead an idle, unproductive life

  • Slightly more males than females

  • Theories

    • Symptoms are often linked to family conflicts and to psychological disorders in parents

    • Defects in attention and short-term memory may contribute

    • Perform poorly on backward masking - have a hard time shutting out the first stimulus in order to focus on the second

    • Linked schizotypal personality disorder to some of the same biological factors found in schizophrenia

    • Also been linked to disorders of mood

      • Around ⅔ of ppl with schizotypal personality disorder also suffer from major depressive disorder or bipolar disorder

      • Relatives of ppl with depression have a higher than usual rate of schizotypal personality disorder and vice versa

  • Treatments

    • Need to help these clients reconnect with the world and recognize the limits of their thinking and their powers

    • Work on helping the clients recognize where their views end and those of the therapist begin

    • Increase positive social contacts, ease loneliness, reduce overstimulation, help the individuals become more aware of their personal feelings

    • Cognitive-behavioral therapists

      • Help people function more effectively

      • Cognitive interventions

      • Evaluate their unusual thoughts or perceptions objectively

      • Ignore the inappropriate thoughts and perceptions

    • Antipsychotic drugs in low doses reduces certainty of their thought problems

“Dramatic” Personality Disorders

  • More commonly diagnosed than the others

Antisocial Personality Disorder

  • A personality disorder marked by a general pattern of disregard for and violation of other people’s rights

  • Most closely linked to adult criminal behavior

  • A person must be at least 18 to receive this diagnosis

  • People with antisocial personality disorder lie repeatedly

  • Usually careless with money

  • Often impulsive

  • Irritable, aggressive, and quick to start fights

  • Little regard for their own safety or for that of others

  • Self-centered

  • Likely to have trouble maintaining close relationships

  • Think of their victims as weak and deserving

  • Four times more common among men than women

  • At least 35% of people in prison meet the diagnostic criteria

  • Criminal behavior of many people with this disorder declines after age 40

  • People with antisocial personality disorder have higher rates of alcoholism and other substance use disorders than do the rest of the population

    • More than 80% of ppl with this disorder display a substance use disorder at some point in their lives

    • A number also display gamblind disorder

  • Children with conduct disorder and ADHD have a heightened risk of developing antisocial personality disorder

    • Conduct Disorder - Persistently lie and violate rules and other people’s rights

    • ADHD - Lack foresight and judgment and fail to learn from experience

  • Theories

    • Psychodynamic Factors

      • Begins with an absence of parental love during infancy, leading to a lack of basic trust

      • Some children respond to the early inadequacies by becoming emotionally distant, and they bond with others through the use of power and destructiveness

      • People with this disorder are more likely than others to have had significant stress in their childhoods

    • Cognitive-Behavioral Factors

      • May be learned through principles of modeling and imitation

      • Operant conditioning - Some parents unintentionally teach antisocial behavior by regularly rewarding a child’s aggressive behavior

        • Parents may give in to restore peace

        • May be teaching the child to be stubborn and violent

      • Hold attitudes that trivialize the importance of other people’s needs

      • People with this disorder have genuine difficulty recognizing POVs or feelings other than their own

    • Biological Factors

      • People may inherit a biological predisposition to the disorder

      • May be linked to particular genes

      • Lower serotonin activity

        • Linked to impulsivity and aggression

      • Deficient functioning in their prefrontal cortex and anterior cingulate cortex

        • Help people to plan and execute realistic strategies

        • Help people to have personal characteristics

      • Deficient functioning in the amygdala, hippocampus, and temporal cortex

        • Contributes to the individual’s inability to follow rules

      • Often respond to warnings or expectations of stress with low brain and bodily arousal

        • Enables them to readily tune out threatening or emotional situations

        • Makes them unaffected by them

        • More likely than others to take risks and seek thrills

      • Ultimately related to poor functioning by a brain circuit

        • Poor communication between the structures in this circuit may produce chronic low reactions to stress

  • Treatments

    • Typically ineffective

    • Most of those in therapy have been forced to participate

    • Cognitive-behavioral therapists try to guide clients to think about moral issues and about the needs of other people

    • Psychotropic drugs

    • Antipsychotic drugs

Borderline Personality Disorder

  • People display great instability, including major shifts in mood, an unstable self-image, and impulsivity

  • Relationships are very unstable

  • Swing in and out of very depressive, anxious, and irritable states

  • Emotions seem to always be in conflict with the world around them

  • Prone to bouts of anger

  • Direct their impulsive anger inward and inflict bodily harm on themselves

  • 85% also experience another psychological disorder

  • Impulsive, self-destructive activities

  • Many engage in self-injurious or self-mutilation behaviors

  • Those with bpd often feel as if the physical discomfort offers relief from their emotional suffering

  • 75% of ppl with bpd attempt suicide at least once

  • Frequently form intense, conflict-ridden relationships in which their feelings aren’t necessarily shared by the other person

    • Come to idealize another person’s qualities and abilities after just a brief first encounter

    • Violate the boundaries of relationships

    • Quickly feel rejected and become furious when their expectations aren’t met

    • Have recurrent fears of impending abandonment

  • Dramatic identity shifts

    • Unstable sense of self

    • Occasionally have a sense of dissociation from their own thoughts or bodies

  • 75% are women

  • Instability and risk of suicide peaks during young adulthood and gradually wanes with advancing age

  • Tends to interfere with job performance even more than most other personality disorders

  • Theories

    • Psychological Factors

      • Object Relations Theorists: Early lack of acceptance by parents may lead to a loss of self-esteem, increased dependence, and an inability to cope with separation

      • Their parents neglected or rejected them, verbally abused them, or otherwise behaved inappropriately

      • Early sexual abuse is a common contributor to the development of BPD

    • Biological Factors

      • Biological predisposition to develop BPD

      • Lower brain serotonin activity

        • Linked repeatedly to depression, suicide, aggression, and impulsivity

      • Tied to abnormal activity and anatomy of certain brain structures

    • Sociocultural Factors

      • Cases of bpd are particularly likely to emerge in cultures that change rapidly

      • As a culture loses its stability, it leaves many of its members with problems of identity

    • Integrative Explanations

      • Biosocial explanation: BPD results from a combination of internal and external forces

        • Internal forces: Difficulty identifying and controlling one’s emotions, social skill deficits, abnormal neurotransmitter activity

        • External forces: An environment in which a child’s emotions are punished, ignored, trivialized, or disregarded

        • Received some, but not consistent, research support

      • Developmental Psychopathology Explanation: Believe that internal and external factors intersect over the course of a person’s life to help produce this disorder

        • Early parent-child relationships are particularly influential in the development of BPD

        • Children who experience early trauma and abuse and whose parents are markedly inattentive, uncaring, confusing, threatening, and dismissive, are likely to develop a disorganized attachment style

        • Central psychological deficit is the person’s inability to mentalize

        • Mentalization: People’s capacity to understand their own mental states and those of other people

        • People subjected to early dysfunctional attachment relationships emerge from their childhood with a weakened ability to mentalize and a poor ability to control their emotions, attention, thinking, and behavior

        • Cannot accurately understand either their own or other people’s underlying mental states

  • Treatments

    • Psychotherapy can eventually lead to some degree of improvement

    • Wildly fluctuating interpersonal attitudes of clients with the disorder can make it difficult for therapists to establish collaborative working relationships with them

    • Clients with BPD may violate the boundaries of the client-therapist relationship

    • Traditional psychoanalytic therapy has not been effective

    • Contemporary psychodynamic approaches have been more effective than traditional psychoanalytic approaches

    • Dialectical Behavior Therapy: A comprehensive treatment approach, applied particularly in cases of borderline personality disorder and/or suicidal intent; includes both individual therapy sessions and group sessions

      • Cognitive-behavioral interventions

      • Social skill-building and support

      • Received considerable research support

      • Now considered the treatment of choice for people with bpd

    • Antidepressant, antibipolar, antianxiety, and antipsychotic drugs

      • Help calm the emotional and aggressive storms of some ppl with bpd

      • Use of drugs on an outpatient basis is unwise

      • Should be used largely as an adjunct to psychotherapy approaches

Histrionic Personality Disorder

  • People are emotionally charged and continually seek to be the center of attention

  • Keep changing themselves to attract and impress an audience

  • Speech is scanty in detail and substance

  • Lack a sense of who they really are

  • Overreact to any minor event that gets in the way of their quest for attention

  • Some make suicide attempts, often to manipulate others

  • May draw attention to themselves by exaggerating their physical illnesses or fatigue

  • Exaggerate the depth of their relationships

  • Once believed to be more common in women than in men

  • Males and females are equally affected

  • Theories

    • Psychodynamic perspective

      • Parents were cold and controlling and left their children feeling unloved and afraid of abandonment

      • Children learned to behave dramatically so their parents would pay attention to them

      • Omg guys this reminds me of buck from 911, though i wouldn’t say he has histrionic personality disorder

    • Cognitive-Behavioral Perspective

      • People are less and less interested in knowing the world at large because they’re so self-focused and emotional

      • Hold a general assumption that they’re helpless to care for themselves

      • Constantly seek out others who will meet their needs

      • Wow this one reminds me of harry styles in ‘confessions of a gay disney prince’ though, again, i don’t think that character has histrionic personality disorder

    • Sociocultural perspective

      • Produced in part by cultural norms and expectations

      • Vain, dramatic, and selfish behavior may actually be an exaggeration of femininity as our culture once defined it

      • Diagnosed less in cultures that discourage overt sexualization

  • Treatments

    • More likely to seek out treatment on their own

    • Working with them can be very difficult because of their demands

    • May pretend to have important insights or to change during treatment merely to please the therapist

    • Therapists must remain objective and maintain strict professional boundaries

    • Cognitive-behavioral therapists - change their belief that they’re helpless and develop better, more deliberate ways of thinking and solving problems

    • Psychodynamic therapy

    • Group therapy

    • Ultimate goal: Help their clients recognize their excessive dependency, find inner satisfaction, and become more self-reliant

    • Drug therapy is less successful

Narcissistic Personality Disorder

  • People are generally grandiose, need much admiration, and feel no empathy with others

  • Expect constant attention and admiration from those around them

  • Exaggerate their achievements and talents

  • Expect others to recognize them as superior

  • Often appear arrogant

  • Often make favorable first impressions but can rarely maintain long-term relationships

  • Seldom interested in the feelings of others

  • Theories

    • Psychodynamic theories

      • Cold, rejecting parents

      • People with narcissistic personality disorder spend their lives defending against feeling rejected and wary of the world

      • Repeatedly tell themselves that they’re actually perfect and desirable

      • Seek admiration from others

    • Object Relations Theorists: Grandiose self-image is a way for these people to convince themselves that they’re totally self-sufficient and without need of warm relationships with their parents or anyone else

    • Children who are neglected, abused, and/or lose their parents are at particular risk for the later development of narcissistic personality disorder

    • Cognitive-behavioral theories

      • Narcissistic personality disorder develops when people are treated too positively in early life

      • Admiring or doting parents teach them to overvalue their self-worth

      • Repeatedly rewarded for minor or no accomplishments

    • Sociocultural theories: Link between narcissistic personality disorder and eras of narcissism

      • Family values and social ideals in certain societies periodically break down

      • Produces generations of young people who are self-centered and materialistic

      • Western cultures are considered likely to produce generations of narcissism

  • Treatments

    • One of the most difficult to treat

      • Clients are unable to acknowledge weakness

      • Clients are unable to appreciate the effect of their behavior on others

      • Clients are unable to incorporate feedback from others

    • Clients may try to manipulate the therapist

    • Psychodynamic therapists help them recognize and work through their basic insecurities and defenses

    • Cognitive-behavioral therapists try to redirect the clients’ focus onto the opinions of others and increase their ability to emphasize

    • No approaches have had clear success

“Anxious” Personality Disorders

  • Typically display anxious and fearful behavior

  • Research support for explanations is very limited

  • Treatments are considerably more helpful than that for other personality disorders

Avoidant Personality Disorder

  • People are very uncomfortable and inhibited in social situations, overwhelmed by feelings of inadequacy, and extremely sensitive to negative evaluation

  • So fearful of being rejected that they give no one an opportunity to reject them

  • Actively avoid occasions for social contact

  • Believe themselves to be unappealing or inferior to others

  • Few or no close friends

  • Similar to social anxiety disorder

    • High comorbidity rate

    • People with social anxiety disorder primarily fear social circumstances

    • People with avoidant personality disorder primarily fear social relationships

  • 2.4% of adults have avoidant personality disorder

  • Theories

    • Often assumed to have the same causes as anxiety disorders

    • Psychodynamic Theories

      • Shame and insecurity tied to childhood experiences

      • If parents repeatedly punish/ridicule their child, the child may develop a negative-self image

      • Leads to the child feeling unlovable and distrusting the love of others

    • Cognitive-Behavioral Theories

      • Harsh criticism and rejection in early childhood may lead certain people to assume that others in their environment will always judge them negatively

      • Come to expect rejection

      • Fail to develop effective social skills

  • Treatments

    • Often distrust the therapist’s sincerity and start to fear their rejection

    • Treated similarly to people with social anxiety disorder and other anxiety disorders

Dependent Personality Disorder

  • People have a pervasive, excessive need to be taken care of

  • Clinging and obedient

  • Fear separation from people with whom they’re in a close relationship

  • Rely on others so much that they can’t make decisions for themselves

  • Constantly need assistance with everything and have extreme feelings of inadequacy and helplessness

  • Theories

    • Psychodynamic Theories:

      • Unresolved conflicts during the oral stage can give rise to a lifelong need for nurturance

      • Early parental loss or rejection may prevent normal experiences of attachment and separation

      • Many parents of people with this disorder were over involved and overprotective, increasing their children’s dependency and separation anxiety

        • Buster Bluth

    • Cognitive-Behavioral Theories:

      • Behavior

        • Parents unintentionally rewarded their children’s clinging and loyal behavior

        • Parents punished acts of independence

        • Some parents’ dependent behaviors may have served as models

      • Cognitive

        • Maladaptive attitudes

          • I am inadequate and helpless

          • I must find a person to provide protection

          • Jerry - Rick and Morty

        • Dichotomous thinking

  • Treatments

    • Help patients accept responsibility for themselves

    • Couple or family therapy

    • Psychodynamic therapy focuses on the same issues as therapy for depressed people

    • Cognitive-Behavioral Therapists

      • Combine behavioral and cognitive interventions to help the clients take control of their lives

      • Assertiveness training

      • Challenge and change their assumptions of incompetence and helplessness

    • Antidepressant drug therapy

    • Group therapy format

Obsessive-Compulsive Personality Disorder

  • People are so preoccupied with order, perfection, and control that they lose all flexibility, openness, and efficiency

  • 7.9% of the population

  • Men are twice as likely

  • May became so focused on organization and details that they fail to grasp the point of the activity

  • Set unreasonably high standards for themselves and others

  • Rigid and stubborn

  • Theories

    • Freud

      • People with OCPD are anal retentive

      • Fixated at the anal stage

      • Become filled with anger

      • Persistently resist both their anger and their instincts to have bowel movements

      • Become extremely orderly and restrained

      • Any early struggles with parents over control and independence may ignite the aggression

    • Cognitive-Behavioral Theories

      • Illogical thinking processes help keep OCPD going

      • Dichotomous thinking may produce rigidity and perfectionism

      • People with OCPD tend to misread or exaggerate the potential outcomes of mistakes or errors

  • Treatments

    • Ppl with OCPD don’t think there’s anything wrong with them

    • Often respond well to psychodynamic or cognitive-behavioral therapy

    • SSRIs

Multicultural Factors: Research Neglect

  • Lack of multicultural research

  • Gender and other cultural differences may be particularly important in both the development and diagnosis of borderline personality disorder

    • 75% of all people who have a diagnosis of bpd are female

    • Could be that the traumas women experience as children are prereqs for the development of bpd

      • Should be viewed and treated as a special form of ptsd

    • Could be a reaction to persistent feelings of marginality, powerlessness, and social failure

      • Disorder may be more attributable to social inequalities than to psychological factors

Are There Better Ways to Classify Personality Disorders?

  • Personality disorders differ more in degree than in type of dysfunction

  • Should be classified by dimensions rather than by categories

The “Big Five” Theory of Personality and Personality Disorders

  • Neuroticism, extroversion, openness to experiences, agreeableness, conscientiousness

  • Everyone’s personality can be summarized by a combination of the five traits

  • Would be best to describe all people with personality disorders as being high, low, or in between on the five supertraits

    • Drop the use of personality disorders altogether

DSM-5’s Proposed Dimensional Approach

  • Personality Disorder-Trait Specified (PDTS): A personality disorder currently undergoing study for possible inclusion in a future revision of DSM-5. People would receive this diagnosis if they had significant impairment in their functioning as a result of one or more very problematic traits

  • Negative Affectivity: People experience negative emotions frequently and intensely

    • Emotional Lability: Unstable emotions

    • Anxiousness

    • Separation insecurity

    • Preservation: Repetition of certain behaviors despite repeated failures

    • Submissiveness

    • Hostility

    • Depressivity

    • Suspiciousness

    • Strong emotional reactions (overreactions to emotionally arousing situations)

  • Detachment: People tend to withdraw from other people and social interactions

    • Restricted Emotional Reactivity: Little reaction to emotionally arousing situations

    • Depressivity

    • Suspiciousness

    • Withdrawal

    • Anhedonia: Inability to feel pleasure or take interest in things

    • Intimacy avoidance

  • Antagonism: People behave in ways that put them at odds with other people

    • Manipulativeness

    • Deceitfulness

    • Attention seeking

    • Hostility

  • Disinhibition: People behave impulsively, without reflecting on potential future consequences

    • Irresponsibility

    • Distractibility

    • Risk taking

  • Psychoticism: People have unusual and bizarre experiences

    • Unusual beliefs and experiences

    • Eccentricity

    • Cognitive and perceptual dysregulation: Odd thought processes and sensory experiences