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      Emotional Lability and Affective Synchrony in Borderline Personality Disorder

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          Abstract

          Extant research on emotional lability in borderline personality disorder (BPD) has focused almost exclusively on lability of individual emotions or emotion types, with limited research considering how different types of emotions shift together over time. Thus, this study examined the temporal dynamics of emotion in BPD at the level of both individual emotions (i.e., self-conscious emotions [SCE], anger, and anxiety) and mixed emotions (i.e., synchrony between emotions). One hundred forty-four women from the community completed a diagnostic interview and laboratory study involving five emotion induction tasks (each of which was preceded and followed by a 5-min resting period or neutral task). State ratings of SCE, anger, and anxiety were provided at 14 time points (before and after each laboratory task and resting period). Hierarchical linear modeling results indicate that women with BPD reported greater mean levels of SCE and Anxiety (but not Anger), and greater lability of Anxiety. Women with BPD also exhibited greater variability in lability of all three emotions (suggestive of within-group differences in the relevance of lability to BPD). Results also revealed synchrony (i.e., positive relations) between each possible pair of emotions, regardless of BPD status. Follow-up regression analyses suggest the importance of accounting for lability when examining the role of synchrony in BPD, as the relation of SCE-Anger synchrony to BPD symptom severity was moderated by Anger and SCE lability. Specifically, synchronous changes in SCE and Anger were associated with greater BPD symptom severity when large shifts in SCE were paired with minor shifts in Anger.

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          Author and article information

          Journal
          101517071
          37399
          Personal Disord
          Personal Disord
          Personality disorders
          1949-2715
          1949-2723
          14 August 2015
          July 2016
          01 July 2017
          : 7
          : 3
          : 211-220
          Affiliations
          [a ]Department of Psychiatry and Human Behavior, University of Mississippi Medical Center, Jackson, MS 39216, USA
          [b ]Department of Psychology, University of Nebraska-Lincoln, Lincoln, NE 68588, USA
          [c ]Department of Psychology, Miami University, Oxford, OH 45056, USA
          Author notes
          [* ]Correspondence should be addressed to Michelle Schoenleber, Department of Psychiatry and, Human Behavior, University of Mississippi Medical Center, 2500 North State Street, Jackson, MS, 39216, USA; Phone: (601) 984-5825; michelle.schoenleber@ 123456gmail.com
          Article
          PMC4930072 PMC4930072 4930072 nihpa715272
          10.1037/per0000145
          4930072
          27362623
          849f79e5-9636-4dd4-aa94-8c13a507c4ab
          History
          Categories
          Article

          Anger,Self-Conscious Emotion,Affective Synchrony,Emotional Lability,Borderline Personality Disorder

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