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PERSONALITY DISORDERS

Gain insight into the nature of personality disorders, including their clusters, traits, and treatment options. Explore the characteristics of Cluster A and Cluster B personality disorders, such as paranoid, schizoid, antisocial, and borderline personality disorders. Understand the important distinctions between antisocial behavior and antisocial personality disorder. Discover the perspectives on the biological factors contributing to these disorders.

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PERSONALITY DISORDERS

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  1. PERSONALITYDISORDERS Chapter 14

  2. Personality Disorders • Personality trait: An enduring pattern of perceiving, relating to, and thinking about the environment and others. • Personality disorders: Ingrained patterns of relating to other people, situations, and events with a rigid and maladaptive pattern of inner experience and behavior. • Dating back to adolescence or early adulthood

  3. The Nature of Personality Disorders • Behavior patterns must manifest themselves in at least two of the following four areas: • Cognition • Affectivity • Interpersonal functioning • Impulse control As a result of these behaviors, the individual experiences distress or impairment

  4. DSM-5 Personality Disorder Clusters • The DSM-5 groups the 11 diagnoses into three clusters based on shared characteristics: • Cluster A • includes paranoid, schizoid, and schizotypal personality disorders, which share the features of odd and eccentric behavior. • Cluster B • includes antisocial, borderline, histrionic, and narcissistic personality disorders, which share overdramatic, emotional, and erratic or unpredictable attitudes and behaviors. • Cluster C • includes avoidant, dependent, and obsessive-compulsive personality disorders, which share anxious and fearful behaviors.

  5. Cluster APersonality Disorders • Cluster A of the personality disorders in DSM-5 include those disorders characterized by eccentric behavior. • In other words, individuals with these disorders show characteristics that might lead others to view them as slightly odd, unusual, or peculiar.

  6. Paranoid PersonalityDisorder • A personality disorder whose outstanding feature is that the individual is unduly suspicious of others and is always on guard against potential danger or harm. • Impossible to trust people • Project blame onto others • Refuse to seek professional help

  7. Schizoid Personality Disorder • Indifference to social and sexual relationships • Prefer to be alone • No desire to love or be loved • Cold, reserved, withdrawn • Insensitive to feelings of others

  8. Schizotypal Personality Disorder • A personality disorder that primarily involves odd beliefs, behavior, appearance, and interpersonal style. • Such individuals lack a clear sense of direction or motivation, and do not have a clear set of standards against which to measure their behavior • People with this disorder may have peculiar ideas, such as magical thinking and beliefs in psychic phenomena. • They lack a clear sense of direction or motivation, and do not have a clear set of standards against which to measure their behavior.

  9. Schizotypal Personality Disorder • Social isolation • Eccentricity • Peculiar communication • Poor social adaptation • Treatment • Parallels interventions commonly used in treating schizophrenia

  10. Cluster BPersonality Disorders These behaviors include impulsivity, an inflatedsense of self, and a tendency to seek stimulation. include those that are marked by dramatic, emotional, or erratic behaviors.

  11. Antisocial Personality Disorder • A personality disorder characterized by a lack of regard for society’s moral or legal standards and an impulsive and risky lifestyle. • Psychopathy:A personality type characterized by a cluster of traits that constitutes the core of what is now called antisocial personality disorder. • Based upon large scale studies of forensic populations: • Core psychopathic personality traits • Antisocial lifestyle

  12. Antisocial Personality Disorder • The diagnostic criteria in the DSM-5 require that an individual show a pervasive pattern of three out of seven possible behaviors: • Failure to conform to social norms • Deceitfulness • Impulsivity • Aggressiveness • Disregard for safety of self or others • Irresponsibility • Lack of remorse

  13. Important Distinctions • There is a difference between antisocial personality disorder and antisocial behavior. • Antisocial behavior • Illegal or immoral behavior such as stealing, lying, or cheating • Criminal • A legal term, not a psychological concept • Antisocial personality disorder may manifest itself in behaviors such as job problems, promiscuity, and aggressiveness. • Maturation hypothesis:The proposition that people with antisocial personality and the other Cluster B disorders become better able to manage their behaviors as they age.

  14. Perspectives onAntisocial Personality • Biological • Possible genetic causes • Various brain abnormalities • Monoamine oxidase A - An enzyme coded by the MAOA gene. • A mutation in this gene results in insufficient amounts of monoamine oxidase in the nervous system, which results in abnormally high levels of dopamine, serotonin, and norepinephrine. • Hippocampus, the brain structure involved in short-term memory processing, functions abnormally in individuals with psychopathy. • People high in psychopathy have deficits in frontal lobe functioning.

  15. Perspectives onAntisocial Personality • Psychological • Neuropsychological deficits • Passive avoidance • Response modulation hypothesis • Antisocial personality disorder causes neuropsychological deficits reflected in abnormal patterns of learning and attention. • Passive avoidance - Correct responses involve learning to avoid responding to a previously punished stimulus. • Response modulation hypothesis attempts to explain the failure of individuals high in psychopathy to learn from negative experience and to process emotional information. • Individuals high on the trait of psychopathy are unable to pay enough attention to secondary cues to switch their attention when necessary.

  16. Treatment of Antisocial Personality Disorder • Problems of working with these individuals • Seeming lack of motivation to change • Tendency toward deception and manipulation • Lack of deep or lasting emotion • Treatment goals: • Measure the effectiveness of therapy in terms of re-arrest or recividism. • Focus on changes in job performance, relationships with others, and involvement in noncriminal activities.

  17. Borderline Personality Disorder • Pervasive pattern of poor impulse control and instability in mood, interpersonal relationships, and self-image • BPD’s central feature is that of instability • The way that people with BPD relate to others is termed “splitting”

  18. Borderline personality disorder - bpd • BPDrests on the individual’s demonstration of at least five out of a possible nine behaviors: • Frantic efforts to avoid abandonment • Unstable and intense relationships • Identity disturbance • Impulsivity in areas such as sexuality, spending, or reckless driving • Recurrent suicidal behavior • Affective instability • Chronic feelings of emptiness • Difficulty controlling anger • Occasional feelings of paranoia or dissociative symptoms. • Splitting: A defense, as being all good or all bad, usually resulting in disturbed interpersonal relationships.

  19. Perspectives on Borderline Personality • Biological • High heritability • Abnormalities in: • Amygdala and prefrontal cortex • Neurotransmitters and hormones • Childhood sexual abuse may alter sympathetic nervous system that leads to hypersensitivity and impulsivity in adulthood. • BPD symptoms are tied to a number of biological factors: • High heritability. • Abnormalities in the amygdala and prefrontal cortex, areas of the brain involved in emotional processing and regulation. • People with BPD may also have abnormalities in neurotransmitters and hormones involved in regulating emotional responses and sensitivity to pain.

  20. Perspectives on Borderline Personality • Psychological • Emotional dysregulation • Lack of awareness, understanding, or acceptance of emotions. • Inability to control the intensity or duration of emotions. • Unwillingness to experience emotional distress as an aspect of pursuing goals. • Inability to engage in goal-directed behaviors when experiencing distress. • Distress tolerance • Experiential avoidance • Childhood neglect or traumatic experiences • Marital or psychiatric difficulties

  21. Treatment of Borderline Personality • Dialectical behavior therapy (DBT):Reduce the frequency of self-destructive acts and to improve the client’s ability to handle disturbing emotions, such as anger and dependency. • Using a process called core mindfulness, DBT clinicians teach their clients to balance their emotions, reason, and intuition as they approach life’s problems. • Transference-focused psychotherapy uses the client-clinician relationships as the framework for helping clients achieve greater understanding of their unconscious feelings and motives.

  22. Needs Involved in Basic Principles of Effective Treatment for Clients with BPD • Need for clinicians to: • Take over a primary role in treatment • Provide a therapeutic structure • Support the client • Involve the client in the therapeutic process • Take an active role in treatment • Deal with the client’s suicidal threats or self-harming acts • Be self-aware and ready to consult with colleagues

  23. Histrionic Personality Disorder • Attention-seeking is one of the pathological personality traits. • Exaggerated emotionalreactions, approaching theatricality, in everyday behavior. • Show extreme pleasure as the center of attention and who behave in whatever way necessary to ensure that this happens. • They are excessively concerned with their physical appearance, often trying to draw attention to themselves in such extreme ways that their behavior seems ludicrous.

  24. Histrionic Personality Disorder • They want immediate gratification of their wishes and overreact to even minor provocations, usually in an exaggerated way, such as by weeping or fainting. • Although their relationships are superficial, they assume them to be intimate and refer to acquaintances as “dear” friends • Flirtatious and seductive • Demand reassurance, praise, approval of others • Need for immediate gratification • Easily influenced by others • Lack analytical ability

  25. Narcissistic Personality Disorder • Unrealistic, inflated sense of self-importance and lack of sensitivity to other people’s needs • Sense of entitlement translates into personality traits of grandiosity, and their desire for admiration leads them to seek out recognition whenever possible. • Individuals with NPD may have a truly inflated and grandiose sense of self. • Clinicians refer to them as high on grandiose narcissism. • Vulnerable narcissism - Who rely excessively on other people to confirm their worth.

  26. Theories of Narcissistic Personality • Freudian • Stuck in early psychosexual stages • Psychodynamic • Empathy • Cognitive behavioral • Maladaptive ideas • Grandiose ideas clash with their experiences of failure

  27. Theories of Narcissistic Personality • Theorists regard the narcissistic individual as having failed to form a cohesive, integrated, sense of self. • Narcissistic personality disorder is expressed as the adult’s expression of this childhood insecurity and need for attention. • Clinicians who work within the psychodynamic perspective use empathy to support the client’s search for recognition and admiration. • As therapists increasingly support them, they become less grandiose and self-centered. • Cognitive-behavioral theorists focus on the maladaptive ideas that they are exceptional people who deserve far better treatment than ordinary humans.

  28. Treatment of Narcissistic Personality • Most effective approach • Provide reassurance and develop a more realistic view of themselves and other people • People with NPD are difficult to treat • Tend not to have insight into their disorder • Extreme perfectionism can obstruct treatment

  29. Cluster C personality disorders They tend to be inner-directed and may draw little attention to themselves, in contrast to those individuals with personality disorders in Cluster B.

  30. Avoidant Personality Disorder • The individual desires, but is fearful of, any involvement with other people and isterrified at the prospect of being publicly embarrassed • People with avoidant personality disorder become extremely sensitive to rejection and ridicule, interpreting the most innocent remark as criticism. • Withdrawn, unlikely to experience intimacy, and unable to feel pleasure.

  31. Avoidant - Theories • Cognitive-behavioral • Hypersensitive due to parental criticism • Feel unworthy of other people’s regard • Expect not to be liked • Avoid getting close to avoid expected rejection • Distorted perceptions of experiences with others • The psychodynamic perspective focuses on fear of attachment.

  32. Treatment of Avoidant Personality • Cognitive-behavioral • Break negative cycle of avoidance • Confront and correct dysfunctional attitudes and thoughts • Graduated exposure to social situations • Learn skills to improve chance of intimacy • Interventions are successfully accomplished after the client comes to trust the therapist. • Therapists must be extremely patient in their attempts to build a therapeutic relationship.

  33. Dependent Personality Disorder • The individual is extremely passive • Tends to cling to other people to the point of being unable to make any decisions • Without others near them, people with dependent personality feel despondent and abandoned.

  34. Obsessive-Compulsive Personality Disorder • A personality disorder involving intense perfectionism and inflexibility manifested in worrying, indecisiveness, and behavioral rigidity. • OCPD is a disturbance of personality, not a disturbance involving anxiety or even out-of-control behaviors • OCPD do not experience obsessions and compulsions. OCPD refers to this rigidly compulsive personality tendency and also obsessive concern with perfectionism.

  35. Obsessive-Compulsive Disorder • Sense of self and self-worth in terms of work productivity • Pathological personality trait - Rigid perfectionism • Quality of perseveration • Obsessive-compulsive personality disorder: Intense perfectionism and inflexibility manifested in worrying, indecisiveness, and behavioral rigidity. • Quality of perseveration - Experience a great deal of negative affect and tend to go back over and over what they’ve done, looking for flaws. • People with OCPD do not experience obsessions and compulsions.

  36. Theories ofObsessive-Compulsive • Freudian • Fixation at anal psychosexual stage • Cognitive-behavioral • Unrealistic standard of perfection • Ruminative tendency • Metacognitive interpersonal therapy • Think about their thinking • Failure to achieve their unrealistic standard of perfection makes them feel worthless. • Person with OCPD tends to intellectualize, to ruminate over past actions, and to worry about making mistakes.

  37. Biopsychosocial Perspective • Disorders represent: • Mix of long-standing personal dispositions and behavior patterns • Disturbances in identity and interpersonal relationships

  38. And in conclusion . . . ? Personality disorders are • Chronic and persistent • Hard to explain • Difficult to treat • Subject to much further study

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