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Showing posts with label Psychiatric research. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Psychiatric research. Show all posts

Tuesday, May 7, 2019

Personality Disorders: Researchers Continue to Make Misleading Assumptions





In this blog I have discussed several instances of researchers making unwarranted assumptions about both their study populations and in interpreting their results in a variety of ways. In this post, I’d like to focus on three recent articles about personality disorder research. The first is a possible refutation of a common presumption, while the second two assume facts not in evidence.


The difference between “cannot” and “do not:” Confusion based on lack of attention to subject motivation, and ignorance of the concept of “false self.”

Shane MS; Groat LL. “Capacity for upregulation of emotional processing in psychopathy: all you have to do is ask.” Social Cognitive & Affective Neuroscience. 13(11):1163-1176, 2018 11 08.

Could it be that a psychopath’s apparent lack of ability to be empathic stem from differences in motivation rather than ability? This article is certainly possible evidence that this is the case. Perhaps people who routinely engage in anti-social acts suppress empathic responses because that is their role in their family. That what has been observed results from subjects’ false selves

This study of course does not address that latter issue, but thinking about it certainly suggests something which could explain the results. (Of course, it would help in that endeavor if we could read minds, because the thing about a false self is that it is based on someone lying to themselves in order to fulfill a social function, so they are highly unlikely to tell experimenters the truth during a short interview).

In any event, in this study, high-psychopathy participants showed typical, significantly reduced neural responses in the brain on an fMRI to negatively-toned pictures under passive viewing conditions. However, this effect seemed to disappear when the subjects were instructed to try to maximize their naturally occurring emotional reactions to these same pictures!

The locations of these increased neural responses included several brain regions involved in the generation of basic emotional responses and which have often been shown to be reduced in psychopathic populations. Thus, despite baseline differences from non-psychopaths,  high-psychopathy participants appeared capable of deliberately manifesting emotional responses to the negatively toned pictures within several brain regions believed to underlie emotional processing. 

Of note was that the magnitude of these deliberately evoked emotional responses was comparable to levels exhibited by low-psychopathy participants’ during passive processing.

A high index of suspicion versus an “inability” to correctly read the mental states of others

Quek et. al., “Mentalization in Adolescents with Borderline Personality Disorder.: a Comparison with Health Controls.” Journal of Personality Disorders, 33 (2):145-165, April 2018.

Mentalization refers to an individual’s capacity to understand and interpret the meaning of one’s own and others’ behavior by considering underlying thoughts, feelings, intentions, and desire. As in other studies, this was “measured” in adolescent subjects with borderline personality disorder (BPD) and normal controls while interpreting the mental states of others shown in pictures, videos, and narrative vignettes of people in various social situations.

The authors of this paper mention almost in passing that the ability to mentalize  is thought to develop within the context of, and is dependent on, the quality of infant- parent interactions. In the experiment, the differences between the performance of the BPD subjects compared to the control group on the various tests became much greater when the material they interpreted suggested attachment-related stress or arousal. 

Additionally, the major differences between BPD subjects and controls seemed to primarily involve what the authors describe as hypermentalization (that is, making much more complex inferences than expected about social cues, signs, and mental states) by the BPD subjects, rather than through a loss of detail.

Despite all this, the authors don’t seem to consider the obvious possibility that attachment figures’ influence on their children’s ideas about the social behaviors of others continues unabated long after they are no longer infants.

So let’s do a mental experiment. How might you evaluate the motives of other people if you were to grow up in an family environment characterized by your being constantly invalidated and given highly confusing double messages about how you are supposed to think and behave, and even being verbally abused— if not physically or sexually abused—if you seem to have guessed wrong about that? Do you think you might have a higher index of suspicion about other people’s intentions than someone who did not grow up in that environment? Do you think you might have more difficulty making sense of other people's behavior? Ya think??

So, do kids with BPD grow up in that environment? Well, in addition to Linehan’s theory of an invalidating environment being part of the etiology of BPD, and my own paper from 2005 (Comprehensive Psychiatry, 46[5] pp. 340-352) which showed that adults with BPD reported about three times the number of double messages from their parents than non-BPD controls, consider the following paper.

Changing parent’s behavior towards BPD children can make those with BPD better—but their behavior apparently had nothing to do with their kids having developed the disorder in the first place

Grenyer et. al., “A Randomized Controlled Trial of Group Psychoeducation for Carers of Persons with Borderline Personality Disorder.” Journal of Personality Disorders 33 (2):214-228, April 2018.

As mentioned in a post on my blog on Psychology Today, researchers into BPD have of late developed an interest in the “burdens” on parents and other caretakers (almost always other relatives) of having a child or adult child with the disorder. Such “carers” are the subject of this particular study, and were recruited through flyers distributed to mental health services, local media, patient advocacy groups, and patient family and support networks. The recruits were put into groups and given a lot of “psychoeducation” about their charges.

The first thing that jumped out at me in this paper was the fact that, even though the carers were evaluated for being critical and over-involved with their BPD children, there was nothing mentioned about seeing if the parents had been guilty of physically or sexually abusing their charges when the fledgling BPD patients were children. This, despite the fact that every empirical study done on this subject in BPD patients finds a high level of significant abuse history. Of course, parents who respond to flyers and volunteer to be research subjects in this sort of study are highly unlikely to have been seriously abusive. So right away, the experiments are selecting for a somewhat atypical sample of parents of children with BPD.

The second thing that jumped out at me was that the psychoeducation provided for the subjects was supposedly based on Bowen family therapy theory, when the researchers mentioned and seem to know absolutely nothing about one of the major tenets of that theory. You know, those that involve intergenerational transfer of dysfunctional family patterns. The researchers mention nothing about the parents being somewhat responsible for the development of the disorder in their kids in the first place!

That they seem to make this assumption is even more awe-inspiring when you look at what was being taught to the parents and which apparently led to improvement in the BPD child’s behavior as well as in the parent-child relationship. They were taught to:

1.      Be non-judgmental, validating, attentive and appropriate.
2.      Reduce their reactivity and try to remain calm and “mindful.”
3.      Attend to their own needs through staying connected with friends and family, attending to their own physical and mental health, and taking breaks.
4.      Model appropriate assertiveness and setting appropriate boundaries and ground rules for the relationship.
5.      Get outside help when crises arise and having a crisis plan.

So, if they had to be taught these things, and if doing those things leads to improvements in their children, maybe the fact that they were doing the opposite of those things all the time previous to the experiment was what was creating their child’s problems in the first place. Exactly what you would expect considering the family dynamics of BPD.

Tuesday, September 1, 2015

Some Great Quotable Quotes from People Who Agree with Me About Stuff - Part I




Some people just naturally have a way with words, and succinctly summarize ideas using comments that I wish I had come up with. 

Today's post, the first of a series of two, contains some of my favorite recent quotes that center around themes discussed in this blog. Many of them come from three of my favorite sources of great quotes: advice columnist Carolyn Hax, parenting advisor John Rosemond, and fellow blogger George Dawson.

Of course, the authors of these quotes and I do not agree about many other things, but so what?

I have been collecting the quotes and putting them on my Facebook fan page at http://www.facebook.com/pages/David-M-Allen-MD/80658565761?fref=ts. The ones contained in this post and the next started in January of 2014, and are loosely organized by topic.

You may find a hidden joke or two among the mayhem.

Psychiatric and Psychotherapy Research

"A significant p value does not specify the probability that the same result can be reproduced in another study." ~ Prof. Gerd Gigerenzer, Max Planck Institute for Human Development.

"If being cited [as a reference in another published study] meant being read, citation statistics might well be a useful criterion. Yet a study estimated that of the articles cited, only 20% had actually been read... For instance, the most important publication in 20th-century biology, Watson and Crick’s paper on the double helix, was rarely cited in the first 10 years after its publication. Innovative ideas take time to be appreciated."
       ~ Prof. Gerd Gigerenzer

It's all in how you look at it, Department:
Medscape News Story about a Study: "Individuals with a neurotic personality type may have reduced brain plasticity during the performance of working memory tasks that may affect their ability to store memories, say US researchers in findings that show the opposite effect in people with a conscientious personality."
         Said one commenter in response: "It is nice to have documentation what those of us who have hired office help have known for years. Personnel with personal problems that occupies their minds continuously are unable to perform satisfactorily in the office."

" I have lost count of the number of papers [that "study" what is supposed to be major depressive disorder] I have read where the depression rating scores were what I consider to be low to trivial." ~ George Dawson, M.D.

In a PTSD study comparing CBT to psychodynamic therapy: "The so-called psychodynamic therapists were also forbidden to discuss the trauma that brought the patient to treatment. Imagine that—you come to treatment for PTSD because you have experienced a traumatic event, and your therapist is forbidden from discussing it with you. When patients brought up the trauma, the therapists were instructed to change the topic." ~ Jonathan Shedler, Ph.D. 

"Evidence based data' is suggestive but typically based on group data, hence only suggestive when working with a single patient. Other sources of suggestions are also available." ~ Thad Harshbarger, Ph.D.  

"The notion that biological changes going on during early adolescence predispose the young teen to all manner of difficult behavior is a myth belied historically, cross-culturally, and by the fact that plenty of young teens are respectful, obedient, and hard-working. That last fact is conclusive evidence to the effect that despite hype to the contrary, there are no changes going on in the young adolescent brain that make inevitable any sort of problematic behavior." ~ John Rosemond, Ph.D.

"When every study reported by a particular group of researchers just happens to reinforce their shared belief system, it makes me skeptical." ~ Loretta Graziano Breuning, Ph.D. 
         Are you listening, CBT and bipolar II researchers?

"Neuroscientist: someone who knows how little we know about the brain." ~ Neuroskeptic

“Maybe sometimes it’s the questions that are biased, not the answers,” ~ John Ioannidis, Ph.D., on bias in medical research - for example,drug companies comparing their new drugs against those already known to be inferior to others on the market.

"Blaming personality disorders on brain pathology due to bad genes is like "blaming badly written software on the hardware." ~ "SwissCheese," who commented on a post on my Psychology Today blog and says he's a computer scientist married to someone with borderline personality disorder.

"The NIMH devotes almost all of its enormous research budget to glamorous, but very long shot, biological research that over the past four decades has contributed exactly nothing to the treatment and lives of the severely [mentally] ill." ~ Allen Frances, M.D.

"The trial result generally depends on rating scale or clinician global rating scale results that grossly oversimplify the condition and measure parameters that are irrelevant in clinical settings. The best example I can think of is depression rating scales that list DSM criteria for depression and then apply a Likert dimension to those symptoms. In clinical practice it is common to see hundreds of patients with the same score on this scale who have a full spectrum of disability from absolutely none to totally disabled. Which population might be more likely to exhibit an antidepressant effect? " ~ Richard Dawson, M.D.

"Published' and ‘true' are not synonyms" ~ Brian Nosek, Ph.D., a psychology professor at the University of Virginia in Charlottesville

"Laboratory studies of social attention have largely focused on the extraction of social information from images (e.g., photos and videos). However, in the natural world attending to real people involves both the reading of social cues and the sending of social signals. ... the influence of another individual on human behaviour is so pronounced that the implied social presence of another person is enough to have a profound effect on where people look, what they say and do, and even modify their willingness to cheat or to engage in prosocial behaviours." ~ Alan Kingstone, Ph.D.

"The hypothalamus is involved in the body's centrally important "Four F's:" fight, flight, feeding, and sex." ~ Otto Kernberg, M.D.

"No man should escape our universities without knowing how little he knows." ~ J. Robert Oppenheimer

"The biggest misconception here seems to be that patients are accurate reporters and they have no unconscious agenda." ~ George Dawson, M.D.

Relationships

"No one can help you if you’d rather be safe than brave.” ~ Carolyn Hax

"Hiding how you feel is how love dies. You think he backed the wrong horse here? Then say so. A grown-up won’t make you pay." ~ Carolyn Hax

"You want a spouse who wants to meet your needs, as part of a commitment to mutual support." ~ Carolyn Hax

What to say to a spouse who refuses to see a marriage counselor when you request it, because he or she doesn't have a problem, it's all just you: "But you do have a problem: Your marriage is in trouble." ~ Annie's Mailbox

"You either aren’t up to this challenge or you don’t want to be, and that’s all you need to know, because choosing a life partner isn’t about being open-minded or fair or noble. It isn’t just about loving or being in love, either. It’s about an unflinching estimation of what works." ~ Carolyn Hax

"One problem that recurs more and more frequently these days, in books and plays and movies, is the inability of people to communicate with the people they love: husbands and wives who can't communicate, children who can't communicate with their parents, and so on. And the characters in these books and plays and so on, and in real life, I might add, spend hours bemoaning the fact that they can't communicate. I feel that if a person can't communicate, the very least he can do is to shut up." ~ Tom Lehrer

"If people are determined to be insulted, they will find a way to be insulted." ~ Amy Dickinson

Parenting

"An adult who enters into a power struggle with a child is no longer acting like an authority figure; therefore, the only person with any power in an adult-child power struggle is the child." ~ John Rosemond, Ph.D.

Letter to advice columnist Carolyn Hax: I am happy he is sharing his interests (in rap music) with me and I have explained to him my perspective that the material makes me uneasy for all of the above reasons. His interest continues unabated. Do I set certain limits on what he can listen to (he is 14) or do I just let it be and hope he grows out of it?
          Ms. Hax's answer: You omitted (c) Raise him, then trust him, to be one of the millions of people who are able to distinguish between an art form and an instruction manual for the treatment of others.

"I, too, am skeptical of the 'Oh you’ll love them when they’re yours' line. Some people regret having kids and just know they can’t say that out loud, and I’d wager there’s a bigger population who don’t even let themselves think that." ~ Carolyn Hax

"Helicopter parenting now seems to have blossumed into Apache Blackhawk parenting." - John Rosemond, Ph.D.

"Parents help their kids with homework, often downright doing it for them; they help their kids study for tests; and they demand of educators that their kids’ school experience be immaculate. I don’t believe that pouring more money into education has worked or is going to work, but I do believe that teachers should be duly compensated for putting up with this garbage. " ~ John Rosemond, Ph.D.

"Parents who are not on the same parenting page will not get on the same page by regarding and treating their differences as a parenting problem. It's a marital problem." ~ John Rosemond, Ph.D.

To be continued.....