Comprehensive Psychiatry
Volume 51, Issue 3 , Pages 275-285, May 2010

An experimental investigation of emotional reactivity and delayed emotional recovery in borderline personality disorder: the role of shame

  • Kim L. Gratz

      Affiliations

    • Department of Psychiatry and Human Behavior, University of Mississippi Medical Center, Jackson, MS 39216, USA
    • Corresponding Author InformationCorresponding author. Tel.: +1 601 815 6450.
  • ,
  • M. Zachary Rosenthal

      Affiliations

    • Duke University Medical Center, Durham, NC 27710, USA
  • ,
  • Matthew T. Tull

      Affiliations

    • Department of Psychiatry and Human Behavior, University of Mississippi Medical Center, Jackson, MS 39216, USA
  • ,
  • C.W. Lejuez

      Affiliations

    • Center for Addictions, Personality, and Emotion Research and the Department of Psychology, University of Maryland, College Park, MD 20742, USA
  • ,
  • John G. Gunderson

      Affiliations

    • Department of Psychiatry, McLean Hospital and Harvard Medical School, Belmont, MA 02478, USA

published online 21 December 2009.

Abstract 

Despite the emphasis on emotional reactivity and delayed emotional recovery in prominent theoretical accounts of borderline personality disorder (BPD), research in this area remains limited. This study sought to extend extant research by examining emotional reactivity (and recovery following emotional arousal) to 2 laboratory stressors (one general, and the other involving negative evaluation) and exploring the impact of these stressors on subjective responding across the specific emotions of anxiety, irritability, hostility, and shame. We hypothesized that outpatients with BPD (compared to outpatients without a personality disorder; non-PD) would demonstrate heightened subjective emotional reactivity to both stressors, as well as a delayed return to baseline levels of emotional arousal. Results provide evidence for context- and emotion-specific reactivity in BPD. Specifically, BPD participants (compared to non-PD participants) evidenced heightened reactivity to the negative evaluation but not the general stressor. Furthermore, results provide support for shame-specific reactivity in BPD, with BPD participants (vs non-PD participants) evidencing a significantly different pattern of change in shame (but not in reported anxiety, irritability, or hostility) across the course of the study. Specifically, not only did BPD participants report higher levels of shame in response to the negative evaluation, their levels of shame remained elevated following this stressor (through the post-recovery period at the end of the study). Findings suggest the importance of continuing to examine emotional reactivity in BPD within specific contexts and across distinct emotions, rather than at the general trait level.

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PII: S0010-440X(09)00091-1

doi:10.1016/j.comppsych.2009.08.005

Comprehensive Psychiatry
Volume 51, Issue 3 , Pages 275-285, May 2010