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Affect in Early Memories of Borderline Patients
14
Citations
2
References
1991
Year
NeuropsychologyObject Relations TheoriesAffective NeuroscienceExplicit MemoryPsychologySocial SciencesPersonality DisorderBorderline PatientsObject Relations TheoryMemoryPsychoanalytic PsychotherapyPersonality DisordersExperimental PsychopathologyEarly MemoriesCognitive SciencePsychiatryPsychodynamicPsychotic DisorderMemory LossMedicinePsychopathology
Psychoanalytically oriented observers using the framework of object relations theory noted that patients with borderline personality organization manifest serious pathology in their capacity to use internalized imagery to cope with the vicissitudes of separation-individuation. This study examined one source of such imagery, the affect associated with a specific sample of early memories, including the earliest recollections of parents. Patients with borderline personality disorder were compared with paranoid schizophrenics and patients with neurotic character pathology. Forty-five outpatients, 15 in each group, participated in the study. It was found that borderline patients had significantly fewer positively toned early memories than neurotics or paranoid schizophrenics. Only the neurotic group, had a majority of affectively positive memories. The results are generally consistent with object relations theories of borderline psychopathology.
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