An exploration of the relationship between ineffective modes of mentalization and difficulties related to borderline personality disorder: A network approach

The mentalization-based perspective of Borderline Personality Disorder (BPD) underscores fluctuating interpersonal functionality, believed to arise from suboptimal mentalization modes, including hyper- and hypomentalizing. The connection between ineffective mentalizing and specific BPD challenges re...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of affective disorders 2025-04, Vol.374, p.225-234
Hauptverfasser: Asztalos, Lilla, Senra, Hugo, O'Driscoll, Ciarán, Feigenbaum, Janet, Griem, Julia, King-Casas, Brooks, Nolte, Tobias, Pratt, Richard, Vaziri, Farzad, Montague, Read, Fonagy, Peter
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container_issue
container_start_page 225
container_title Journal of affective disorders
container_volume 374
creator Asztalos, Lilla
Senra, Hugo
O'Driscoll, Ciarán
Feigenbaum, Janet
Griem, Julia
King-Casas, Brooks
Nolte, Tobias
Pratt, Richard
Vaziri, Farzad
Montague, Read
Fonagy, Peter
description The mentalization-based perspective of Borderline Personality Disorder (BPD) underscores fluctuating interpersonal functionality, believed to arise from suboptimal mentalization modes, including hyper- and hypomentalizing. The connection between ineffective mentalizing and specific BPD challenges remains ambiguous. Network theory offers a unique means to investigate the hypothesis that distinct yet interconnected mental challenges (‘symptoms’) construct ‘disorders’ through their continuous mutual interactions. This study aimed to probe the pairwise interrelations between ineffective mentalizing and BPD challenges and to distinguish these relations between individuals with (clinical group) and without (community group) a BPD diagnosis using a network analysis approach. Through a cross-sectional secondary data analysis, a moderated Mixed Graphical Model was employed on data from 575 individuals (350 clinical, 225 community). The study evaluated associations between ineffective mentalization modes (hypermentalization, hypomentalization, and no mentalization) gauged by the MASC and self-reported BPD-associated challenges, using BPD diagnosis as the moderating variable. The analysis confirmed the presence of significant links between ineffective mentalizing and specific interpersonal BPD challenges, which were moderated by BPD diagnosis. It implied that hypermentalization and hypomentalization might simultaneously shape BPD-associated challenges. The results offer fresh insights into the interplay between hypermentalization, hypomentalization, and BPD-related difficulties. •Ineffective mentalizing modes are closely associated with distinct BPD-related challenges;•BPD-related difficulties linked to ineffective mentalizing modes were intrinsically interpersonal;•Hypermentalization and hypomentalization might simultaneously shape BPD-associated challenges.
doi_str_mv 10.1016/j.jad.2025.01.031
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subjects Borderline personality disorder
Ineffective mentalizing
Network models
title An exploration of the relationship between ineffective modes of mentalization and difficulties related to borderline personality disorder: A network approach
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