Article
Psychology, Multidisciplinary
Bettina Bajzat, Peter Soltesz, Klara Soltesz-Varhelyi, Evelyn Erika Levay, Zsolt Szabolcs Unoka
Summary: Borderline personality disorder is a complex mental disorder characterized by interpersonal instability, emotion dysregulation, self-harm, and impulsive decision-making. This study investigates impulsive decision-making in individuals with BPD using Rogers' decision-making test. The results show significant differences between BPD patients and healthy controls in terms of decision-making quality and risk adjustment.
FRONTIERS IN PSYCHOLOGY
(2023)
Article
Psychology, Multidisciplinary
Stine Iversen, Arvid Nikolai Kildahl
Summary: Autistic individuals without intellectual disabilities may not be diagnosed until adolescence/adulthood. Misdiagnosis of autism as personality disorder (PD) may occur due to co-occurring self-injury, depression, and attention deficit disorder (ADD), as well as lack of comprehensive assessment and autism knowledge in general mental health services.
FRONTIERS IN PSYCHOLOGY
(2022)
Article
Psychology, Multidisciplinary
Beatriz Thadani, Ana M. Perez-Garcia, Jose Bermudez
Summary: This study explores the relationship between pathological personality traits, perceived social support, and functional disability in individuals with borderline personality disorder (BPD). The results reveal that BPD patients have lower levels of perceived social support and higher levels of functional disability compared to the control group. Pathological personality traits directly and indirectly impact functionality through perceived social support.
FRONTIERS IN PSYCHOLOGY
(2022)
Article
Psychiatry
Min-Jo Lee, Young-Sil Kwon, Myoung-Ho Hyun
Summary: This study explored the influence of social situations on risky decision-making in individuals with a borderline personality tendency (BT). The participants were assigned to exclusion or inclusion conditions and engaged in the Cyberball game. The results showed that individuals with high BT tended to make riskier decisions in the exclusion condition, regardless of their previous decisions, indicating the impact of negative feedback. These findings have implications for developing effective interventions in psychotherapy for individuals with borderline personality disorder/tendency.
PSYCHIATRY INVESTIGATION
(2023)
Article
Computer Science, Information Systems
Marc Serramia, Maite Lopez-Sanchez, Stefano Moretti, Juan A. Rodriguez-Aguilar
Summary: Decision makers face challenges in comparing and ranking elements based on multiple criteria and personal preferences. This study introduces a new decision-making framework and presents a new method for ranking single elements. It is also proven that the contributions of this study generalize recent results in the field of social choice. The findings are illustrated through a case study on ethical decision-making.
INFORMATION SCIENCES
(2023)
Review
Medicine, General & Internal
Tina Wu, Jennifer Hu, Dimitry Davydow, Heather Huang, Margaret Spottswood, Hsiang Huang
Summary: Borderline personality disorder is a common mental health diagnosis observed in the primary care population and is associated with various challenges in diagnosis and treatment. This article aims to describe the impact of BPD in primary care, review current knowledge, and provide evidence-based treatment approaches for these patients.
FRONTIERS IN MEDICINE
(2022)
Article
Psychology, Multidisciplinary
Erika Evelyn Levay, Bettina Bajzat, Zsolt Szabolcs Unoka
Summary: This study examined the asymmetry between social behavior and beliefs about others in patients with borderline personality disorder (BPD). The results showed that BPD patients' expectations of selfishness significantly exceeded those of the healthy control group, indicating mistrust and negativity bias in social interactions.
FRONTIERS IN PSYCHOLOGY
(2021)
Article
Clinical Neurology
J. Lumikukka Socada, John J. Soderholm, Tom Rosenstrom, Jesper Ekelund, Erkki Isometsa
Summary: This study investigated the prevalence, severity, co-occurrence, and overlap of manic symptoms and borderline personality features in unipolar and bipolar major depressive episodes. The results showed that the presence of mixed and borderline features in MDEs is common, with differences in diagnosis-specific features among different subcohorts. The study highlighted the impact of hypomania on perceived BPD features and the correlation between manic symptoms and borderline features.
JOURNAL OF AFFECTIVE DISORDERS
(2021)
Article
Medicine, General & Internal
Giulia Quattrini, Laura Rosa Magni, Mariangela Lanfredi, Laura Pedrini, Antonino Carcione, Ilaria Riccardi, Daniele Corbo, Roberto Gasparotti, Roberta Rossi, Michela Pievani
Summary: This study found that BPD patients exhibit microstructural impairments in the triple network system, with increases in MD in the anterior SN, dorsal DMN, and right ECN. The severity of these microstructural abnormalities is positively correlated with behavioral dysregulation, indicating their potential contribution to BPD patients' behavioral dysfunctions.
JOURNAL OF CLINICAL MEDICINE
(2022)
Review
Biology
Yinmei Ni, Jian Li
Summary: The article examines how the inference about others is dynamically acquired during social learning and how prosocial behavior results from interactions between different brain regions. It emphasizes the importance of combining computational decision theory with the identification of neural mechanisms for guiding behavioral output in complex social environments.
SCIENCE CHINA-LIFE SCIENCES
(2021)
Article
Clinical Neurology
Livia Graumann, An Bin Cho, Eugenia Kulakova, Christian Eric Deuter, Oliver T. Wolf, Stefan Roepke, Julian Hellmann-Regen, Christian Otte, Katja Wingenfeld
Summary: The aim of this study was to investigate the effects of perceived social exclusion without accompanying cortisol increase on empathy in women with BPD and healthy women. The findings showed that women with BPD reported lower emotional empathy for positive emotions, but not for negative emotions. Additionally, emotional empathy in women with BPD seems to be more sensitive to the effects of stress or ambiguous social situations.
EUROPEAN ARCHIVES OF PSYCHIATRY AND CLINICAL NEUROSCIENCE
(2023)
Article
Clinical Neurology
Karen Kelley, Maggie Walgren, Hilary L. DeShong
Summary: This study found that anger rumination is the strongest predictor of both antisocial and borderline symptoms, while worry negatively predicts antisocial symptoms. Rumination and worry explain far more variance in borderline symptoms compared to antisocial symptoms.
JOURNAL OF AFFECTIVE DISORDERS
(2021)
Article
Clinical Neurology
Tomasz Cyrkot, Remigiusz Szczepanowski, Kamila Jankowiak-Siuda, Lukasz Gaweda, Ewelina Cichon
Summary: The study found that individuals with Borderline Personality Disorder (BPD) performed worse in a mindreading task, but had similar levels of confidence when providing incorrect answers. BPD individuals tended to overestimate their confidence in incorrect answers, showing dysfunctional patterns in metacognition.
EUROPEAN ARCHIVES OF PSYCHIATRY AND CLINICAL NEUROSCIENCE
(2021)
Article
Clinical Neurology
Joana Henriques-Calado, Bruno Goncalves, Catarina Marques, Marco Paulino, Joao Gama Marques, Jaime Gracio, Rute Pires
Summary: This study aims to identify the best set of predictors to differentiate between borderline personality disorder and bipolar spectrum disorders. The results indicate that the major common discriminants of borderline PD across the bipolar spectrum are unusual beliefs & experiences, paranoid ideation, obsession-compulsion and extraversion. Depressivity and impulsivity traits display the greatest predictive value in the differential diagnosis.
JOURNAL OF AFFECTIVE DISORDERS
(2021)
Article
Psychology, Clinical
Mark Zimmerman, Caroline Balling, Iwona Chelminski, Kristy Dalrymple
Summary: Patients with both bipolar disorder and BPD exhibit more severe psychosocial morbidity compared to those with only one of these disorders.
PSYCHOLOGICAL MEDICINE
(2021)
Article
Neurosciences
Dimitris Bolis, Juha M. Lahnakoski, Daniela Seidel, Jeanette Tamm, Leonhard Schilbach
Summary: The study found that higher similarity in autistic traits between individuals led to higher perceived friendship quality, regardless of factors such as friendship duration, age, sex, and overall autistic traits in the dyad. Specifically, higher interpersonal similarity in autistic traits was associated with greater measures of closeness, acceptance, and help in friendships.
SOCIAL COGNITIVE AND AFFECTIVE NEUROSCIENCE
(2021)
Article
Neurosciences
Sandra Iglesias, Lars Kasper, Samuel J. Harrison, Robert Manka, Christoph Mathys, Klaas E. Stephan
Summary: Through pharmacological fMRI studies, the research found that dopamine and acetylcholine influence precision-weighted prediction errors at different hierarchical levels. The results indicate a more complex interaction between these neuromodulatory systems and hierarchical Bayesian quantities.
Article
Behavioral Sciences
Marie-Luise Brandi, Juha M. Lahnakoski, Johannes Kopf-Beck, Tobias Nolte, Tanja M. Bruckl, Leonhard Schilbach
Summary: Negative interpersonal experiences are a key factor in psychiatric disorders, influencing social cognition. This study developed a new naturalistic social interaction paradigm to study the neural mechanisms of social interactions, finding that imagining negative interpersonal experiences affects social interactions on a neural level.
Review
Psychiatry
Stefan Fraessle, Eduardo A. Aponte, Saskia Bollmann, Kay H. Brodersen, Cao T. Do, Olivia K. Harrison, Samuel J. Harrison, Jakob Heinzle, Sandra Iglesias, Lars Kasper, Ekaterina Lomakina, Christoph Mathys, Matthias Mueller-Schrader, Ines Pereira, Frederike H. Petzschner, Sudhir Raman, Dario Schoebi, Birte Toussaint, Lilian A. Weber, Yu Yao, Klaas E. Stephan
Summary: Psychiatry is encountering challenges in differential diagnosis, clinical trajectory prediction, and treatment response, leading to the emergence of Translational Neuromodeling and Computational Psychiatry. Computational assays require end-to-end pipelines, which are currently under development, aiming to provide objective and reliable tools for clinical routine.
FRONTIERS IN PSYCHIATRY
(2021)
Article
Psychology, Biological
Praveen Suthaharan, Erin J. Reed, Pantelis Leptourgos, Joshua G. Kenney, Stefan Uddenberg, Christoph D. Mathys, Leib Litman, Jonathan Robinson, Aaron J. Moss, Jane R. Taylor, Stephanie M. Groman, Philip R. Corlett
Summary: The initial phase of the COVID-19 pandemic increased individuals' paranoia and made their belief updating more erratic. Government policies, such as proactive lockdowns and state-mandated mask-wearing, played a role in exacerbating paranoia and inducing erratic behavior.
NATURE HUMAN BEHAVIOUR
(2021)
Article
Psychology, Biological
Jim A. C. Everett, Clara Colombatto, Edmond Awad, Paulo Boggio, Bjoern Bos, William J. Brady, Megha Chawla, Vladimir Chituc, Dongil Chung, Moritz A. Drupp, Srishti Goel, Brit Grosskopf, Frederik Hjorth, Alissa Ji, Caleb Kealoha, Judy S. Kim, Yangfei Lin, Yina Ma, Michel Andre Marechal, Federico Mancinelli, Christoph Mathys, Asmus L. Olsen, Graeme Pearce, Annayah M. B. Prosser, Niv Reggev, Nicholas Sabin, Julien Senn, Yeon Soon Shin, Walter Sinnott-Armstrong, Hallgeir Sjastad, Madelijn Strick, Sunhae Sul, Lars Tummers, Monique Turner, Hongbo Yu, Yoonseo Zoh, Molly J. Crockett
Summary: Trust in leaders is crucial for citizen compliance with public policies. The way leaders handle moral dilemmas can either decrease or increase trust, with support for impartial beneficence boosting trust and support for instrumental harm decreasing it.
NATURE HUMAN BEHAVIOUR
(2021)
Editorial Material
Biochemistry & Molecular Biology
Juha M. Lahnakoski, Simon B. Eickhoff, Juergen Dukart, Leonhard Schilbach
MOLECULAR PSYCHIATRY
(2022)
Review
Biology
Dimitris Bolis, Guillaume Dumas, Leonhard Schilbach
Summary: In this article, the authors analyze social interactions from various perspectives such as dialectics, second-person neuroscience, and enactivism. They propose the concept of interpersonal attunement as a multi-scale process of anticipating and interacting with others and ourselves. The authors argue that collective psychophysiology can provide a fine-tuned analysis of social interactions, while also recognizing the importance of individual experiences. They also discuss how an interpersonal mismatch of expectations can lead to communication breakdown and negatively affect mental health, and propose an interpersonalized psychiatry approach to promote mental health through understanding the multi-faceted processes of social interaction.
PHILOSOPHICAL TRANSACTIONS OF THE ROYAL SOCIETY B-BIOLOGICAL SCIENCES
(2023)
Article
Behavioral Sciences
Satu Saalasti, Jussi Alho, Juha M. Lahnakoski, Mareike Bacha-Trams, Enrico Glerean, Iiro P. Jaaskelainen, Uri Hasson, Mikko Sams
Summary: This study used a data-driven approach to explore the neural mechanisms underlying comprehension of connected natural speech through lipreading. The results showed that the brain areas involved in lipreading, listening, and reading were largely overlapping, including the temporal, parietal, frontal cortices, precuneus, and cerebellum. However, lipreading showed less activity in higher-level linguistic processing compared to listening and reading. The lipreading test score and subjective comprehension of the lipread narrative were associated with activity in the temporal cortex.
BRAIN AND BEHAVIOR
(2023)
Editorial Material
Psychology, Multidisciplinary
Chiara Fini, Dimitris Bolis, Quentin Moreau, Vanessa Era
FRONTIERS IN PSYCHOLOGY
(2023)
Article
Psychology, Experimental
Mark Dingemanse, Andreas Liesenfeld, Marlou Rasenberg, Saul Albert, Felix K. Ameka, Abeba Birhane, Dimitris Bolis, Justine Cassell, Rebecca Clift, Elena Cuffari, Hanne De Jaegher, Catarina Dutilh Novaes, N. J. Enfield, Riccardo Fusaroli, Eleni Gregoromichelaki, Edwin Hutchins, Ivana Konvalinka, Damian Milton, Joanna Raczaszek-Leonardi, Vasudevi Reddy, Federico Rossano, David Schlangen, Johanna Seibt, Elizabeth Stokoe, Lucy Suchman, Cordula Vesper, Thalia Wheatley, Martina Wiltschko
Summary: A fundamental fact about human minds is that they are never truly alone: all minds are steeped in situated interaction. On this view, interaction complicates cognition. Here, we explore the more radical stance that interaction co-constitutes cognition: that we benefit from looking beyond single minds toward cognition as a process involving interacting minds.
Review
Psychology, Experimental
Chiara Fini, Lara Bardi, Dimitris Bolis, Martina Fusaro, Matteo P. P. Lisi, Arthur Henri Michalland, Vanessa Era
Summary: In this paper, the authors propose that interpersonal bodily interactions play a crucial role in the development of the bodily and psychological self. They discuss the importance of early infant-caregiver bodily interactions in shaping the sense of self and learning to predict others' behavior. The authors also explore the social function of touch throughout the lifespan and argue that abstract thinking is inherently a social process.
PSYCHOLOGICAL RESEARCH-PSYCHOLOGISCHE FORSCHUNG
(2023)
Proceedings Paper
Computer Science, Artificial Intelligence
Peter Thestrup Waade, Nace Mikus, Christoph Mathys
Summary: The continuous state space active inference agent, utilizing the hierarchical Gaussian filter, successfully tracks the moving target's noisy observations and minimizes surprisal by staying close to it. This approach supplements active inference with HGF-filtering of observations' sufficient statistics in noisy and volatile environments.
MACHINE LEARNING AND PRINCIPLES AND PRACTICE OF KNOWLEDGE DISCOVERY IN DATABASES, ECML PKDD 2021, PT I
(2021)
Proceedings Paper
Computer Science, Theory & Methods
Ismail Senoz, Albert Podusenko, Semih Akbayrak, Christoph Mathys, Bert de Vries
Summary: This paper discusses the usage of variational message passing-based inference in a switching Hierarchical Gaussian Filter (HGF), extending the model to support parameter switching mechanics, and shows its advantages in modeling on a stock market dataset.
2021 IEEE INTERNATIONAL SYMPOSIUM ON INFORMATION THEORY (ISIT)
(2021)
Article
Clinical Neurology
Louise P. Kirsch, Christoph Mathys, Christina Papadaki, Penelope Talelli, Karl Friston, Valentina Moro, Aikaterini Fotopoulou
Summary: Research investigated the difficulties faced by patients with anosognosia for hemiplegia in updating beliefs, finding that neglect affects local sensorimotor error monitoring, but appears to impact the extent to which observed errors are utilized in updating more general, prospective beliefs about counterfactual motor abilities in these patients.
BRAIN COMMUNICATIONS
(2021)