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Affect Regulation in AlexithymiaAn Ethological Study of Displacement Behavior during Psychiatric Interviews

 

作者: ALFONSO TROISI,   SERGIO BELSANTI,   ANNA BUCCI,   CRISTINA MOSCO,   FABIOLA SINTI,   MONICA VERUCCI,  

 

期刊: The Journal of Nervous and Mental Disease  (OVID Available online 2000)
卷期: Volume 188, issue 1  

页码: 13-18

 

ISSN:0022-3018

 

年代: 2000

 

出版商: OVID

 

数据来源: OVID

 

摘要:

Displacement activities (i.e.,self-directed behaviors such as self-touching, scratching, and self-grooming) are a reliable ethological indicator of increased emotional and physiological arousal throughout the phylogenetic scale. We hypothesized that, in alexithymic individuals, the failure to regulate cognitively distressing emotions might result in increased displacement behavior. The nonverbal behavior of 30 patients with depressive or anxiety disorders was video-recorded during psychiatric interviews and analyzed using an ethological scoring system. Before being interviewed, each patient completed the Twenty-Item Toronto Alexithymia Scale (TAS-20), the Beck Depression Inventory (BDI), and the state form of the State-Trait Anxiety Index (STAI-S). Ethological data confirmed the hypothesis of the study. The patients with more pronounced alexithymic features showed a significantly higher frequency of displacement activities during interviews. At the same time, these patients reported levels of self-rated anxiety and depression equivalent to those reported by nonalexithymic patients. Such a dissociation between cognitive appraisal of emotion and nonverbal behavior reflecting increased emotional arousal supports the view that alexithymia implies a failure to elevate emotions from a preconceptual level of organization to the conceptual level of mental representations.

 



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