首页   按字顺浏览 期刊浏览 卷期浏览 Malevolence, Splitting, and Parental Ratings by Borderlines
Malevolence, Splitting, and Parental Ratings by Borderlines

 

作者: LAURA BAKER,   KENNETH SILK,   DREW WESTEN,   JOEL NIGG,   NAOMI LOHR,  

 

期刊: The Journal of Nervous and Mental Disease  (OVID Available online 1992)
卷期: Volume 180, issue 4  

页码: 258-264

 

ISSN:0022-3018

 

年代: 1992

 

出版商: OVID

 

数据来源: OVID

 

摘要:

Malevolent object relations as well as splitting have long been considered by psychodynamic theorists as central features of borderline personality disorder. We tested the hypotheses that borderlines would a) perceive their parents more negatively than both nonborderline major depressive patients and nonpatient normal controls, and b) split their representations of their parents into opposites more than the comparison subjects. Borderlines (N=31), who were identified by the Diagnostic Interview for Borderlines, Research Diagnostic Criteria major depressives (N=15), and nonpatient controls (N=14) were asked to rate each parent on the Adjective Check List (ACL; Gough and Heilbrun, 1983). Seven ACL scales were studied: Favorable, Unfavorable, Critical Parent, Nurturing Parent, Nurturance, Aggression, and Dominance. Correlations were performed between scores for mother and father on the various scales for each of the three cohorts. Analysis of variance and one-way Wests with Bonferroni correction were used to test group differences. Borderlines rated their parents, especially their fathers, not only as more unfavorable on negative scales than depressives or normals, but as less favorable on positive scales than the comparison groups. Analysis of covariance revealed that a significant portion of the variance in father scores, but not in mother scores, was related to age of respondent and history of sexual abuse. While borderlines did not appear to split their parents into one good and one bad parent, they did show significantly less correlation between parents on the Favorable scale when compared with either depressives or normal subjects. The results imply that borderlines have a greater tendency to view the world in negative, malevolent ways than to split their object representations.

 

点击下载:  PDF (789KB)



返 回