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Borderline Personality Disorder

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Though many mental disorders are household names, such as depression or bipolar disorder, many are not nearly as widespread or recognized by today’s society. One of the these lesser-known disorders is Borderline Personality Disorder. Called BPD for short, this disorder is characterized by emotional and functional instability. Mood swings and problems maintaining social and familial relationships are quite common. The intent of this write up is to use three different works about BPD to gain a better understanding of how BPD is represented in different types of media, with emphasis on content, style, and structure.
The goal of the study “Multimethod Investigation of Interpersonal Functioning in Borderline Personality Disorder” was to see what …show more content…

These included the SCID-I, IRA, and SCID-II. After the tests were taken, a primary interviewer would present each case to a minimum of three judges. The participants in these trials were 54 BPD participants, 55 participants with another personality disorder, and 29 participants with no personality disorder. Between each interview session, each participant took the IIP, which is a self report that measures interpersonal difficulty. Their mean score, out of 88 items, was used. During the IIP, significant others, relatives, spouses, or close friends, were interviewed about the participant. The second session had another interviewer, unaware of the other results, measure interpersonal function with the RAPFA test. This measured functioning across work, romantic relationships, friendships, and unspecified social relationships on a 1 to 9 scale, with 1 being the best, and 9 being the worst. The mean from all four was used as the overall level, and judges also evaluated these results. Electronic diaries were also used, with participants rating their behavioral, (7 items, each out of 10) and emotional responses (33 items, each out of 10) after social interaction. The participants also had to evaluate 24 different faces, determining whether they thought the person in the photo would like or dislike the participant, and whether the person in the …show more content…

It is divided into relatively short separate sections, starting with the abstract and background. This makes the article easier to read and much more concise. The next sections are more specific, first starting with “Is BPD a bipolar mood condition?” and then addressing Is BPD a unipolar mood condition?”. Then the article closes off with a its verdict and closing statement on the issue at hand. This article is written because there is a slight controversy over BPD being a mood disorder due to similarities such as overlapping symptoms, and mood swings. However, this article splits up the argument between polar and unipolar mood disorders, since polar and unipolar disorders have one big dissimilarity: unipolar disorders deal with one emotional stage, while bipolar disorders have two distinct stages. A few reasons as to why BPD is not a bipolar mood disorder are, BPD patients have little reaction to mood stabilizers, their depression is triggered by environment, and BPD patients have problems maintaining relationships. It is harder to describe why BPD is not a unipolar mood disorder, but it is said that BPD is more on the intricate functions rooted within personality than specifically depression or anxiety, since these factors fluctuate often with BPD. One flaw of this article is that the information can

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