Social sharing and expressive suppression in major depressive disorder and borderline personality disorder: An experience sampling study

Martine W. F. T. Verhees, Eva Ceulemans, Laura Sels, Egon Dejonckheere, Marlies Houben, Peter Kuppens
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Abstract

Major depressive disorder (MDD) and borderline personality disorder (BPD) are characterized by disturbed patterns of emotional and interpersonal functioning, which might imply altered use of emotion regulation in interpersonal contexts. In the current study, we examined how individuals with MDD and/or BPD differ from healthy controls in (1) their overall daily life use of expressive suppression and social sharing and (2) their tendency to adjust the use of these strategies to the emotional context (i.e., preceding negative and positive affect). Thirty-four individuals with MDD, 20 individuals with BPD, 19 individuals with comorbid MDD and BPD, and 40 healthy controls participated in a week of experience sampling during which they reported their use of expressive suppression, social sharing, and experienced negative and positive affect. The results indicated that all clinical groups reported more expressive suppression and social sharing in their daily lives than healthy controls. Group differences remained when controlling for differences in mean experienced affect, except for increased suppression for MDD and increased sharing for BPD and comorbid MDD and BPD, which seemed related to these participants' overall higher levels of negative affect. Additionally, associations between within-person fluctuations in negative or positive affect and subsequent strategy use were equally strong for clinical and control participants, indicating that clinical groups did not differentially adjust the use of suppression and sharing to the emotional context. In conclusion, individuals with MDD and/or BPD showed increased use of suppression and sharing in daily life, which might contribute to, or follow from their emotional and interpersonal difficulties.

重度抑郁障碍和边缘型人格障碍中的社交分享和表达抑制:经验取样研究
重度抑郁障碍(MDD)和边缘型人格障碍(BPD)的特点是情绪和人际功能模式紊乱,这可能意味着在人际交往中使用情绪调节的方式发生了改变。在本研究中,我们考察了 MDD 和/或 BPD 患者与健康对照者在以下方面的差异:(1)他们在日常生活中使用表达性抑制和社交分享的总体情况;(2)他们根据情绪环境(即之前的消极和积极情绪)调整这些策略的使用的倾向。34 名 MDD 患者、20 名 BPD 患者、19 名合并 MDD 和 BPD 的患者以及 40 名健康对照者参加了为期一周的经验取样,在此期间,他们报告了表达性抑制和社交分享的使用情况,并体验了消极和积极情绪。结果显示,与健康对照组相比,所有临床组在日常生活中都报告了更多的表达压抑和社交分享。在控制了平均体验情感的差异后,组间差异依然存在,但多发性抑郁症患者的压抑增加,而双相情感障碍患者和合并有多发性抑郁症和双相情感障碍的患者的分享增加,这似乎与这些参与者整体较高的消极情感水平有关。此外,对于临床参与者和对照组参与者来说,消极或积极情绪的人际波动与随后的策略使用之间的关联同样强烈,这表明临床组并没有根据情绪环境对抑制和分享的使用进行不同的调整。总之,患有 MDD 和/或 BPD 的人在日常生活中会更多地使用压抑和分享,这可能是导致其情绪和人际交往困难的原因之一。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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