<> "The repository administrator has not yet configured an RDF license."^^ . <> . . "Shame, self-criticism and fears of compassion in Borderline Personality Disorder"^^ . "BPD is a serious mental illness characterized by instability in interpersonal relationships, self-image, affect, and marked impulsivity. Although there are evidence based therapies for BPD \r\nthat have been shown to be particularly effective in reducing severe impairments in behavioral \r\ncontrol and emotion regulation (S3-Guideline; Arbeitsgemeinschaft der Wissenschaftlichen \r\nMedizinischen Fachgesellschaften, 2022), results of long-term studies show that more than \r\nhalf of those affected do not achieve good social and vocational functioning even 10 years \r\nafter diagnosis (Zanarini et al., 2010, 2012). These findings suggest that further research into \r\nthe underlying pathomechanisms is needed in order to develop even more tailored treatments. \r\nThe aim of this dissertation was to contribute to a better understanding of the processing of \r\nself-related information, a domain that is thought to contribute the poor social integration of \r\nindividuals with BPD. The focus of the underlying three studies was on the investigation of the \r\nnegative self-conscious emotion shame, self-criticism and fears of compassion, representing \r\nmajor resistances in affiliative self-related processes respectively. Since there have been no \r\ntranslations and validations of the corresponding measuring instruments on self-criticism and \r\nfears of compassion to date, these were carried out within the framework of this thesis. Both, \r\nthe translation and validation of the Forms of Self-Criticizing/-Attacking and Self-Reassuring \r\nScale (FSCRS; Gilbert et al., 2004) and the Fears of Compassion Scales (FCS; Gilbert et al., \r\n2011) resulted in German versions with good to excellent psychometric quality, comparable to \r\nthose of the original English versions and offer further opportunities for research of these \r\nconcepts in German-speaking countries. With regard to self-criticism, individuals with BPD \r\nreported higher levels of the hated self aspect of self-criticism in comparison to a mixed clinical \r\nsample and additionally higher levels of the inadequate and lower levels of the reassured self\r\naspect of self-criticism compared to a sample from the general population and a healthy control \r\n(HC) sample. In addition to the general relevance of self-criticism in BPD, these findings point \r\nto the pronounced urge to self-attacking tendencies in the face of failure or distress, which \r\ndistinguishes individuals with BPD from other clinical disorders. In the light of previous findings \r\nof impairments in processes of social approach and affiliation, fears of compassion seem to \r\nbe specific resistances to these processes. While individuals with BPD differed on all three \r\ndimensions of fears of compassion (for self, for other, from others) from nonclinical participants, \r\nthere were no differences in fears of compassion towards others compared to a mixed clinical \r\nsample. Furthermore, during an experimental paradigm addressing levels of state shame in \r\nBPD compared to healthy control persons, the mere confrontation with the own face resulted \r\nin higher levels of state shame and self-disgust and the confrontation with the face of another \r\nperson in higher levels of envy in BPD in comparison to healthy control persons. While levels \r\nof state shame during the experimental confrontation with the own self was associated with \r\nelevated proneness to shame across both samples, this relation could not be found when \r\nanalyzing the BPD and HC sample separately. This again underlines that the aversiveness of \r\nprocesses directed towards the own self is of particular importance for the psychopathology of \r\nBPD. Nevertheless, further longitudinal studies are required that capture the exact links \r\nbetween these concepts and BPD psychopathology. The development and research of \r\ntreatments that are more tailored to these impairments is therefore of particular relevance. \r\nTherapeutic approaches such as Compassion Focused Therapy (CFT; Gilbert, 2014) that \r\ndirectly target shame and self-criticism have already been shown to be effective in other mental \r\ndisorders (Craig et al., 2020) and might also be a potentially promising treatment in BPD."^^ . "2023" . . . . . . . "Miriam"^^ . "Biermann"^^ . "Miriam Biermann"^^ . . . . . . "Shame, self-criticism and fears of compassion in Borderline Personality Disorder (PDF)"^^ . . . "Dissertation Shame, self-criticism and fears of compassion in Borderline Personality Disorder Miriam Biermann.pdf"^^ . . . "Shame, self-criticism and fears of compassion in Borderline Personality Disorder (Other)"^^ . . . . . . "indexcodes.txt"^^ . . . "Shame, self-criticism and fears of compassion in Borderline Personality Disorder (Other)"^^ . . . . . . "lightbox.jpg"^^ . . . "Shame, self-criticism and fears of compassion in Borderline Personality Disorder (Other)"^^ . . . . . . "preview.jpg"^^ . . . "Shame, self-criticism and fears of compassion in Borderline Personality Disorder (Other)"^^ . . . . . . "medium.jpg"^^ . . . "Shame, self-criticism and fears of compassion in Borderline Personality Disorder (Other)"^^ . . . . . . "small.jpg"^^ . . "HTML Summary of #34177 \n\nShame, self-criticism and fears of compassion in Borderline Personality Disorder\n\n" . "text/html" . . . "150 Psychologie"@de . "150 Psychology"@en . .