Publications by authors named "M F Lenzenweger"

Article Synopsis
  • The study investigates the long-term effects of schizotypy assessed during late adolescence on future schizotypic features in midlife.
  • Findings reveal that early schizotypy predicts increased schizotypal and paranoid personality traits as well as schizophrenia proneness in participants around age 35.
  • This research supports the idea that schizotypy serves as an underlying risk factor for developing schizotypic psychopathology, emphasizing the value of longitudinal studies in understanding schizophrenia-related issues.
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An extensive theoretical literature links identity pathology with deficits in mentalization, which is the ability to understand the internal mental states of self and others. However, only a few investigations have attempted to bridge theory and data by empirically testing the relation between mentalization and identity pathology, and none have done so with mentalization measured using a laboratory task. The current study investigated the association between mentalization deficits and identity pathology in a large, nonclinical sample.

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Background: The historical concept of borderline conditions refers to the pathology on the border between neurosis and psychosis. In the conditions were divided into specific but also somewhat overlapping diagnostic criteria for Borderline Personality Disorder (BPD) and Schizotypal Personality Disorder (SPD). This phenomenological overlap, which results in co-occurrence of the two diagnoses, remains a clinical challenge to this day.

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Previous research reveals that rejection sensitivity is associated with both sexual violence victimization and self-silencing behavior, yet the association among these variables has not been examined. As the foundation for this study, we propose a theoretical model that integrates these constructs. Using mediational analyses with bootstrapping, the results from a sample of 241 heterosexual college women revealed that consistent with the proposed model, self-silencing mediated the link between rejection sensitivity and reports of unwanted sexual contact and rape.

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