Background: Studying empathy in borderline personality disorder (BPD) is essential because difficulties with interpersonal functioning are integral.
Objectives: This scoping and narrative review explores the aetiological theory that BPD is an innate anomaly of cognitive empathy, with a normal or heightened emotional empathy.
Eligibility Criteria And Sources Of Evidence: Ovid MEDLINE(R) ALL was searched using the terms e and . For inclusion in the scoping review, articles needed to empirically assess an empathic skill in people with BPD, or self-reported empathy in a BPD group compared to controls, or empathic skill as a 'borderline feature' in a nonclinical sample.
Charting Method: The results of empirical studies were categorised as per their methodological approach, with results in the BPD group reported as or compared to controls.
Results: 320 articles were returned, with 38 eligible. The majority affirmed that people with BPD have an anomalous empathetic ability, especially a deficient cognitive empathy. Furthermore, this is trait, evident early in development, correlates with syndrome severity, and is mediated by atypical neural networks.
Conclusions: This substantiates the theory that BPD is, at least in major part, an innate empathy anomaly.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/13651501.2024.2420662 | DOI Listing |
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