Adversity, attachment, and mentalizing

The papers in this special issue offer evidence of personality disorder as a dysfunction of higher-order cognition, which is conceptualized variously as a disorder of mentalizing, metacognition, mindfulness, social cognition and reflective function. While there may be differences in the scope of these concepts, they all imply that higher-order mental processing is at the core of personality function. In this commentary, the authors use mentalizing as an umbrella term for these concepts, and argue that it is the complex interaction of adversity, attachment and mentalizing that lead to the characteristic symptoms of borderline personality disorder and other personality disorders.
Source: Comprehensive Psychiatry - Category: Psychiatry Authors: Source Type: research