Support our work
Decorative header background

Emotional sensitivity, emotion regulation and impulsivity in borderline personality disorder

Publication year 2015
Published in Neuroscience & Biobehavioral Reviews
Authors Linda van Zutphen, Nicolette Siep, Gitta A Jacob, R. Goebel, Arnoud Arntz

Emotional sensitivity, emotion regulation and impulsivity are fundamental topics in research of borderline personality disorder (BPD). Studies using fMRI examining the neural correlates concerning these topics is growing and has just begun understanding the underlying neural correlates in BPD. However, there are strong similarities but also important differences in results of different studies. It is therefore important to know in more detail what these differences are and how we should interpret these. In present review a critical light is shed on the fMRI studies examining emotional sensitivity, emotion regulation and impulsivity in BPD patients. First an outline of the methodology and the results of the studies will be given. Thereafter important issues that remained unanswered and topics to improve future research are discussed. Future research should take into account the limited power of previous studies and focus more on BPD specificity with regard to time course responses, different regulation strategies, manipulation of self-regulation, medication use, a wider range of stimuli, gender effects and the inclusion of a clinical control group.

Support our work!

The Friends Foundation facilitates groundbreaking brain research. You can help us with that.

Support our work