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Knowing me, knowing you: Memory functioning in Dissociative Identity Disorder Rafaële Huntjens University of Groningen Martin Dorahy University of Christchurch • Some people find that sometimes they are listening to someone talk and they suddenly realize that they did not hear all or part of what was said. • Some people find that when they are watching television or a movie they become so absorbed in the story that they are unaware of other events happening around them. • Some people are told that they sometimes do not recognize friends or family members. • Some people have the experience of finding thenselves dressed in clothes that they don’t remember putting on. • Some people find that in one situation they may act so differently compared with another situation that they feel almost as if they were different people. Symptom level (Steinberg, 1995) • depersonalisation • derealization • identity confusion • amnesia • identity alteration Dissociative amnesia (DSM-5) • Recurrent gaps in the recall of everyday events, important personal information, and/or traumatic events that are inconsistent with ordinary forgetting. Do I know you? Autobiographical memory functioning in dissociative identity disorder Case example dissociative amnesia https://www.youtube.com/watch?feature=player_detailpage& v=B0LNyXsErb8#t=303 Inter-identity amnesia in DID: Neutral information Inter-identity amnesia in DID neutral information • recall list A vegetables (eg pepper) animals (eg caterpillar) flowers (eg rose) • recall list B (amnesic identity) vegetables (eg pea) animals (eg camel) furniture (eg couch) Huntjens, R. J. C., Postma, A., Peters, M., Woertman, L., & Van der Hart, O. (2003). Interidentity amnesia for neutral, episodic information in dissociative identity disorder. Journal of Abnormal Psychology, 112, 290-297. Mean recall score Trial 1 7 6 5 controls, shared controls, unshared 4 3 2 List A List B Mean recall score Trial 1 8 7 controls, shared 6 controls, unshared 5 4 simulators, shared 3 simulators, unshared 2 1 0 List A List B Mean recall score Trial 1 8 controls, shared 7 controls, unshared 6 5 simulators, shared 4 3 simulators, unshared 2 DID patients, shared 1 DID patients, unshared 0 List A List B Inter-identity amnesia in DID trauma-related information List A: • trauma-related • “abuse” • Positive words • music”” • Neutral words • “page” List B (amnesic identity): • trauma-related • “pain” • Positive words • “blossom” • Neutral words • “cloud” Huntjens, R. J. C., Peters, M., Woertman, L., & Van der Hart, O., & Postma, A. (2007). Memory transfer for emotionally valenced words betrween identities in dissociative identity disorder. Behaviour Research and Therapy, 45, 775-789. | Inter-identity amnesia in DID: Autobiographical information Figure 1. Mean reaction time for same identity, other identity, and irrelevant items for DID patients, control participants, and simulators. Huntjens, R. J. C., Verschuere, B., & McNally, R.J. (2012). Inter-identity autobiographical amnersia in patients with dissociative identity disorder. PLoS ONE, 7, e40580. • • • • • • • • • • • Allen, J. J. B., & Movius, H. L.,II. (2000). The objective assessment of amnesia in dissociative identity disorder using eventrelated potentials. International Journal of Psychophysiology, 38(1), 21-41. doi: 10.1016/S0167-8760(00)00128-8 Eich, E., Macaulay, D., Loewenstein, R. J., & Dihle, P. H. (1997). Implicit memory, interpersonality amnesia, and dissociative identity disorder: Comparing patients with simulators. In J. D. Read, & D. S. Lindsay (Eds.), (pp. 469-474). New York, NY US: Plenum Press. Huntjens, R. J. C., Peters, M. L., Postma, A., Woertman, L., Effting, M., & Hart, O. van der (2005). Transfer of newly acquired stimulus valence between identities in dissociative identity disorder (DID). Behaviour Research and Therapy, 43(2), 243-255. doi: 10.1016/j.brat.2004.01.007 Huntjens, R. J. C., Peters, M. L., Woertman, L., Bovenschen, L. M., Martin, R. C., & Postma, A. (2006). Inter-identity amnesia in dissociative identity disorder: A simulated memory impairment? Psychological Medicine, 36(6), 857-863. doi: 10.1017/S0033291706007100 Huntjens, R. J. C., Peters, M. L., Woertman, L., Hart, O. van der, & Postma, A. (2007). Memory transfer for emotionally valenced words between identities in dissociative identity disorder. Behaviour Research and Therapy, 45(4), 775-789. doi: 10.1016/j.brat.2006.07.001 Huntjens, R. J. C., Postma, A., Hamaker, E. L., Woertman, L., Van, D. H., & Peters, M. (2002). Perceptual and conceptual priming in patients with dissociative identity disorder. Memory & Cognition, 30(7), 1033-1043. doi: 10.3758/BF03194321 Huntjens, R. J. C., Postma, A., Peters, M. L., Woertman, L., & van, d. H. (2003). Interidentity amnesia for neutral, episodic information in dissociative identity disorder. Journal of Abnormal Psychology, 112(2), 290-297. doi: 10.1037/0021843X.112.2.290 Huntjens, R. J. C., Postma, A., Woertman, L., Hart, O. van der, & Peters, M. L. (2005). Procedural memory in dissociative identity disorder: When can inter-identity amnesia be truly established? Consciousness and Cognition: An International Journal, 14(2), 377-389. doi: 10.1016/j.concog.2004.10.001 Huntjens, R. J. C., Verschuere, B., & McNally, R. J. (2012). Autobiographical amnesia in patients with dissociative identity disorder. PLoS ONE, 7, e40580. Kong, L. L., Allen, J. J. B., & Glisky, E. L. (2008). Interidentity memory transfer in dissociative identity disorder. Journal of Abnormal Psychology, 117(3), 686-692. doi: 10.1037/0021-843X.117.3.686 Silberman, E. K. (1985). Dissociative states in multiple personality disorder: A quantitative study. Psychiatry Research, 15(4), 253-260. doi: 10.1016/0165-1781(85)90062-9 Dissociative meta-memory beliefs (Huntjens & Dorahy, in prep) Fragmentation “I believe I can remember distressing events in parts, but not as a whole” Fear of retrieval of negative events “I believe thinking about past negative experiences will hurt me emotionally” Lack of self-reference / lack of acknowledgement “I believe some of the memories that come into my mind about my past don’t belong to me” Differential identity functioning: Autobiographical memory specificity Huntjens, R. J. C., Wessel, I., Hermans, D., & Van Minnen, A. Autobiographical Memory Specificity and Avoidance in Dissociative Identity Disorder. Journal of Abnormal Psychology, 123, 419-428. Autobiographical Memory Task (AMT; Williams & Broadbent, 1986) HAPPY Answers healthy controls: “The birth of my first child” “My last birthday” party” Answers PTSD patients / depressive patients: “I am never happy” “In the summer of ‘76 when I stayed with my grandparents” “Always when I was in my safe place up in the apple tree” Two types of identity states: • Trauma identity state • Amnesic identity state Hypothesis: • Fewer specific memories in the amnesic identity state Number of specific memories t(11) = .42, p = .68, η2 = .02 Number of specific memories F(2, 62) = 5.18, p = .008, partial η2 = .14 DID vs. Controls: p = .037 PTSD vs. Controls, p = .004 PTSD vs. DID, p = .99 Summary • Both DID and PTSD patients scored higher on self-reported avoidance. • In DID, the trauma and amnesic identities did not differ on memory specificity. • Independent of identity, the DID patients as well as the PTSD patients scored lower on memory specificity compared to controls. • Detrimental impact on daily life functioning: problem solving, mood repair Differential identity functioning: Self-defining memories and future goals Self-defining memories •Targeted to elicit important personal memories •Exemplar autobiographical memories that reflect one’s identity •Affectively intense, repetitive, vivid Personal goals •Things most important for the participant to achieve in the future (trying to attain or seeking to avoid or prevent) Rater trauma-relatedness (SDM) z = 2.38, p = .02, r = .51 Self-reported trauma-relatedness (SDM) t(10) = 1.72, p = .12, η2 = .23 Self-reported trauma-relatedness (SDM) F(2, 66) = 37.78 p < .001, η2 = .53 DID vs. Controls: p = .001 PTSD vs. Controls, p < .001 PTSD vs. DID, p = .75 Self-reported trauma-relatedness (goals) t(10) = .86, p = .41, η2 = .07 Self-reported trauma-relatedness (goals) Chi2(2) = 47.66 p < .001, η2 = .69 DID vs. Controls: p < .001 PTSD vs. Controls, p < .001 PTSD vs. DID, p = .74 Proportion avoidance goals Chi2(2) = 9.40 p = .009, η2 = .14 DID vs. Controls: p = .13 PTSD vs. Controls, p = .44 PTSD vs. DID, p = .007 Summary and conclusion • Trauma identity focus on retrieval of traumatic events as SDM • Amnesic identity not focused on trauma-unrelated daily life but focused on (dealing with)consequences of trauma (running away, substance abuse, therapy, not finishing high school, auto-mutilation) • Both identities more avoidant goals compared to PTSD General Conclusion • No empirical evidence for memory compartmentalization • Similarities between PTSD and DID in memory functioning (overgeneral memory, SDM memories) • Joint diagnostic category of (complex) posttraumatic disorders? • Impaired meta-cognition as the cause of self-reported amnesia? Future research: • Transdiagnostic research of functioning in trauma-related disorders (i.e., including samples of borderline, (complex) PTSD, and other trauma-related disorders • Treatment innovations Schema Therapy as a viable alternative for the treatment of DID? Schema Therapy as a viable alternative? • emphasis on dealing with early childhood abuse and neglect • severe attachment problems, minimal coping capacity, and severe personality pathology are explicitly addressed • given lack of evidence for compartmentalisation, the definition of modes relates very well to identity states in DID: • The specific emotions, cognitions & behaviors that are currently activated Adapted protocol ST DID • lenght of treatment: 3 years • define identities in mode terms • emphasis on functional groups of modes instead of individual identities • subjective experience of switching between identities is acknowledged and explained by shifts between modes • after thorough mode conceptualization, further ST goals and interventions are readily applicable to DID Switch to my male alter: Martin Dorahy Episodic autobiographical memory transfer across subjectively experienced amnesic identities Present Study Objectives • To assess episodic autobiographical memory in dissociative identity disorder (DID), with regard to transfer of episodic autobiographical information across identities that report having no awareness of each other (two-way amnesia). • To assess autobiographical memory differences across groups with DID, non-clinical controls, and people simulating DID. • To assess how the emotional content of a memory influences retrieval in the identity that experienced the event and the identity that did not experience the event (specifically, the emotion of embarrassment). Participants • Participants – 20 DID (currently 18, but some unuseable) – 40 Controls (20 amnesic, 20 non-amnesic) (currently 32, one ?DD) – 20 DID Simulators (currently 12) • Recruitment – DID via Belmont Private Hospital and private practices in Christchurch – Controls via University of Canterbury participant pool, ‘Subjects Wanted’ website, leaflets in Psychology Department, public libaries. churches – DID Simulators via Drama department at University of Canterbury and contacts in Brisbane • Simulator training – Independent of testing session – Information sheets, videos, working with research assistant • Researcher blind to DID and simulators • DID/Simulators asked to chose two identities, one aware of painful life events, one unaware of them. Experimental Task 1 • Presentation of narratives (through head phones): – Embarrassing & neutral – identity A Counterbalanced – Embarrassing & neutral – identity B – Second person (‘You’) to first person (‘I’) transformation when repeating (autobio, internalised) Embarrassment script Control script Memory measurement • Assessed immediately (FR), and aIAT. • Then approximately 45 minutes after exposure: • Memory assessment: – free recall, – force-choice recognition; know and remember judgments, Free-recall – Tested in identity A • First question: For this task, I would like you to tell me everything you can remember about the stories you heard through the headphones. Start with the first story, do you remember it? Can you tell me what you remember? ? [If no, Do you remember hearing a story about…[PUT HERE THE SHAME/NEUTRAL STORY THEY DID HEAR , EG., A SUPERMARKET TRIP; A TRIP TO THE BANK] – 2 minutes space to narrate the story • Probe: Are those all the details you have about those stories? (Similar to probe used by Berryhill et al., 2007). • Second question: Now I would like you to tell me anything you can about the second story. do you remember it? Can you tell me what you remember. – 2 minutes space to narrate the story • Probe: Are those all the details you have about those stories? • ‘Do you remember hearing any other stories’. Do you remember a story about… Force-choice recognition Remember/Know • Remember judgments: If your recognition of the sentence is accompanied by a conscious recollection of its prior occurrence in what you saw, heard or did earlier, then press “R.” (episodic) • Know judgments:, press “K” (for “know”) when you are certain of recognizing the sentence but the sentence fails to evoke any specific recollection of the event. (semantic) Autobiographical Implicit Association Test (aIAT) • An implicit (non-conscious) assessment of whether an autobiographical memory has been encoded • This will allow us to see if the experience of one identity (ie., the stories they were presented) impact at a non-conscious level on the information retrieved by the other identity. • Thus, it assesses non-conscious interference/influence Experimental Task 2 • Event creation: – engaging in highly specific and novel tasks during study – Each task has some reference to the person themselves to create a more autobiographical and personalised experience Eg., Identity A Experiences: • First, I would like you to take your mobile phone out, put it on silent and place it next to the pot plant. • Second, I would like you to retrieve that book from the table, which is under some papers. Turn to page __ and study the photo of the three shapes [circle, triangle and square]. • Now, following the instructions beside the picture, I would like you to draw the shapes. Then colour the circle in blue, the triangle in red and the square in green. • Now, using your favourite coloured pen, write your name on the circle and your birthday on the square. • Now, what memory associated with your life comes to mind when you see the finished picture? When you have one, I would like you to spend twenty seconds visualizing this memory. Identity B Script • First, trace a picture of a dog using the blue pen • Second, fill those three cups with water to the level marked on the side of each cup. Then, place them in order from least amount of water to highest. • Now, I would like you to create an origami model of a finger pointer. Follow these instructions. • Now, I would like you to view these photos of people and identify them while pointing with the origami finger • Now could you rank them from your most to least liked • Finally, I would like you to state which person you see as being most similar to you. Could you provide a reason for your decision? Memory measurement • Assessed approximately 45 minutes after exposure • Memory assessment – free recall – force-choice recognition Thank you! [email protected]