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How are the relationships between childhood temperament, personality development and interpersonal function, and risk to depressive and other mood disorders, best conceptualised? What are the implications for preventive or treatment research?

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  11 October 2023

Ian B. Hickie*
Affiliation:
Brain and Mind Centre, The University of Sydney, Sydney, NSW, Australia
Andrew Chanen
Affiliation:
Orygen, Melbourne, VIC, Australia Centre for Youth Mental Health, The University of Melbourne, Melbourne, VIC, Australia
*
Corresponding author: Ian B. Hickie; Email: ian.hickie@sydney.edu.au
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Extract

One of the long-standing challenges in the field of depressive and other mood disorders is to have a clear conceptualisation of the relationships between childhood temperaments, personality development and adult self and interpersonal function, and depressive and other mood disorders. Some biologically-based dispositional (or temperamental) traits are present from birth and are relatively stable from infancy through to adulthood. These characteristics (e.g., anxious attachment or social inhibition) are commonly seen as ‘at-risk’ traits for later formal diagnoses of anxiety disorders in pre-pubertal children and anxiety and depression in teenagers (Compas et al., 2004; Rothbart, 2007).

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Copyright
© The Author(s), 2023. Published by Cambridge University Press

Context

One of the long-standing challenges in the field of depressive and other mood disorders is to have a clear conceptualisation of the relationships between childhood temperaments, personality development and adult self and interpersonal function, and depressive and other mood disorders. Some biologically-based dispositional (or temperamental) traits are present from birth and are relatively stable from infancy through to adulthood. These characteristics (e.g., anxious attachment or social inhibition) are commonly seen as ‘at-risk’ traits for later formal diagnoses of anxiety disorders in pre-pubertal children and anxiety and depression in teenagers (Compas et al., Reference Compas, Connor-Smith and Jaser2004; Rothbart, Reference Rothbart2007).

These dispositional traits link individual differences in behaviour to developing neurobiological characteristics (Rothbart, Reference Rothbart2007; Shiner, Reference Shiner, Mikulincer, Shaver, Cooper and Larsen2015) such as arousal or fear sensitivity and might be seen to be caused by a variety of genetic and/or environmental factors that influence the development of key response systems (e.g., hypothalamic–pituitary–adrenal axis, sympathetic nervous system response and immune response), along with their linked behavioural repertoires (fight or flight, flop, retreat and avoid).

Through reciprocal interactive processes in relation to environmental experience, these temperamental traits become known as personality traits (Rothbart, Reference Rothbart2007; Shiner, Reference Shiner, Mikulincer, Shaver, Cooper and Larsen2015). Certain personality traits have been proposed as ‘at risk’ traits for depression and other mood disorders. Most prominently, ‘neuroticism’, the trait disposition to experience negative affects (anger, anxiety, self‐consciousness, irritability, emotional instability, depression) predisposes individuals to respond adversely to environmental (especially interpersonal) stress, such as interpreting ordinary situations as threatening, or experiencing small frustrations to be overwhelming (Boyce et al., Reference Boyce, Hickie, Parker, Mitchell, Wilhelm and Brodaty1992; Widiger and Oltmanns, Reference Widiger and Oltmanns2017).

When personality traits are associated with other emotional characteristics, such as mood instability and other more enduring patterns of behaviour within interpersonal relationships (i.e., rejection sensitivity), they are also likely to attract a variety of different depressive or mood disorder diagnoses (e.g., dysthymia and bipolar spectrum) or personality disorder diagnoses (e.g., borderline personality disorder). These determinations often have very significant implications for the types of treatments offered, with those labelled ‘personality-determined’ being more likely to attract psychological therapies, while those labelled ‘depressive or mood disorder-determined’ being more likely to attract medical therapies.

Depressive and other mood disorders have as central characteristics key behavioural changes in the interpersonal domain, such as withdrawal from key social relationships, reduced response to key interpersonal cues, avoidance of interpersonal engagement, changes in perception of the value of key interpersonal contacts, and withdrawal from or loss of pleasure associated with physical or sexual intimacy with key others. Consequently, there is often great controversy as to whether these are actually state-based phenomena (i.e., a direct consequence of the mood disorder) or whether they are reflective of enduring personality characteristics (and hence less likely to be greatly affected by the active treatment of the mood disorder).

Much of this area has been complicated by the erroneous conceptualisation of mood disorders as one axis of primary psychiatric disorders within multiaxial diagnostic systems (such as the DSM systems since 1980), while personality and personality disorders have been conceived to be on an entirely separate axis. Within such classificatory systems, treatment of the primary psychiatric disorders is prioritised, while personality characteristics are often simply recorded and the assignment of ‘personality disorder’ diagnoses might lead to neglect of the provision of active mood disorder treatments.

So, there is an urgent need to improve our conceptualisation of trajectories of risk, the role(s) of temperament and personality, their active assessment (using standardised measures) in those who present with depression and other mood disorders, and prevention and intervention research focused on delivering optimal outcomes – particularly in the key interpersonal domain.

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Competing interests

IBH is the Co-Director, Health and Policy at the Brain and Mind Centre (BMC) University of Sydney, Australia. The BMC operates an early-intervention youth services at Camperdown under contract to headspace. Professor Hickie has previously led community-based and pharmaceutical industry-supported (Wyeth, Eli Lily, Servier, Pfizer, AstraZeneca, Janssen Cilag) projects focused on the identification and better management of anxiety and depression. He is the Chief Scientific Advisor to, and a 3.2% equity shareholder in, InnoWell Pty Ltd which aims to transform mental health services through the use of innovative technologies.

References

Boyce, P, Hickie, I, Parker, G, Mitchell, P, Wilhelm, K and Brodaty, H (1992) Interpersonal sensitivity and the one-year outcome of a depressive episode. Australian and New Zealand Journal of Psychiatry 26(2), 156161.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Compas, BE, Connor-Smith, J and Jaser, SS (2004) Temperament, stress reactivity, and coping: Implications for depression in childhood and adolescence. Journal of Clinical Child & Adolescent Psychology 33(1), 2131.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Rothbart, MK (2007) Temperament, development, and personality. Current Directions in Psychological Science 16(4), 207212. doi: 10.1111/j.1467-8721.2007.00505.x CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Shiner, R (2015) The development of temperament and personality traits in childhood and adolescents. In Mikulincer, M, Shaver, PR, Cooper, M and Larsen, RJ (eds). APA Handbook of Personality and Social Psychology, Vol. 4. Personality Processes and Individual Differences (pp. 85–105): American Psychological Association.Google Scholar
Widiger, TA and Oltmanns, JR (2017) Neuroticism is a fundamental domain of personality with enormous public health implications. World Psychiatry. 16(2):144145. doi: 10.1002/wps.20411.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed