Abstract:
Introduction
Borderline Personality Disorder is a complex mental health problem where affective 
instability and interpersonal relationship of the person is markedly disrupted. Various 
biological, developmental, psychological and contextual factors are indicated for this 
disruption along with other signs and symptoms of BPD. This study explored metacognition 
and attributional style in Borderline Personality Disorder (BPD). Both metacognitive ability 
and attribution style impacts an individual‘s quality of social interaction and mental health 
and these two have been found to be impaired in different psychiatric conditions including 
personality disorders.  A comprehensive literature review identified some gap in knowledge 
regarding the role of these two variables in the cases of borderline personality disorder.   
 
Rationale: The present study is conceived to address the generic knowledge gap regarding 
the relation between cognitive constructs (such as, metacognitive process, and attribution 
style) (see Semerari, et al., 2014) as well as contextual knowledge gap from a low resourced 
Asian culture that is Bangladesh. 
 
Objective: The present study aims to understand the attribution style and metacognitive 
process in borderline personality disorder. To achieve this overarching objective, several 
specific objectives were formulated as follows: 1) To assess metacognitive skills in BPD;  
2) To assess attribution styles in BPD; 3) To explore relation between different metacognitive 
skills and four BPD sectors of  psychopathology that is to say, affective, interpersonal, behavioral 
and cognitive/self; 4)  To explore the relation between internal, personal and situational 
attribution style and four sectors of BPD psychopathology that is to say, affective, interpersonal, behavioral and cognitive/self; 5) To explore relation between different metacognitive skills and 
attribution styles in BPD. 
 
Method 
Design: Mixed method sequential approach using both quantitative and qualitative methods 
was employed to investigate the objectives of the present research. 
 
Participants: 40 diagnosed with BPD and 40 screened as without BPD took part in the 
research. Both groups were matched on the basis of age (average age being bpd=25.96 years 
and normal =26.68 years), sex (male=31, female=9) and education (average years of 
education, bpd=13.72 years; normal=13.92 years). 
 
Inclusion and Exclusion Criteria: Status of diagnosis of BPD was the key inclusion criteria 
for the two groups of participants.  While to be included in the Group 1 i.e., the BPD patient, 
the participants needed to have a confirmed  diagnosis of BPD while to be included in the 
Group 2 i.e., the normal control, the participants needed to be screened out of BPD. 
 
Ethical clearance: For data collection ethical clearance was obtained from the respective 
Ethics Committees of the Department of Clinical Psychology, University of Dhaka and 
National Institute of Mental Health and Hospital, Bangladesh.  
 
Measures: The metacognitive self-assessment scale (MSAS) and Internal Personal and 
Situational Attribution Questionnaire (IPSAQ) were used to assess the metacognition and 
attributional style of the participants respectively. Both the scales were translated in bangla 
following the forward-backward translation procedures. Cronbach‘s alpha ranged between 
0.623 and 0.830 for all MSAS subscales and for overall metacognitive function as measured behavioral and cognitive/self; 5) To explore relation between different metacognitive skills and 
attribution styles in BPD. 
 
Method 
Design: Mixed method sequential approach using both quantitative and qualitative methods 
was employed to investigate the objectives of the present research. 
 
Participants: 40 diagnosed with BPD and 40 screened as without BPD took part in the 
research. Both groups were matched on the basis of age (average age being bpd=25.96 years 
and normal =26.68 years), sex (male=31, female=9) and education (average years of 
education, bpd=13.72 years; normal=13.92 years). 
 
Inclusion and Exclusion Criteria: Status of diagnosis of BPD was the key inclusion criteria 
for the two groups of participants.  While to be included in the Group 1 i.e., the BPD patient, 
the participants needed to have a confirmed  diagnosis of BPD while to be included in the 
Group 2 i.e., the normal control, the participants needed to be screened out of BPD. 
 
Ethical clearance: For data collection ethical clearance was obtained from the respective 
Ethics Committees of the Department of Clinical Psychology, University of Dhaka and 
National Institute of Mental Health and Hospital, Bangladesh.  
 
Measures: The metacognitive self-assessment scale (MSAS) and Internal Personal and 
Situational Attribution Questionnaire (IPSAQ) were used to assess the metacognition and 
attributional style of the participants respectively. Both the scales were translated in bangla 
following the forward-backward translation procedures. Cronbach‘s alpha ranged between 
0.623 and 0.830 for all MSAS subscales and for overall metacognitive function as measured behavioral and cognitive/self; 5) To explore relation between different metacognitive skills and 
attribution styles in BPD. 
 
Method 
Design: Mixed method sequential approach using both quantitative and qualitative methods 
was employed to investigate the objectives of the present research. 
 
Participants: 40 diagnosed with BPD and 40 screened as without BPD took part in the 
research. Both groups were matched on the basis of age (average age being bpd=25.96 years 
and normal =26.68 years), sex (male=31, female=9) and education (average years of 
education, bpd=13.72 years; normal=13.92 years). 
 
Inclusion and Exclusion Criteria: Status of diagnosis of BPD was the key inclusion criteria 
for the two groups of participants.  While to be included in the Group 1 i.e., the BPD patient, 
the participants needed to have a confirmed  diagnosis of BPD while to be included in the 
Group 2 i.e., the normal control, the participants needed to be screened out of BPD. 
 
Ethical clearance: For data collection ethical clearance was obtained from the respective 
Ethics Committees of the Department of Clinical Psychology, University of Dhaka and 
National Institute of Mental Health and Hospital, Bangladesh.  
 
Measures: The metacognitive self-assessment scale (MSAS) and Internal Personal and 
Situational Attribution Questionnaire (IPSAQ) were used to assess the metacognition and 
attributional style of the participants respectively. Both the scales were translated in bangla 
following the forward-backward translation procedures. Cronbach‘s alpha ranged between 
0.623 and 0.830 for all MSAS subscales and for overall metacognitive function as measured by total MSAS score was 0.898. Cronbach‘s alpha for the IPSAQ Bangla from the current 
sample was 0.754. 
For qualitative part indepth interview was conducted following a topic guide, which were 
recorded and transcribed for analysis.  
 
Analysis: For quantitative part of the study, analysis of data comprised of both descriptive 
and inferential statistical procedure using SPSS. The analysis of qualitative part consisted of 
open coding, followed by focused coding and finally extracting of themes.  
 
Result 
Quantitative: Results showed that total metacognitve ability of the participants with BPD (M 
= 31.40, SD = 8.136) was found less than the total metacognitve ability of the participants 
without BPD (M = 42.07, SD = 5.070). An independent t-test showed that the difference 
between ability scores was significant and effect size was large (t = 7.042; df=65.326, p = 
0.000, two-tailed, d=0.80). In all subscale scores of metacognition, viz., monitoring, 
integration, differentiation, decentration and mastery, with BPD was low compared to the 
without BPD sample, and the differences were significant in all sub-scales scores except 
decentration.  As for Attribution style BDP group showed greater tendency towards internal 
attribution style for negative events than without BPD group and also attributed the cause of 
negative events to others and situational factors significantly less. As regards internalizing 
bias BPD group scored less and as regards personalizing bias, for with BPD and without 
BPD on average more than half the attributions for negative events were ascribed to other 
people which in other words is blaming others for negative events. Pearson Correlation 
among SCID score, Metacognition and Attributional Style scores were calculated. Total score 
on SCID of the BPD group has showed a significant negative correlation with Monitoring 
and Decentration; and affect domain on SCID has a significant negative correlation with 
Decentration. Whereas, SCID Interpersonal Sector has a significant positive correlation with Personalizing Bias. Other results inform about significant correlation between different 
metacogntive abilities with attribution style of the BPD. Thus Negative-internal attribution 
has negative correlation with Decentration and Mastery. Whereas, Negative-situational has 
positive correlation with Decentration and Mastery. On the other hand Personal Bias has 
significant negative correlation with Monitoring, Decentration and Mastery. All these 
correlations hint to BPD‘s characteristic thinking and behavior patterns, like self and other 
blaming, hostility and depression etc. As regards severity of BPD psychopathology, affective 
domain has found to be the highest followed by Interpersonal, behavioral and self/cognitive 
domains.  
 
Qualitative: Five core themes themes were extracted which were as follows: ―prioritization 
of emotion‖; ―thought emotion fusion‖; ―failed subtle communication‖; ―primacy of personal 
view‖; ―loop of self-criticism and rumination.‖  
Discussion 
The findings gives a cognitive profile consisting of two significant variables that explains 
some difficulties of the borderline people in self and relational context. Qualitative findings 
have further supported and elucidated the findings. Findings of this study is supported in 
many ways by similar research for different disorders, and further the findings has 
implications for clinical intervention in BPD. Thus training the BPD patients on enhancing 
metacognitive skills and educating to deal with negative attribution style seem to have good 
prognostic outcome in BPD intervention.   
Limitation & Conclusion: Non-probabilistic sampling, small sample size, and drawing the 
sample only from urban, educated and middle and upper socioeconomic strata, are some 
limitations of the present study. However, being a research of first of its kind on Bangladeshi 
BPD population further studies addressing different aspects of metacognition and attribution 
is deemed necessary.