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  • [INTRO ♪]

  • In 1955, a woman named Shirley Mason

  • visited the psychotherapist she'd been seeing for a few months.

  • When the therapist asked her how she was doing, she said, “I'm fine but Shirley isn't.

  • She was so sick she couldn't come, so I came instead...

  • I'm Peggy!”

  • Through continued therapy, the therapist discovered what seemed like

  • 16 personalities living inside Shirley's mind.

  • She later wrote a now-famous book about Shirley, titled "Sybil"—

  • using a different name to protect her patient's privacy.

  • And that book put a rare syndrome, then called multiple personality disorder, on the map.

  • Before Sybil, fewer than 100 cases had ever been reported,

  • but after the book came out, diagnoses exploded into the thousands.

  • In a surprising twist, Shirley's specific case might not have been real,

  • and she eventually wrote her therapist claiming she'd made it all up.

  • But researchers are still looking into the disorder as a whole.

  • Today, we call Shirley's diagnosis dissociative identity disorder, or DID.

  • It often occurs alongside other psychiatric disorders,

  • making diagnosis very difficult.

  • And it's still very controversial among psychologists and psychiatrists.

  • But what's not controversial is that the way Hollywood portrays it is way off.

  • To be diagnosed with DID, a patient needs to have

  • two or more so-calledidentities”, or personality states.

  • This doesn't necessarily mean a whole other person

  • is living inside their mind.

  • In many cases, it's more like their overall personality is fragmented,

  • and different parts of their history and self-image can take control.

  • For example, only one personality state might be able to

  • speak a language learned during a semester abroad in college,

  • while another doesn't remember that experience.

  • Or if they'd previously been a very religious person,

  • they might have one fragment of them that's devout, and another that isn't.

  • Sometimes these fragments present themselves as multiple people

  • with different ages or genders, but not always.

  • And while these fragments can be complicated, with their own wants and aspirations, they

  • aren't there to fulfill, like, evil or criminal desires.

  • So the idea that people with DID are ruled by the worst parts of themselves,

  • like in Fight Club or Split, is entirely fictional.

  • The other major symptom is memory loss or amnesia.

  • This could be missing personal information about themselves,

  • or missing memories from times when another personality fragment was in control.

  • Also, it doesn't count if the personality shift

  • or memory loss are chemically-induced.

  • If everyone tells you that you turn into someone else when you're drunk,

  • but you can't remember what you said or did

  • you do not have dissociative identity disorder.

  • And, parents: imaginary friends? Totally cool.

  • They're really commonlike, 2/3 of kids have them

  • and this is not a symptom of your child harboring another secret personality.

  • But if a patient has multiple identities, their memory is shaky,

  • and they're distressed or impaired by these symptoms,

  • then a psychiatrist might diagnose them with DID.

  • Many, though, wouldn't.

  • It's not that their condition isn't real

  • there's no denying that patients have these symptoms.

  • But experts disagree on where the symptoms come from

  • whether DID is a stand-alone disorder, or whether it's better explained by other,

  • well-established disorders.

  • Surveys of psychiatrists found that most agree it's a valid diagnosis,

  • but many think it's commonly misdiagnosed.

  • That's partly because DID is so rare, most studies on it have very small samples.

  • But it's also because it's very unlikely that patients get just a DID diagnosis.

  • It's usually tacked on to other diagnoses, and this is one reason why many psychologists

  • think that it's better understood as an extreme version

  • of other disorders.

  • For example, DID can look a lot like a dissociative fugue state.

  • This is a kind of temporary memory loss where people behave impulsively,

  • leave their homes and wander around, and do things that they would never otherwise do.

  • So it might seem like a shift in personality.

  • These people also often lose their memories of who they are,

  • so they sometimes invent a new identity to fill in the gap.

  • And although a lot of these fugue cases are a bit of a mystery,

  • some are explained by substance use or neurological conditions.

  • DID also overlaps a lot with post-traumatic stress disorder, or PTSD.

  • That's especially interesting, because the psychologists

  • who most strongly believe DID is a distinct disorder

  • think it stems from childhood trauma or abusewhich could also cause PTSD.

  • And DID similarly shares symptoms with borderline personality disorder,

  • which is characterized by impulsive behavior, as well as unstable relationships and identity.

  • One study of 33 patients in the 1980s found that 70% of patients with DID

  • could have just as easily been diagnosed with borderline personality disorder instead.

  • But, the researchers concluded that because 30% of the cases

  • were distinct, DID should be considered a stand-alone disorder.

  • DID is also controversial because many of the new diagnoses

  • seem to be coming from just a few psychiatrists, and some suggest these doctors may be overzealous

  • because they're eager to find new cases.

  • But the doctors themselves counter that by saying that

  • they're just better at seeing the signs and identifying the disorder.

  • Regardless, the good news is that treatment for DID with tailored therapy

  • at least for the symptoms related to identity fragmentation

  • is pretty effective.

  • Which is great, because although there's a lot of controversy

  • surrounding the disorder, psychiatrists all agree that

  • real people are suffering and need help.

  • And like anyone else, they should be shown compassion,

  • and not made into movie monsters.

  • Thanks for watching this episode of SciShow Psych.

  • If you want to learn more about the psychology of trauma,

  • you might be interested in our episode on how trauma can be inherited.

  • [OUTRO ♪]

[INTRO ♪]

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