Abnormal Psychology - People Server at UNCW
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Transcript Abnormal Psychology - People Server at UNCW
Abnormal
Psychology
Defining Abnormal Behavior
What is abnormal behavior?
– statistical infrequency
e.g. mental retardation
– personal distress
e. g. depression
– violation of social norms
e.g., alcoholism
Abnormal behavior is behavior that
causes:
– significant impairment in social or occupational
functioning
– Significant distress in self or others
Causes of Abnormal
Behavior
Biological factors
– e.g., neurotransmitters
Psychological factors
– e.g. traumatic stressors
Sociocultural factors
– e.g. “downward” social drift
An interactive approach:
Biopsychosocial
Classifying Abnormal
Behavior
Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of
Mental Disorders, 4th Edition (DSM-IV)
Multiaxial system
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I: Primary classification
II: Personality disorders
III: General medical conditions
IV: Psychosocial stressors
V: Current level of functioning
Categories of Mental
Disorders
Anxiety disorders
– Psychological disorders that include the
following main features:
Excessive fear (out of proportion to the
feared stimulus)
Phsical symptoms (e.g. racing heart,
sweatiness)
Apprehensive expectations and thoughts
Anxiety Disorders
Generalized anxiety disorder
– Consists of persistent anxiety for at
least a month
– Individual is unable to specify the
reasons for the anxiety
Panic disorder
– Panic attacks coupled with at least one
month of worry about having another
panic attack
Anxiety Disorders
Agoraphobia
– Individuals often lead very restricted
lives- not leaving the house at all.
– characterized by an intense fear of:
Having a panic attack and being humiliated
or unable to find help
Anxiety Disorders
Phobic disorder
– Individual has irrational,
overwhelming, persistent fear
of a particular object or
situation
Social phobia
– Intense fear of being
humiliated or embarrassed in
social situations
Anxiety Disorders
Obsessive-compulsive disorder
– Individual has recurrent unwanted
thoughts that will not go away
(obsession) and/or urges to perform
repetitive, ritualistic behaviors
(compulsion)
Common themes are contamination or
doubting
Anxiety Disorders
Post-traumatic stress disorder
– Develops through exposure to an
extremely traumatic event
– Anxiety symptoms may immediately
follow the trauma or be delayed for
many years
Dissociative Disorders
Dissociative disorders
– Involve a sudden loss of memory or
change in identity
Dissociative amnesia
– Memory loss caused by extensive
psychological stress
Dissociative Disorders
Dissociative fugue
– Individual not only develops amnesia, but also
unexpectedly travels away from home and
assumes a new identity
Dissociative identity disorder
– Formerly called multiple personality disorder
– Individuals have two or more distinct
personalities or selves
Mood Disorders
Major depressive disorder
– Individual experiences depressed
characteristics for at least two weeks
– Symptoms are:
Cognitive
Emotional
somatic
Dysthymic disorder
– More chronic than major depressive disorders
and has fewer symptoms.
Mood Disorders
Bipolar disorder
– A mood disorder characterized by
extreme mood swings that include one
or more episodes of mania
Euphoria
Excitability and hyperactivity
– Person may experience depression and
mania
Causes of Mood Disorders
Biological causes
– Heredity and brain processes
Psychological causes
– Learned helplessness
occurs when individuals are exposed to
aversive stimulation, such as prolonged
stress or pain, over which they have no
control
Schizophrenia
Schizophrenia
– A severe psychological disorder
characterized by:
Disturbances in affect
– e.g. flat or inappropriate
Disturbances in speech and behavior
– e.g. formal thought disorder
Distortions in cognition
– e.g., delusions and hallucinations
Types of Schizophrenia
Disorganized schizophrenia
– Individual has delusions and
hallucinations that have little or no
recognizable meaning
Catatonic schizophrenia
– Most prominent characteristic is
disturbances in motor behavior
e.g. catatonic rigidity
Types of Schizophrenia
Paranoid schizophrenia
– Characterized by delusions of reference,
grandeur, and persecution
Undifferentiated schizophrenia
– Characterized by disorganized behavior,
hallucinations, delusions, and
incoherence
Causes of Schizophrenia
Biological factors
– Heredity and neurobiological factors
The dopamine hypothesis
Psychosocial factors
– Diathesis-stress view
A combination of biogenetic disposition and
stress causes schizophrenia
Personality Disorders
Personality disorders
– Chronic, maladaptive cognitivebehavioral patterns that are thoroughly
integrated into the individual’s
personality
Odd/Eccentric Cluster
Paranoid
Schizoid
Schizotypal
Dramatic/Emotionally
Problematic Cluster
Histrionic
Narcissistic
Antisocial
Borderline
Chronic Fearfulness/Avoidant
Cluster
Avoidant
Dependent
Obsessive-compulsive
Passive-aggressive