Day 2: Chapter 1
Download
Report
Transcript Day 2: Chapter 1
Historical Context of Abnormal Psychology
and
Definitions of Abnormal Behavior
Chapter 1
Some Terms & Definitions
Psychopathology
Prevalence - # people with the disorder at a given
time
Incidence - # new cases in a given time period (#
people who develop the disorder)
Prognosis – the expected course and outcome of the
disorder
Etiology – causes of the disorder, how & why it
developed
The Past: Abnormal Behavior and the
Supernatural Tradition
Deviant behavior as a battle of “Good” vs. “Evil”
Deviant behavior was believed to be caused by demonic
possession, witchcraft, sorcery
Mass hysteria and the church
Treatments included exorcism, snake pits, beatings, and crude
surgeries
Movement of the moon and stars as a cause of deviant
behavior
Paracelsus and lunacy
Both “Outer Force” views were popular during the Middle Ages
Few believed that abnormality was an illness on par with
physical disease
trephination
The Past: The Biological Tradition Comes
of Age
Hippocrates & Galen- 4 humors (blood, black
bile,yellow bile, phlegm), melancholic, phlegmatic,
choleric, hysteric personalities
General paresis (Syphilis) and the biological link
with madness
Associated with several unusual psychological and
behavioral symptoms
Pasteur discovered the cause – A bacterial microorganism
Led to penicillin as a successful treatment
Bolstered the view that mental illness = physical illness and
should be treated as such
John Grey, MD., Psychiatrist, American Journal of
Insanity. “All mental illness due to physical causes”.
The Past: Consequences of the
Biological Tradition
Mental Illness = Physical Illness
The 1930s: Biological treatments were standard
practice
Insulin shock therapy, ECT, and brain surgery (i.e.,
lobotomy)
By the 1950s several medications were established
Examples include neuroleptics (i.e., reserpine) and major
tranquilizers
Psychological Traditions
Moral Therapy & Mental Hygiene Movement (1700s – Late 1800s)
Pinel, Tuke, Rush, and Dorothea Dix
Psychoanalytic Theory (late 1800s – 1950s)
Mesmer, Charcot, Freud, psychodynamic theory, psychoanalysis
Humanistic Theory (post-WWII)
Rogers, Maslow, self-actualization
Behavioral Model (1920s – 1970s)
Watson, Pavlov, Skinner, behavior therapy
Cognitive-behavioral Model (1960s – present)
Bandura, Beck, cognitive-behavioral therapy