AP Psych Chpt 14 Sct 2
Download
Report
Transcript AP Psych Chpt 14 Sct 2
SCHIZOPHRENIC
DISORDERS
A class of disorders marked by delusions,
hallucinations, disorganized speech, and
deterioration of adaptive behavior
GENERAL SYMPTOMS
Delusions and irrational thoughts
Delusions are false beliefs that are maintained
even though they clearly are out of touch with
reality
Delusions of grandeur
Deterioration of thought
Deterioration of adaptive behavior
Hallucinations: sensory perceptions that occur in
the absence of a real, external stimulus or are
gross distortions of perceptual input
Disturbed emotion
SUBTYPES
Paranoid type: dominated by delusions of
persecution, along w/delusions of grandeur
Catatonic type: striking motor disturbances,
ranging from muscular rigidity to random motor
activity
Disorganized type: particularly severe
deterioration of adaptive behavior
Undifferentiated type: idiosyncratic mixtures of
schizophrenic symptoms
POSITIVE VS. NEGATIVE SYMPTOMS
Negative symptoms involve behavioral deficits,
such as flattened emotions, social withdrawal,
apathy, impaired attention, and poverty of speech
Positive symptoms involve behavioral excesses or
peculiarities, such as hallucinations, delusions,
bizarre behavior, and wild flights of ideas
COURSE AND OUTCOME
Schizophrenia usually emerges during
adolescence or early adulthood
Emergence may be sudden or gradual
Mild disorders are usually successfully treated
For some, it is chronic and permanent
hospitalization is required
Males tend to have earlier onset, relapse, and
more hospitalizations
ETIOLOGY OF
SCHIZOPHRENIA
GENETIC VULNERABILITY
Strong evidence to support hereditary influence
Identical twin concordance rates at about 48%
Born to two schizophrenic parents---46%
NEUROCHEMICAL FACTORS
Excess dopamine is a possibility
Possible interaction between dopamine and
serotonin
STRUCTURAL ABNORMALITIES IN
THE BRAIN
CT scans and MRIs show enlarged brain
ventricles in schizophrenic patients
A smaller thalamus may play a part
Psychs don’t know if these are cause or effect of
schizophrenia
NEURODEVELOPMENTAL
HYPOTHESIS
Schizophrenia is caused in part by various
disruptions in the normal maturation processes
before or at birth
Studies focus on viral infections
EXPRESSED EMOTION
Focuses on family dynamics influence the course
of schizophrenia
Expressed emotion is the degree to which a
relative of a schizophrenic patient displays highly
critical or emotionally overinvolved attitudes
toward the patient
PERSONALITY DISORDERS
A class of disorders marked by extreme, inflexible
personality traits that cause subjective distress or
impaired social and occupational functioning
PERSONALITY DISORDERS
DSM-IV lists ten disorders clustered into 3 main
groups:
1) Anxious-fearful
2) Odd-eccentric
3) Dramatic-impulsive
DIAGNOSTIC PROBLEMS
Personality disorders tend to overlap one another
Current revisions are underway for the new
DSM-V, set to be published in 2013
ANTISOCIAL PERSONALITY
DISORDER
DEF: marked by impulsive, callous,
manipulative, aggressive, and irresponsible
behavior that reflects a failure to accept social
norms
Lack a conscience
More common among males
Seen in 3-4% of pop.
ETIOLOGY
May be a genetic disposition
Inherited sluggish autonomic systems
Inadequate or dysfunctional family systems may
be a cause
PSYCHOLOGICAL
DISORDERS AND THE LAW
INSANITY
DEF: a legal status indicating that a person
cannot be held responsible for his or her actions
because of mental illness
M’naghten rule: insanity exists when a mental
disorder makes a person unable to distinguish
right from wrong
INVOLUNTARY COMMITMENT
DEF: people hospitalized in psychiatric facilities
against their will
Criteria:
1) people are dangerous to themselves
2) dangerous to others
3) treatment is needed
CULTURE AND PATHOLOGY
ARE EQUIVALENT DISORDERS
FOUND AROUND THE WORLD?
Severe disorders are pancultural
Culture-bound disorders: abnormal syndromes
found only in a few cultural groups
Koro, windigo, anorexia nervosa