AP Psych Chpt 14 Sct 1
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Transcript AP Psych Chpt 14 Sct 1
PSYCHOLOGICAL
DISORDERS
MEDICAL MODEL APPLIED TO
ABNORMAL BEHAVIOR
Medical model proposes that it is useful to think
of abnormal behavior as a disease
Critics: Thomas Szasz—mind can’t be sick
Diagnosis: distinguish one illness from another
Etiology: causation and developmental history of
an illness
Prognosis: forecast about probable course of an
illness
CRITERIA OF ABNORMAL BEHAVIOR
Deviance: deviating from society’s norms
Maladaptive behavior: struggling to adapt
Personal distress: usually depression and/or
anxiety disorders
Evolutionary psychs believe mental disorders
should be referred to as evolutionary dysfunctions
STEREOTYPES OF PSYCHOLOGICAL
DISORDERS
1) Psych disorders are incurable
2) People w/psych disorders are often violent and
dangerous
3) People w/psych disorders behave in bizarre
ways and are very different from normal people
PSYCHODIAGNOSIS:
CLASSIFICATION OF DISORDERS
1952: Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of
Mental Disorders (DSM) describes 100 disorders
1980: DSM-III---new classification system
Axes I and II diagnose disorders
Axes III-V are supplemental info
PREVALENCE OF PSYCHOLOGICAL
DISORDERS
Epidemiology: the study of the distribution of
mental or physical disorders
Prevalence: percentage of population that
exhibits a disorder during a specific time period
DSM criteria: 1/3 of pop. has some psych disorder
ANXIETY DISORDERS
A class of disorders marked by feelings of
excessive apprehension and anxiety
GENERALIZED ANXIETY DISORDER
DEF: marked by a chronic, high level of anxiety
that is not tied to any specific threat
Called “free-floating anxiety”
Worry about minor matters
Physical symptoms: trembling, muscle tension,
diarrhea, dizziness, faintness, sweating, heart
palpitations
PHOBIC DISORDERS
DEF: marked by a persistent and irrational fear
of an object or situation that presents no realistic
danger
Even imagining the object can trigger anxiety
PANIC DISORDER AND
AGORAPHOBIA
Panic disorder: characterized by recurrent
attacks of overwhelming anxiety that usually
occur suddenly and unexpectedly
Agoraphobia: fear of going out to public places
Majority who suffer from one or both are female
OBSESSIVE-COMPULSIVE
DISORDER
OCD: marked by persistent, uncontrollable
intrusions of unwanted thoughts and urges to
engage in senseless rituals
Obsessions are thoughts
Compulsions are actions
ETIOLOGY OF ANXIETY
DISORDERS
BIOLOGICAL FACTORS
Concordance rate: indicates the percentage of
twin pairs or other pairs of relatives that exhibit
the same disorders
Anxiety sensitivity
Neurotransmitters
CONDITIONING AND LEARNING
Anxiety responses are acquired by classical
conditioning
They are maintained by operant conditioning
Phobias could be evolutionary
Observational learning may also play a part
COGNITIVE FACTORS
Some are more likely to have anxiety b/c they
tend to:
1) misinterpret harmless situations as
threatening
2) focus excessive attention on perceived threats
3) selectively recall info that seems threatening
PERSONALITY AND STRESS
Certain personality traits appear to be related to
likelihood of anxiety
Neuroticism---nervous, jittery, insecure, guiltprone, gloomy
SOMATOFORM DISORDERS
Physical ailments that cannot be fully explained
by organic conditions and are largely due to
psychological factors
SOMATIZATION DISORDER
DEF: marked by a history of diverse physical
complaints that appear to be psychological in
origin
Usually a very diverse array of symptoms
CONVERSION DISORDER
DEF: characterized by a significant loss of
physical function (w/no apparent organic basis),
usually in a single organ system
HYPOCHONDRIASIS
DEF: characterized by excessive preoccupation
w/health concerns and incessant worry about
developing physical illnesses
Usually coupled w/ anxiety disorders and
depression
ETIOLOGY OF
SOMATOFORM DISORDERS
PERSONALITY FACTORS
Histrionic personality most prevalent
Self-centered, suggestible, excitable, highly
emotional, overly dramatic
Neuroticism also common
THE SICK ROLE
Being sick is a way to avoid life’s challenges
Creates an excuse for failure
Gets attention from others
DISSOCIATIVE DISORDERS
Class of disorders in which people lose contact
w/portions of their consciousness or memory,
resulting in disruptions in their sense of identity
DISSOCIATIVE AMNESIA AND
FUGUE
Dissociative Amnesia: sudden loss of memory for
important personal info that is too extensive to
be due to normal forgetting
Dissociative Fugue: loss of memory for entire life
along with sense of identity
DISSOCIATIVE IDENTITY DISORDER
DID: involves the coexistence in one person of 2
or more largely complete, and usually very
different, personalities
Personalities usually unaware of each other
Alternate personalities exhibit traits unusual for
original personality
ETIOLOGY OF DISSOCIATIVE
DISORDERS
Nicholas Spanos: DID patients are merely roleplaying to mask personal failure
Trauma does seem to be the main cause of
development of DID
MOOD DISORDERS
Class of disorders marked by emotional
disturbances of varied kinds that may spill over to
disrupt physical, perceptual, social, and thought
processes
MAJOR DEPRESSIVE DISORDER
DEF: show persistent feelings of sadness and
despair and a loss of interest in previous sources
of pleasure
Depression can occur at any point in life
Dysthynic disorder: chronic depression that is
insufficient in severity to justify diagnosis of a
major depressive episode
BIPOLAR DISORDER
DEF: characterized by the experience of one or
more manic episodes usually accompanied by
periods of depression
Cyclothymic disorder: exhibit chronic but
relatively mild symptoms of bipolar disturbance
ETIOLOGY OF MOOD
DISORDERS
GENETIC VULNERABILITY
Heredity can create a predisposition
Environmental factors may determine if it
becomes an actual disorder
NEUROCHEMICAL FACTORS
Norepinephrine and serotonin thought to be the
main NT’s
Recent studies are showing that other NT’s may
be involved
COGNITIVE FACTORS
Depression caused by Learned helplessness---a
passive “giving up”
People with pessimistic explanatory style are
most susceptible to depression
Hopelessness theory: pessimistic style, high
stress, low self-esteem, etc… create depression
Basically…negative thoughts and emotions lead
to and maintain depression
INTERPERSONAL ROOTS
Behaviorist approach
Inadequate social skills lead to depression
Depressed people are depressing