Transcript Lecture 1
1
Accepted
1.
DSM-V definition:
Behavioral, cognitive, and/or emotional
dysfunctions
2.
Unexpected in cultural context
3.
Personal distress
4.
Substantial impairment in function
Diagnostic and Statistical Manual-V (DSM-V) outlines
criteria for disorders based on prototypes/typical
profiles
2
Study
of psychological
disorders
description, causes (etiology),
assessment, and treatment
Scientist-practitioner
model
Staying current.
Objectively evaluating assessment
and treatment efficacy.
Conducting scientific research.
http://www.youtube.com/watch
?v=mNoRxCRJ-Y0
3
As
understanding of abnormal behavior
changes, so do treatment approaches.
Traditions
of understanding psychopathology:
Supernatural
Biological
Psychological
4
supernatural
tradition: psychological problems
have supernatural causes; mental illness is a battle
between good and evil
exorcism: religious ritual performed to eliminate evil
spirits
Modern examples?
Astrology
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=z11DeKK
13vM&NR=1
Barnum effect
Hippocrates (460-377 BC)
Father of modern Western
medicine
Etiology = a combination of, brain
pathology, head trauma, genetics,
psychosocial factors, stress, and
family factors
Galen (129-198 AD)
Humoral theory of mental illness
Treatments = bloodletting and
inducing vomit
6
Syphilis
STD with psychosis-like symptoms (i.e.,
delusions and hallucinations)
Etiology = bacterial microorganism
The
1930’s
Insulin shock therapy
Brain surgery
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_0aNILW6
ILk
20,000 procedures by early 1950’s
Electro-Convulsive Therapy (ECT)
Remains a treatment for depression
7
The 1950’s
◦ Psychotropic medications
Increasingly available
Systematically developed
◦
Antipsychotic medication (Neuroleptics)
Chlorpromazine (Thorazine), Reserpine and
treatment of psychosis
◦
Anti-anxiety medication (Tranquilizers)
Benzodiazepines (Valium, Xanax) and
treatment of anxiety
Cons of medications
8
Bethlem Royal Hospital (a.k.a. Bedlam)
opened in 1403 as a hospital for mentally ill
in London
Became infamous for brutal treatment
18th century - people paid admission to see
“lunatics”
Could bring a stick to poke patients
Moral
Therapy
“Moral” = emotional or psychological
Frequent observation and human contact
Encouraging social interaction
Individual attention
Pinel was originator
Replaced bleeding and other treatments with
moral therapy
10
Id
Pleasure principle
Illogical, emotional, irrational
Ego
Reality principle
Logical and rational
Superego
Moral principles
“Conscience”
11
Ego
Loss
fights to stay on top of the Id and Superego
of control = anxiety
Coping
strategies include:
Displacement
Denial
Rationalization
Reaction formation
Projection
Repression
Sublimation
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free
association: saying freely whatever
comes to mind
catharsis: release of emotional material
transference: client transfers emotional
feelings for his or her parents to the
therapist
countertransference: therapist transfers
feelings for significant others onto the
client
Theoretical constructs
◦ Intrinsic goodness
◦ Striving for self-actualization
◦ “Blocked” growth
Person-centered therapy
◦ Carl Rogers (1902–1987)
Hierarchy of Needs
◦ Abraham Maslow
◦ (1908-1970)
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Therapeutic process
◦ Unconditional positive
regard
◦ Empathy
◦ Non-directive, clientcentered approach
◦ http://www.youtube.c
om/watch?v=RX_Y3zUP
zEo&feature=related
Outcomes
◦ Efficacy data is limited
◦ Limitation: Severe
psychopathology
15
Classical Conditioning
Ivan Pavlov (1849-1936)
◦
Ever-present form of learning of
relationships(associations) in our
environment
◦
Unconditioned stimulus (UCS)
Unconditioned response (UCR)
◦
Conditioned stimulus (CS)
Conditioned response (CR)
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Behaviorism--John B. Watson (1878 - 1958)
“Little Albert” experiment
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Xt0ucxOrPQE
Concept of stimulus generalization.
Skinner (1904 - 1990)
Operant Conditioning: learning from consequences
Reinforcements and Punishments
Behavior “shaping”
Reinforce “successive approximations”
in order to train a complex behavior
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Mary Cover Jones
◦ Rabbit phobia extinguished by exposure
and modeling
Joseph Wolpe (1915 -1997)
◦ Systematic desensitization
◦ Relaxation
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