Psychopathology

    Cards (32)

    • statistical infrequency - how often we come across behaviour - usual=normal , unusual=abnormal
    • deviation from social norms is how we expect people to behave socially by making a collective judgement of a society about what is right
    • failure to function adequately is when someone can’t cope with the demands of everyday like food , job , hygiene
    • Rosenbaum and Seligman (1989) said that relationships suffer as people can’t conform to standard interpersonal rules
    • deviation from ideal mental health is a focus on being normal and not deviating from being psychologically healthy
    • Maria Jahoda (1958) suggested we need to meet these things:
      • no distress
      • cope with stress
      • realistic view of the world
      • self esteem
      • love
      • eork
      • leisure
    • cultural relativism is the idea that cultural norms and values are culture specific so we should tolerate cultures as they are
    • schizotypal personality disorder (STPD) is a mental health condition marked by a consistent pattern of intense discomfort with relationships and social interactions
    • phobias:
      • you have it
      • physical and mental strain
      • always present even when there is no danger
      • interferes with ability to function
    • fears:
      • you experience it
      • fear is a reaction
      • once the danger has passed the fear becomes less intense
    • DSM 5 standa for diagnostic and statistic manual of mental disorder
    • DSM 5 is used by clinicians and psychiatrists to diagnose illness
    • specific phobia - phobia of an object or situation
    • social anxiety ( social phobia ) is a phobia of social situations
    • behavioural characteristics are the way people act
    • emotional characteristics are the way people feel
    • cognitive characteristics are the way people think
    • behavioural responses to phobias:
      • panic attacks
      • crying
      • screaming
      • avoidance
    • emotional responses to phobias:
      • persistent fear
      • high anxiety
      • fear
    • cognitive responses to phobias:
      • conscious awareness of heightened anxiety
      • paying selective attention
      • irrational beliefs
    • Watson and Rayner studied phobias in 1920 with their experiment “little albert“
    • something we have no fear of - neutral stimulus
    • something that triggers fear - unconditioned stimulus
    • Method of Watson and Rayners research on phobias:
      • before conditioning - rat (ns) - no fear
      • during conditioning - rat (ns) and loud bang (ucs) = fear
      • after conditioning - rat (ns) now has a conditioned reflex= fear
    • classical conditioning:
      • how phobias are learned in the first place
      • associate an involuntary response and stimulus
    • operate conditioning:
      • associate a voluntary behaviour and consequence
      • how learned fears are maintained
    • Mowrer on operant conditioning -
      • rewards increase a behaviour
      • punishment decreases a behaviour
      • avoidance maintains the fear
    • 2 ways to treat phobias:
      • flooding
      • systematic desensitisation
    • systematic desensitisation is a behavioural therapy designed to gradually reduce phobic anxiety through classical conditioning - if a person can learn to relax in the presence of the phobic stimulus they will be cured
    • 3 processes in systematic desensitisation:
      • anxiety heirarchy
      • relaxation
      • exposure
    • reciprocal inhibition is when its impossible to feel fear and calm
    • flooding - facing your fear at maximum intensity for a long period of time
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