phobias

    Cards (22)

    • what are phobias?
      extreme , irrational , unreasonable fear
    • what can cause phobias?
      bad experiences
    • what are the two types of depression?
      major depressive disorder and persistent depressive disorder
    • what is persistent depressive disorder?
      • dont remember last time you were happy
      • extreme low mood
      • symptoms need to last longer than 2 years to be diagnosed
    • what is major depressive disorder?
      • normal mood when youre not having an episode
      • symptoms need to last 2 weeks to be diagnosed
    • what are behavioural characteristics of phobias ?
      panic , endurance , avoidance
    • what are emotional characteristics of phobias?
      anxiety , fear , emotional
    • what are cognitive characteristics of phobias ?
      selective attention to the stimulus , irrational beliefs , cognitive distortions
    • behavioural characteristics of depression?
      activity levels , disruption to sleep and eating behaviour , aggression and self - harm
    • emotional characteristics of depression ?
      lowered mood , anger , lowered self esteem
    • cognitive characteristics of depression ?
      poor concentration , dwelling on the negative , absolutist thinking (thinking all situations are bad)
    • Behavioural characteristics of ocd?
      compulsions are repetitive , compulsions reduce anxiety , avoidance
    • emotional characteristics of ocd?
      anxiety and distress , accompanying despression , guilt and disgust
    • what was the aim of the little albert study?
      provide empirical evidence that human emotional responses could be learned through classical conditioning
    • what was the procedure of the little albert study?
      • an 11 month old boy was showed animals ( rats , bunnies, and also cotton wool ) and he had no response
      • he was then showed the animals and a metal bar was hit behind his head
      • he then associated the animals with the bar and got a phobia of white furry objects
    • what is flooding?
      • a treatment that involves exposing the patient to their phobia without a gradual build up in an anxiety hierarchy
      • immediate exposure eg , a person with arachnophobia recieving flooding would experience a large spider crawl over them for an extended period
    • how does flooding work?
      • flooding stops phobic responses very quickly, this may be because without the option of avoidance behaviour the client quickly learns that the stimulus is harmless
      • in classical conditioning terms, this is called extinction
    • flooding - classical conditioning ?
      a learned response is extinguished when the conditioned stimulus is encountered without the unconditioned stimulus. the result is that the conditioned stimulus no longer produces the conditioned response ( fear )
    • ethical safeguards - flooding?
      flooding is not unethical but could be distressing so full consent must be given by the participant
    • what is systematic desensitisation ?
      a behavioural therapy designed to gradually reduce phobic anxiety through classical conditioning
      a new response is learned ( counterconditioning )
    • what are the 3 processes involved in systematic desensitisation ?
      • anxiety hierarchy
      • become relaxed
      • work up the hierarchy through exposure
    • strength and weakness of flooding?
      strength = cost effective ( ten sessions of systematic desensitisation vs a 3 hour long session of flooding )
      weakness = highly unpleasant experience , sarah schumacher et al ( 2015 )found that participants and therapists rated flooding as significantly more stressful than systematic desensitisation which rises the ethical issue