Psychopathology

    Cards (25)

    • Characteristics of depression
      • Emotional
      • Behavioural
      • Cognitive
    • How phobias are initiated through classical conditioning
      A neutral stimulus is paired with an unconditioned stimulus (that causes fear) to produce a conditioned response of fear
    • Systematic desensitisation
      Preferred to flooding due to being less traumatic and more viable for all phobic individuals
    • Behavioural characteristics of depression
      Depressed individuals experience either increased or reduced levels in activity, changes in sleeping hours, agitation, restlessness, and appetite changes
    • Emotional characteristics of depression
      5 symptoms required for a diagnosis of major depressive disorder, including feelings of intense sadness and worthlessness, some may report feelings of anger
    • Cognitive characteristics of depression
      Negative thoughts cause negative emotions associated with depression, irrational thoughts include negative expectations and thoughts of worthlessness, self-fulfilling thoughts may occur
    • Diathesis-stress model

      Certain genes create vulnerability for mental disorders, and after an activating event or trauma, mental disorders develop in these individuals
    • Systematic desensitisation
      Treatment for phobias replacing fear with relaxation by exposing patients to progressively anxiety-inducing scenarios
    • Negative triad
      A cognitive approach to understanding depression, focusing on how expectations (schema) about the self, world, and future lead to depression
    • SLT explains phobias
      May be acquired through modelling the behaviour of others, especially if the behaviour is rewarding and gets attention
    • Phobias maintained by operant conditioning
      Avoidance of phobic stimulus reduces anxiety, leading to continued avoidance due to negative reinforcement
    • Statistical infrequency
      Abnormality defined as behavior that is extremely rare or characteristics not displayed by many people
    • Emotional, behavioural, and cognitive characteristics of phobias
      Emotional- Anxiety, Behavioral- Avoidance behaviors, Cognitive- Irrational fears and avoidance behaviors
    • Emotional, behavioural, and cognitive characteristics of OCD
      Emotional- Feelings of anxiety and shame, Behavioural- Compulsive behaviors to alleviate anxiety, Cognitive- Recurrent, intrusive thoughts often involving irrational themes like germs
    • Cognitive theory explains depression
      Depression is due to irrational thinking and skewed negative cognitions
    • Failure to function adequately
      Abnormality defined as an inability to cope with everyday life, causing distress to the individual or others around them
    • Biological theory explains OCD
      OCD is caused by abnormal levels of dopamine and serotonin, and a non-functioning worry circuit in the brain
    • Phobias interfere with the individual’s daily life, distinguishing them from normal fears
    • OCD is treated using the biological approach by administering drugs to reduce symptoms, such as SSRIs to increase serotonin levels
    • Briefly describe the case of Little Albert
    • The deviation from ideal health definition is criticised for being founded on unrealistic criteria that are unlikely for any one individual to display all the time
    • Little Albert study
      1. A fear of fluffy white objects was conditioned in a young baby
      2. Pairing neutral stimulus (NS) with unconditioned stimulus (UCS) led to a fear response becoming a conditioned response
    • Characteristics of phobias
      • Emotional: Anxiety is the primary emotion associated with phobic disorders
      • Behavioural: Phobic individuals often avoid situations involving their phobic stimulus
      • Cognitive: Thoughts of a phobic individual are irrational and not reduced by reasoning
    • Depression is treated using the cognitive approach by using CBT, a combination of cognitive therapy and behavioural therapy
    • Deviation from the ideal mental health is defined as displaying the absence of the criteria set by Jahoda for ideal mental health