Cards (11)

    • Who explains depression through a cognitive triad?
      Beck (1976)
    • What does Beck (1976) claim depression is caused by?

      Negative self-schemas maintaining the cognitive triad: negative and irrational view of ourselves, our future, and the world
    • How do negative self-schemas develop?
      In response to negative experiences, such as criticisms from parents, peers or teachers
    • What do depressed people posses?
      Negative cognitive biases; selectively attend to negative stimuli, creating distortion of information (dichotomous thinking or faulty information processing)
    • What does Beck suggest depressed people do?

      Make overgeneralisations due to negative cognitive biased and therefore have preconceived expectations
    • Who explains depression through the ‘ABC Model’
      Ellis (1962)
    • How does Ellis explain depression?

      Result of irrational thinking; therefore states what is required for good mental health
    • What does ABC refer to in Ellis’ model?
      Activating event, belief and consequence
    • What is the activating event?
      Environmental trigger which may cause irrational thinking; e.g a friend passes you, ignoring you despite you trying to interact with them.
    • What is the belief?

      Where the individual has either a rational or irrational interpretation of the event; e.g. rationally, your friend is stressed and busy so they didn’t hear you, or that they dislike you and never want to talk again
    • What is the consequence?
      The action taken in response to the interpretation, where rational beliefs lead to healthy outcomes and irrational the opposite; e.g. I will talk to my friend later to see if they are okay, or I will ignore my friend since they don’t want to talk to me