Eats things that aren't really food and have no nutrition (dirt,poop,hair, paper) and isn't normal for their stage of development. Usually starts in childhood.
Rumination disorder
Regurgitation for no apparent reason. No problems with digestion, no disgust but rather satisfaction. Starts as a baby. Isususka then kakainin
Avoidant/restrictive food intake disorder
Not eating because of lack of interest in food. Lots of weight loss, malnutrition.
Bulimia Nervosa
Bulimia is an eating disorder in which a person has regular episodes of eating a verylargeamount of food (bingeing) during which the person feels a loss of control over eating. The person then uses different ways, such as vomiting or laxatives (purging), to preventweightgain.
Anorexia Nervosa
Overly successful weightloss. Restricting or binging/ purging. Body image distortions, food rituals, pride in diet and control, rarely seek treatment. Lots of medical consequences.
Binge-eating disorder
Binge eating without compensatory behaviors. Very distressed about binging. Disgusted, depressed,embarrassed, and guilty.
Somatic Symptom Disorder
Somatic Symptom Disorder
Illness Anxiety Disorder
Conversion Disorder
Factitious Disorder
Somatic SymptomDisorder
Somatic symptom disorder can refer to any mental disorder which are manifestedthroughphysicalsymptoms. It is characterized by multiple persistent physical complaints that are associated with excessive and maladaptive thoughts, feelings, and behaviors related to those symptoms. The reaction of the sufferer to the symptoms is mostly excessive and abnormal. They may even believe thattheirmedicalissuesarelife-threatening, leading to intense anxiety despite reassurance from their doctor and normal lab test results.
Illness Anxiety Disorder
(previously called hypochondriasis) is a psychiatric disorder defined by excessiveworry about having or developing a serious undiagnosed medical condition. (headache = tumor)
Conversion disorder
(also known as functionalneurologicalsystemdisorder) is a condition in which a person experiences physical and sensory problems, such as paralysis, numbness, blindness, deafness or seizures,withnounderlyingneurologicpathology.
Factitious disorder
A serious mental disorder in which someone deceives others by appearing sick, by purposely gettingsick or by self-injury.
Beauty
Beauty is defined in so many ways, but in its simplest sense, beauty can be described as HAPPINESS. Beauty is a qualitypresent in a thing or person that gives intense pleasure or deep satisfaction to the mind.
beau in Psychology Every person is UNIQUE. We have different sizes, shapes, colors, heritage, and roles. No culture, company, or concept could ever truly define beauty.
Types of Beauty
Objective
Subjective
Helen Keller: '"The best and mostbeautiful things in the world cannot be seen or evertouch- they must be felt with the heart".'
Philosophers' views on Beauty
Objective
Subjective
St.Augustine's view on Beauty
Things were beautifulbecause it gives delight or It gives delightbecause it was beautiful.
Plato's view on Beauty
Plato connected Beauty as a response to love and desire. He asserted that beauty exists in therealm of Form. Objects are found beautiful because they are the reflection of the idea of beauty that already exist in the realm of Form.
Aristotle's view on Beauty
Beauty is the GIFTOFGOD. Aristotle asserted that the chief form of BEAUTY are ordered,symmetry, and definiteness that can bedemonstrated by mathematical sciences.
David Hume's view on Beauty
Beauty is no quality in things themselves: It onlyexists merely in the minds of men which contemplates and eachmindperceivesdifferentbeauty.
ImmanuelKant's view on Beauty
The judgment of taste is therefore notajudgment of cognition, and is consequently not logical but aesthetic, by which we understand that whose determining ground can be no other than SUBJECTIVE.BEAUTYISENTIRELYSUBJECTIVE.
FrancisHutcheson's view on Beauty
The perception of beauty does depend on the externalsense of sight. BEAUTY IS IN THE EYEOF THE BEHOLDER.
What psychology discovered about beauty
People feelbetter about themselves when they think they are attractive to others.
People is often striving to be attractive and seeking out beautiful people.
A person who is perceived as attractive makes moremoney than a person of below-average looks.
Beautybasedondeception
Cognitive bias, Halo effect, Horn effect are errors in reasoning, evaluating, remembering, or any other mental process that is always a result of holding on to one's preferences and beliefs regardless of contrary information.
Culturaltraditions can either be a positive or negative influence on body image and on the self esteem.
Bodyimage
Body image is how you view your physicalbody, whether you feel you are attractive, and how you feel some other people likeyour looks. For many people body image is closely related to self-esteem.
You have a selfimageproblem
When your looksdonotmatchyourbeautystandards
To have a positive self-image and higher self-esteem you must fix your falsebeliefaboutphysical attractivenessfirst.
Halo
You see true info about how bad person but you keep ignoring (promarcos)
Horn
You see true info about how good but you keep ignoring (anti marcos)