Psychological Explanation of Schizophrenia

Cards (14)

  • Family Dysfunction Explanation of Schizophrenia
    - psychologists have attempted to link schizophrenia to childhood and adult experiences of living in a dysfunctional family
  • The Schizophrenogenic Mother
    - (Reichmann, 1948) proposed a psychodynamic explanation for schizophrenia based on the accounts of her patient's childhoods

    - found many of her patients had a particular type of parent, she called the schizophrenogenic mother

    - the schizophrenogenic mother is cold, rejecting and controlling and creates a family environment typified by tension and secrecy

    - this leads to distrust and that later develops into paranoid delusions and ultimately schizophrenia
  • Double-Bind Theory
    - (Bateson et al, 1972) also emphasised the role of communication style within the family

    - children who receive contradictory messages from their parents are more likely to develop schizophrenia

    - this style of communication leaves them understanding that the world is confusing and dangerous (reflected in symptoms such as disorganised thinking and paranoid delusions)

    - Bateson clearly stated that this was a risk factor and wasn't necessarily the main type of communication in the family
  • Expressed Emotion (EE)
    - the level of emotion, usually negative, that is expressed towards a person with schizophrenia by the carers (often family members)

    - EE includes:
    . verbal criticism of the person, occasionally accompanied by violence)
    . hostility towards the person, including anger and rejection
    . emotional over-involvement in the life of the person, often including needless self-sacrifice

    - high levels of EE are a source of stress which can trigger the onset of schizophrenia in people with genetic vulnerability and is often used to explain relapses
  • Cognitive Explanations of Schizophrenia
    - explains schizophrenia through the role of metal processes (thoughts, feelings, beliefs etc.)
  • Dysfunctional Thinking
    - schizophrenia is characterised by disruption to normal thought processing

    - reduced thought processing in the ventral striatum is associated with negative symptoms

    - whilst reduced processing of information in the temporal and cingulate gyri is associated with hallucinations (Simon et al, 2015)

    - (Frith et al, 1992) identified 2 types of dysfunctional thought processes:
    . metarepresentation
    . central control dysfunction
  • Metarepresentation Thinking
    - metarepresentation is the cognitive ability to reflect on thoughts and behaviour

    - this gives us insight into our own goals and intentions and allows us to interpret the actions of others

    - dysfunction of our metarepresentation would disrupt our ability to recognise our own actions and thoughts as being carried out by ourselves rather than someone else

    - this explains hallucinations and thought insertions (the experience of having thoughts be projected into the mind by others)
  • Central Control Dysfunction
    - Frith et al also identified issues with the cognitive ability to suppress automatic responses while we perform deliberate actions

    - speech poverty and thought disorder could result form the inability to suppress thoughts and speech triggered by other thoughts

    - e.g. people with schizophrenia tend to experience derailment of thoughts due to each word triggering associations which must be responded to
  • Family Dysfunction: Research Support (Strength)
    - there is evidence linking family dysfunction to schizophrenia; indicators of family abuse include insecure attachment and childhood trauma

    - (Read et al, 2005) adults with schizophrenia are disproportionately likely to have insecure attachment particularly type C or D

    - they also reported 69% of women and 59% of men with schizophrenia have history of physical/sexual abuse

    - (Morkaved et al, 2017) found most adults with schizophrenia reported a least one childhood trauma
  • Explanations Lack Support: Limitations
    - there is almost no evidence to support traditional family-based theories

    - both these theories are based upon clinical observations and informal assessment of their mothers' personalities but not with systematic evidence

    - this means that family explanations have not been able to account for the link between childhood trauma and schizophrenia
  • Parent-Blaming: Evaluation Extra
    - research investigating the family-schizophrenia link may be useful in showing that insecure attachment and experience of childhood trauma affect individual vulnerability to schizophrenia

    - family linking family dysfunction is socially sensitive because it can lead to parent-blaming (especially mothers)

    - for parents having to watch their child experience the symptoms of schizophrenia and take responsibility for their care, to be blamed adds insult to injury
  • Cognitive Explanation: Research Support (Strength)
    - there is evidence for dysfunctional thought processing

    - (Stirling et al, 2006) compared the performance on a range of cognitive tasks (e.g. the Stroop task) in 30 people with schizophrenia and a control group of 30 people without

    - as predicted by Frith et al's theory, the schizophrenia group took longer (on average 2x longer) to name the font colours

    - meaning the cognitive processes of people with schizophrenia is impaired
  • A Proximal Explanation: Limitation
    - the cognitive explanation only explains the proximal origins of symptoms (what is causing symptoms now) rather than a distal explanation (what initially caused symptoms)

    - possible distal explanations are genetic and family dysfunction explanations

    - what is currently unclear and not well-addressed is how genetic variation or childhood trauma might lead to problems with metarepresentation or central control

    - this means that cognitive theories on their own only provide partial explanations for schizophrenia
  • Psychological or Biological: Evaluation Extra
    - the cognitive approach provides an excellent explanation for the symptoms of schizophrenia

    - there is therefore an argument for seeing schizophrenia primarily as a psychological condition

    - it also appears that the abnormal cognition associated with schizophrenia is partly genetic in origin and the result of abnormal brain development (Thoulopulou et al, 2019)

    - this suggests that schizophrenia is a biological condition