PSY7-L1

Cards (43)

  • Positive Psychology
    -or one that had a
    morepositive conception of human
    potential and nature

    - utilizes a quanti-
    tativeapproach and aims to help people
    make the mostout of life's setbacks,
    relate well to others, findfulfillment in
    creativity, and find lasting meaningand
    satisfaction
  • Humanistic Psychology
    - generally
    relied onqualitative methods
  • Abnormal Behavior
    - to be a combination of personal distress, psychological dysfunction,deviance from social norms, dangerousness to self and
    others, and costliness to society
  • Dysfunction
    - Includes "clinically significant
    disturbance in an individual's cognition, emotion
    regulation, or behavior that reflects a dysfunction in
    the psychological, biological, or developmental
    processes underlying mental functioning"
  • Distress
    When the person experiences a disabling
    condition "in social, occupational, or other
    important activities"
    -
    can take the form of psychological
    or physical pain, or both concurrently.
    -
    it is not sufficient enough to describe
    behavior as abnormal
  • Deviance
    - Closer examination of the word
    abnormal indicates a move away from what is
    normal, or the mean (i.e., what would be considered
    average and in this case in relation to behavior), and
    so is behavior that infrequently occurs (sort of an
    outlier in our data).
  • Culture
    - or the totality of socially transmitted
    behaviors, customs, values, technology, attitudes,
    beliefs, art, and other products that are particular to
    a group, determines what is normal.
  • Social Norms
    - a person is said to be deviant when
    he or she fails to follow the stated and unstated rules
    of society
    -change over time due to shifts in
    accepted values and expectations.
  • Abnormal Psychology
    - the scientific study of
    abnormal behavior, with the intent to be able to
    predict reliably, explain, diagnose, identify the
    causes of, and treat maladaptive behavior
  • Psychopathology
    - Abnormal behavior can become
    pathological and has led to the scientific study of
    psychological disorders
  • Mental Disorders
    - are characterized by
    psychological dysfunction, which causes physical
    and/or psychological distress or impaired
    functioning, and is not an expected behavior
    according to societal or cultural standards
  • Classification
    -is how we organize or categorize things
    -
    or how we organize or categorize things,
    provides us with a nomenclature, or naming
    system, to structure our understanding of
    mental disorders in a meaningful way.
  • Epidemiology
    - is the scientific study of the
    frequency and causes of diseases and other
    health-related states in specific populations such as
    a school, neighborhood, a city, country, and the
    world.
  • Psychiatric or Mental Health Epidemiology
    -
    refers to the occurrence of mental disorders in a
    population
  • Presenting Problem
    - patient presents with a
    specific problem
  • Clinical Description
    - includes information about
    the thoughts, feelings, and behaviors that constitute
    that mental disorder. We also seek to gain
    information about the occurrence of the disorder, its
    cause, course, and treatment possibilities
  • Prevalence
    - is the percentage of people in a
    population that has a mental disorder or can be
    viewed as the number of cases divided by the total
    number of people in the sample.
  • Point Prevalence
    - indicates the proportion
    of a population that has the characteristic at
    a specific point in time. In other words, it is
    the number of active cases.
  • Period Prevalence
    - indicates the
    proportion of a population that has the
    characteristic at any point during a given
    period of time, typically the past year.
  • Lifetime Prevalence
    - indicates the
    proportion of a population that has had the
    characteristic at any time during their lives.
  • Incidence
    -
    indicates the number of new cases in a
    population over a specific period.
    -
    This measure is usually lower since it does
    not include existing cases as prevalence
    does.
    -
    is often studied by medical and public health
    officials so that causes can be identified, and
    future cases prevented
  • Comorbidity
    - describes when two or more mental
    disorders are occurring at the same time and in the
    same person
  • Etiology
    -
    is the cause of the disorder. There may be
    social, biological, or psychological
    explanations for the disorder which need to
    be understood to identify the appropriate
    treatment. Likewise, the effectiveness of a
    treatment may give some hint at the cause of
    the mental disorder
    -
    is the cause of a disorder while the course is
    its particular pattern and can be acute,
    chronic, or time-limited
  • Course - of the disorder is its particular pattern. A
    disorder may be
    Acute - meaning that it lasts a short time
    Chronic - meaning it persists for a long time
    Time-limited - meaning that recovery will
    occur after some time regardless of whether
    any treatment occurs
  • Prognosis
    - is the anticipated course the mental
    disorder will take
  • Age
    - a key factor in determining the course, with
    some disorders presenting differently in childhood
    than adulthood
  • Treatment
    - is any procedure intended to modify
    abnormal behavior into normal behavior
  • Social Cognition
    - is the process through which we
    collect information from the world around us and
    then interpret it
  • Schema
    - or a set of beliefs and expectations about
    a group of people, believed to apply to all members
    of the group, and based on experience
  • Stereotypes
    - are special types of schemas that are
    very simplistic, very strongly held, and not based on
    firsthand experience.
  • Heuristics, or Mental Shortcuts
    - allow us to
    assess this collected information very quickly. One
    piece of information, such as skin color, can be used
    to assign the person to a schema for which we have
    a stereotype. This can affect how we think or feel
    about the person and behave toward them.
  • Social identity theory
    - states that people
    categorize their social world into meaningfully
    simplistic representations of groups of people
  • Out-group homogeneity
    - occurs when we see all
    members of an outside group as the same.
  • In-group/out-group bias
    - this leads to a tendency
    to show favoritism to, and exclude or hold a
    negative view of, members outside of one's
    immediate group
  • Prejudice
    - the negative view or set of beliefs about
    a group of people
  • Discrimination
    - can result in acting in a way that
    is negative against a group of people
  • Implicit Attitude
    - an attitude we are unaware of
  • Explicit Attitudes
    - which are the views within our
    conscious awareness
  • Stigma
    - is when negative stereotyping, labeling,
    rejection, and loss of status occur and take the form
    of public or self-stigma, and label avoidance
  • Public stigma
    - When members of a society
    endorse negative stereotypes of people with
    a mental disorder and discriminate against
    them. They might avoid them altogether,
    resulting in social isolation