Psychopathology - psyche boost

Cards (30)

  • Definitions of abnormality

    • Deviation from social norms
    • Failure to function adequately
    • Statistical infrequency
    • Deviation from ideal mental health
  • Social norms
    Unwritten behavioral expectations that vary depending on culture, time and context
  • Behaviors showing high cultural specificity

    • Tolerance to homosexuality
    • Religious experience
    • Public displays of emotion
  • Diagnosing abnormality according to social norms is not ethnocentric
  • Defining people who move to a new culture as abnormal according to the new cultural norms can be inappropriate
  • Failure to function adequately

    Individuals cannot cope with the day-to-day challenges of daily life such as maintaining personal hygiene
  • Features of failure to function adequately

    • Maladaptive behavior
    • Irrational, unpredictable actions that go against their long-term best interests
    • Personal anguish
    • Observers feel discomfort in their presence
  • Statistical infrequency compares the individual's behavior to the rest of the population
  • The normal distribution curve shows a population's average spread of specific characteristics
  • Not all statistically rare traits are negative, for example IQs of 130 are just as statistically rare as IQs of 70
  • Deviation from ideal mental health

    Features are environmental mastery, autonomy, resisting stress, self-actualisation, positive attitude to yourself, and accurate perception of reality
  • Characteristics of phobias, depression and OCD

    • Phobias: Behavioral avoidance, panic, failure to function, emotional anxiety, cognitive irrational thoughts
    • Depression: Behavioral reduction in activity, emotional sadness, cognitive poor concentration
    • OCD: Behavioral compulsions, emotional anxiety, cognitive obsessions
  • Behavioral approach to explaining and treating phobias

    1. Acquisition: Classical conditioning
    2. Maintenance: Operant conditioning
    3. Generalization
  • Behavioral therapies like systematic desensitization and flooding are effective, suggesting the behaviorist principles they are based on are valid
  • Systematic desensitization

    Therapist teaches relaxation techniques, then gradually exposes client to phobic stimulus
  • Flooding
    Immediate and full exposure to maximum level of phobic stimulus
  • Compared to flooding, systematic desensitization is a more pleasurable experience for the client but may require more sessions
  • Systematic desensitization and flooding may be limited to the controlled environment and not translate to real-world experiences
  • Beck's negative triad

    Persistent automatic negative biases about the self, the world, and the future
  • Ellis's ABC model

    1. Activating event, B: Belief, C: Consequence
  • CBT and REBT are effective in treating depression, suggesting the underlying cognitive explanations are valid
  • Some people with severe depression may be too unmotivated to engage with the demands of CBT
  • Genetic explanations for OCD

    • Serotonin reuptake gene, Gen9 comp gene, 5ht1d beta gene
  • Neural explanation for OCD

    Low serotonin levels, overactive 'worry circuit' in the brain
  • Twin studies suggest a genetic component to OCD, but the environment also plays a role
  • SSRI drugs are effective in treating OCD, suggesting a biological aspect to the disorder
  • Drug therapies for OCD

    • SSRIs
    • Benzodiazepines
    • Tricyclics and SNRIs
  • Drug therapy for OCD can have side effects like nausea, headache, and insomnia
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