psychopathology

Cards (86)

  • Definitions of Abnormality

    • Deviation from Social Norms
    • Statistical Infrequency
    • Failure to Function
    • Deviation from Ideal Mental Health
  • Social norm
    Rules of behaviour that are considered acceptable in a group or society
  • Deviation from social norms
    Anyone who does not follow social norms is considered abnormal
  • Social norms vary tremendously from one generation to another and from one country to another
  • Relying on deviation from social norms to define mental illness can lead to systematic abuse of human rights
  • Statistical infrequency

    Statistically rare behaviour is regarded as abnormal, whereas frequent behaviour is normal
  • The normal distribution curve shows the majority of people as being in the middle, with relatively few people falling at either end</b>
  • Standard deviation (SD)

    The spread of the normal distribution, 68% of the population fall between 1 SD either side of the mean and 95% fall between 2 SD
  • Behaviour falling outside 2 SD is defined as abnormal
  • A weakness of the statistical infrequency definition is that it does not classify whether all behaviour is undesirable
  • The statistical infrequency definition is culturally relative as what is considered abnormal in one culture may be normal in another
  • Failure to function adequately

    A person is considered abnormal if they are unable to cope with the demands of normal everyday life
  • Criteria for inadequate functioning
    • Maladaptive behaviour
    • Vivid and unconventional behaviour
    • Unpredictability
    • Irrationality/incomprehensibility
    • Observer discomfort
    • Personal distress
    • Violation of moral/social standards
  • A weakness of the failure to function adequately definition is that it requires subjective judgement
  • Deviation from ideal mental health
    A person is considered abnormal if they do not meet all or most of the criteria for good mental health
  • Criteria for ideal mental health

    • Autonomy
    • Resistance to stress
    • Accurate perception of reality
    • Positive attitude towards self
    • Self actualisation
    • Adapting to and mastering the environment
  • A weakness of the deviation from ideal mental health definition is that it sets an unrealistically high standard for mental health
  • Phobia
    A type of anxiety disorder where the adaptive fear response to a potentially threatening object or situation has become extreme and debilitating
  • Characteristics of phobias

    • Cognitive characteristics
    • Behavioural characteristics
    • Emotional characteristics
  • Cognitive characteristics of phobias
    Irrational thought processes, recognition that response is excessive but inability to control it, selective attention
  • Behavioural characteristics of phobias
    Avoidance, panic
  • Emotional characteristics of phobias
    Extreme fear, distress, anxiety
  • Two-process model of phobia acquisition

    1. Classical conditioning (initiation)
    2. Operant conditioning (maintenance)
  • Classical conditioning

    The process by which phobias are initially learned
  • Phobia
    • Avoidance behaviour that can significantly impair day to day functioning
    • Panic behaviour such as crying, screaming or running away
  • Behavioural psychologists

    Believe phobias are acquired through the process of conditioning (learning)
  • Two-process model
    1. Initiation through classical conditioning
    2. Maintenance through operant conditioning
  • Classical conditioning

    Learning by association - an unconditioned stimulus that creates fear is paired with a neutral stimulus, which then becomes a conditioned stimulus that creates fear on its own
  • Operant conditioning

    Negative reinforcement - the fear response is strengthened because it removes the unpleasant anxiety, making the avoidance behaviour more likely to be repeated
  • Preparedness
    Biological pre-programming to fear certain things that would have threatened survival in our evolutionary past
  • Systematic desensitisation

    Replacing a maladaptive fear response with a relaxation response through gradual exposure to the feared stimulus
  • Systematic desensitisation
    1. Relaxation techniques
    2. Anxiety hierarchy
    3. Counter conditioning
  • Flooding
    Immediate and prolonged exposure to the most severe version of the phobia
  • Depression
    • Unipolar (constant low mood) vs bipolar (alternating low mood and mania)
  • Beck's cognitive biases

    Negative schemas and cognitive biases that lead to negative interpretations of reality
  • Beck's negative triad

    Pessimistic and irrational view of the self, the world, and the future
  • Overgeneralisation
    Depressives often draw a sweeping conclusion based on the basis of a single event
  • Negative schemas

    Activated in adult life whenever the person encounters a situation similar to the one in which the schema was learned
  • Beck's Negative Triad

    A pessimistic and irrational view of three key elements in a person's belief system: the self, the world, and the future
  • The self
    • Individuals see themselves as being helpless, worthless and inadequate