Psychopathology

Cards (79)

  • Definitions of abnormality
    • Deviation from Social Norms (DSN)
    • Failure to Function Adequately (FFA)
    • Statistical Infrequency (SI)
    • Deviation from Ideal Mental Health (DIMH)
  • Deviation from Social Norms (DSN)
    Behaviour that goes against the unwritten rules and norms in a given society or community
  • Psychological behaviour
    • Antisocial Personality Disorder (APD) - a person with APD is impulsive, aggressive and irresponsible
  • The Diagnostic & Statistical Manual 5 states that one important symptom of APD is that people with APD are abnormal because they do not conform to our moral standards
  • Deviation from Social Norms definition
    • Supports the general views that most people have of what abnormality is
    • Norms vary over time as social attitudes change, so it is era-dependent
    • Social norms vary tremendously from one community to another, so it has cultural relativity
  • Failure to Function Adequately (FFA)
    Individuals are abnormal when their behaviour suggests that they cannot cope with the demands of everyday life
  • Psychological Behaviour
    • Severe depression, which can lead to a lack of interest meaning that the depressed person may fail to get up in the morning and hold down a job
  • Characteristics of abnormal behaviour related to the FFA definition

    • Suffering
    • Maladaptiveness
    • Irrational
    • Observer discomfort
    • Vividness
    • Violation of moral codes
    • Unpredictability
  • Failure to Function Adequately (FFA) definition
    • Applies to the diagnosis of many disorders and is an important criteria with respect to many psychological disorders
    • Determining 'failure to function adequately' is subjective as someone needs to decide what is 'adequate'
    • Abnormality is not always associated with failing to function adequately
  • Statistical Infrequency (SI)
    Abnormal behaviour is behaviour which is rare (uncommon)
  • Psychological Behavior
    • Schizophrenia is suffered by 1 in 100 people and so is statistically infrequent
  • Statistical Infrequency definition
    • It is an objective way of deciding who is abnormal and can be used in the diagnosis of disorders
    • It focuses on FREQUENCY of behaviour, NOT its desirability
    • Behaviours that are statistically infrequent in one culture may be statistically more frequent in another
  • Deviation from Ideal Mental Health (DIMH)
    Abnormality would be an absence of the criteria for ideal mental health, including positive attitudes towards the self, self-actualisation and personal growth, being resistant to stress, personal autonomy, accurate perception of reality, and environmental mastery
  • Psychological Behaviour
    • A person with anorexia nervosa has lost touch with reality as they perceive own body in a distorted way thinking they are significantly larger than they actually are. They also do not have a positive attitude towards the self as they often have a negative self-concept and low self-esteem.
  • Deviation from Ideal Mental Health (DIMH) definition
    • It offers an alternative view on mental disorders by focusing on the positives rather than the negatives
    • It sets an unrealistically high standard for mental health, as most people would be considered abnormal by these criteria
    • The criteria are rooted in Western societies and may not apply to other cultures
  • To identifying abnormality, reducing its validity
  • Cultural relativism
    A further limitation of the DIMH is that the characteristics listed by Jahoda above are rooted in Western societies and a Western view of personal growth and achievement
  • Self-actualisation (seeking to fulfil one's full potential) may be seen as a key goal in life within some cultures e.g. Western (individualistic) cultures but not other cultures e.g. Non-Western (collectivist) cultures
  • In collectivist cultures, elders in the family may plan the young person's future; this might include such things as career paths and arranged marriages
  • It may therefore be regarded as abnormal to go after your own goals if they are in conflict with those of your own culture
  • This suggests that cultural relativity severely limits the validity of the DIMH definition when looking at abnormality just from a Western society point of view
  • Systematic desensitization

    A treatment for phobias where the patient is gradually exposed to the feared stimulus while in a relaxed state
  • Anxiety hierarchy
    A list of situations related to the phobia that provoke anxiety arranged in order from least to most frightening
  • Gradual exposure

    The patient is gradually exposed to the phobic stimulus while in a relaxed state, starting at the bottom of the anxiety hierarchy and moving up as the patient can stay relaxed
  • Research shows systematic desensitization is effective in the treatment of specific phobias
  • Relaxation may not be necessary for the success of systematic desensitization

    The exposure to the feared stimulus may be the key factor
  • Systematic desensitization is more preferable to flooding for many clients as it is seen as less traumatic
  • A limitation of systematic desensitization is the possibility of symptom substitution, where the problem may reappear in a different form
  • Flooding
    A treatment for phobias where the patient is immediately exposed to the phobic object or situation for an extended period of time in a safe and controlled environment
  • Flooding appears to be an effective treatment for phobias
  • Flooding is less effective for treating social phobias compared to simple phobias
  • Flooding can be a highly traumatic experience for patients
  • A limitation of flooding is the possibility of symptom substitution, where the problem may reappear in a different form
  • Rational thoughts
    Thoughts triggered by unpleasant events
  • ABC model

    1. A - Activating event: something happens in the environment around you
    2. B - Belief which is held about the event, may be rational or irrational
    3. C - Consequence: rational beliefs lead to healthy emotions, irrational beliefs lead to unhealthy emotions
  • It is not the activating event that causes the consequence, the consequence is caused by the beliefs about the activating event
  • Individuals who become depressed interpret unpleasant events in excessively negative or threatening ways
  • Having irrational beliefs leads to unhealthy negative reactions and emotions
  • Supporting research for Beck's cognitive explanation of depression

    • Koster et al's study found depressed participants spent longer attending to negative words than non-depressed group
    • Empirical support for Ellis therapy based on the ABC model contributes to the acceptance that irrational beliefs lead to depression
  • Distorted cognitive patterns
    May be a consequence rather than a cause of depression