Cognitive approach to explaining depression

    Cards (17)

    • Beck's negative triad:

      Cognitive approach to why some people are more vulnerable to depression. Beck suggested three kinds of negative thinking contribute to being depressed.
    • Faulty information processing: Beck
      • depressed people attend to the negative aspects of a situation and ignore positives
      • black and white thinking
    • Negative self-schema: Beck
      • depressed people interpret all information about themselves in a negative way
    • The negative triad: Beck
      • People develop a dysfunctional view of themselves because of three types of negative thinking that occur automatically
      • World, future and self
    • The three elements of the negative triad: Beck
      • negative view of the world
      • negative view of the future
      • negative view of the self
    • Negative view of the world - Beck
      • Creating the impression that there is no hope anywhere
    • Negative view of the future - Beck
      • Thoughts reduce any hopefulness and enhance depression
    • Negative view of self - Beck
      • thoughts enhance any existing depressive feelings because they confirm existing emotions of low self-esteem
    • AO3 Negative triad - Research support
      Cognitive vulnerability - ways of thinking that may predispose a person to becoming depressed
      Clark and Beck: These cognitive vulnerabilities were more common in depressed people and predicted later depression
    • AO3 Negative triad - Real-world application
      Applications in screening and treatment for depression
      Cohen - assessing cognitive vulnerability allows psychologists to screen young people and identify those most at risk of developing depression in the future
      Cognitive behaviour therapy - alter cognitions to make people more resilient
    • Ellis's ABC model
      • good mental health is the result of rational thinking
      • irrational thoughts - any thoughts that interfere with us being happy and free from pain
      • ABC model explains how irrational thoughts affect our behaviour and emotional state
    • What does Ellis's ABC model stand for?
      • A - activating event
      • B - Beliefs
      • C - Consequences
    • Ellis's ABC model - activating event
      • irrational thoughts are triggered by external negative events
      • Failing a test, ending a relationship
    • Ellis's ABC model - Beliefs
      • The belief that we must always succeed - MUSTURBATION
      • The belief that it is a major disaster when something doesn't go smoothly - I-CAN'T-STAND-IT-ITIS
      • The belief that life is always meant to be fair - UTOPIANISM
    • Ellis's ABC model - Consequences
      • When an activating event triggers irrational beliefs there are emotional and behavioural consequences
    • AO3 Ellis ABC - Real-world application
      • Rational emotive behaviour therapy
      • arguing with a depressed person the therapist can alter irrational beliefs that make them unhappy
      • changes negative beliefs and relieve symptoms of depression
    • AO3 Ellis ABC - only explains reactive depression and not endogenous depression
      • Reactive depression - depression triggered by life events
      • Endogenous depression - not traceable to life events and is not obvious what leads the person to become depressed
      • Ellis only explains some cases of depression and is therefore only a partial explanation
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