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psychology
Psychopathology
explaining phobias
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Cards (17)
phobia
:
intense, persistant and irrational fear of an object, context or activity
fear is atypical when people have an
extreme
reaction to a non-threatening or
mildy
threatening situation
types of phobias:
specific phobias
social phobias
agoraphobia
specific phobias:
fears about specific objects or situations e.g
spiders
,
flying
social phobias
:
anxiety
relating to
social situations
e.g public speaking, using public toilet
agoraphobia
:
fear of being
outside
or
in public
spaces
Behavioural characteristics of phobias:
panic
- screaming, crying
avoidance
- prevent contact with stimulus
endurance
- choose to remain with stimulus but keep a wary eye
emotional characteristics of phobias:
anxiety
- unpleasant high arousal, prevents relaxation and can be long term
fear
- immediate and extremely unpleasant experience, more intense than anxiety
cognitive characteristics of phobias:
selective attention
- struggle to focus on anything else
irrational beliefs
- resistant to rational arguements
cognitive distortions
- inaccurate or unrealistic perceptions
two process model:
mowrer
proposed model based on
behavioural
approach towards phobias
phobias acquired through
classical conditioning
and maintained through
operant conditioning
classical conditioning:
associate a
neutral
stimulus with something we're afraid of
unconditioned
stimulus: ant attack, unconditioned response: fear,
neutral
stimulus: flower, conditioned stimulus: flower, conditioned response: fear
watson and
rayner
: little
albert
procedure
9
month baby
shown many
stimuli
- fear only shown when banging metal bar with
hammer
2
months later albert returned - shown
white rat
when banging
little albert findings:
after trials,
albert
showed
fear
when shown the rat
ucs: banging, ucr:
fear
, ns and cs: white rat, cr:
fear
stimulus generalisation:
conditioning generalises to similar objects
rabbit
, fur coat,
watson wearing santa beard
made out of cotton balls
operant conditioning:
fear leads to
avoidance
which leads to
phobia
persistance
avoiding has desirable consequences so we feel
rewarded
(
negative
reinforcement)
EVALUATION: real world application to therapy
behaviourist
idea have been used to develop exposure therapies (systematic desensitisation and flooding)based on
conditioning
approach says
phobias
maintained through avoidance - avoidance prevented = no
reinforcement
= decline
therapies
successfully used to treat
phobias
- support or behaviourist explanation
EVALUATION: ignores
evolutionary
factors
bournton
- evolutionary factors play a role in
phobias
, especially id avoidance increases chance of
survival
psychologists say we are predisposed to some
phobias
(snakes, heights) - innate,
survival mechanism
innate predisposition is called
preparedness
(seligman) - casts doubts on model, suggests there is more to phobias than
learning
EVALUATION: ignores
cognitive
factors
alternative explanation:
cognitive
approach -
phobias
develop as consequence of irrational thinking
person thinks that being in
lift
can trap and suffocate them - leads to
extreme anxiety
and triggers phobia
two process
model doesnt fully explain symptoms of
phobias