Chapter 15 Psychological Disorders notes



Unit 12, Abnormal Psychology Notes

(2011 update for use with Chapter 16 in 2007 Myers text)

Perspectives on Psychological Disorders 563

1 Definition

1. harmful

2. atypical

3. disturbing

4. maladaptive

5. unjustifiable

Is ADHD a disorder? 563

The text provides no answer. The debate continues.

A. Understanding Psychological Disorders 564

What perspectives can help us understand psychological disorders?

The Medical Model

a. medical model: diagnose the sickness and cure it

1.Etiology: Causation and developmental of the disorder.

2.Diagnosis: Identifying (symptoms) and distinguishing one disease from another.

3.Treatment: Treating a disorder in a psychiatric hospital.

4.Prognosis: Forecast about the disorder.

1. Bio-psycho-social approach

a. interaction of nature and nurture

2 Classifying Disorders 565

How and why do clinicians classify psychological disorders?

2. DSM-IV

a. Used to classify disorders

b. Not used to explain causes

3. neurotic disorders: distressing but still can function

4. psychotic disorders: debilitating

Table 16.1 page 645

Axis I Is a Clinical Syndrome Present?

Axis II Is a Personality Disorder Present?

Axis III Is a General Medical Condition also Present?

Axis IV Are Psychosocial or Environmental Problems Present?

Axis V What is the Global Assessment of their functioning?

3 Labeling Psychological Disorders 567

Why do some psychologists criticize the use of diagnostic labels?

5. David Rosenhan (1973) study revealed the power of labeling the mentally ill

6. stigmatizing

7. stereotyping

Labels can serve as “self-fulfilling prophecies”.

4 Insanity and responsibility 569

8. Legal definitions

a. wrongfulness of actions

b. ability to participate in legal defense

c. danger to self or others

9. Hinckley case, 1981

10. Dahmer case, 1991

11. Unabomber case

12. Andrea Yates case, 2002

Anxiety Type Disorders 569

What are anxiety disorders, and how do they differ from ordinary worries and fears?

1 Generalized anxiety

1. State of tension, apprehension, ANS arousal

2 Panic disorder

13. sudden, intense dread episode

3 Phobias

14. persistent, intense, irrational fear of specific thing

ex: agoraphobia—fear of being outside

4 Obsessive-Compulsive Disorder (OCD)

15. unwanted thoughts constantly preoccupying you

ex: taking ten showers a day to stay clean

5 Post Traumatic Stress Disorder

1. Nightmares, insomnia and painful memories

2. Post traumatic growth: finding positive strengths while dealing with PTSD

Understanding Anxiety Disorders 574

16. Learning Perspective

Fear conditioning: stimulus generalization after the initial fear producing event, followed by reinforcement to maintain the phobia or compulsion.

Observational learning: Susan Minetka (1985) found monkeys transmit their fear of snakes

17. The biological perspective

Natural selection: we are prepared to face certain risks

Genes: Some studies point to an anxiety gene; other studies implicate glutamate overabundance making the brain more sensitive

The Brain: the anterior cingulate cortex is hyperactive in those with OCD

Somatoform disorders 576

What are somatoform disorders?

•Physical ailments that cannot be explained by organic causes

•Psychosomatic diseases

•Have a psychological origin

•Symptoms are more imaginary than real

Types

•1. Somatization disorder: affects mainly women; a list of minor complaints that may accompany depression or anxiety

•2. Conversion disorder: loss of function of a specific organ

•3. Hypochondriasis: excessive worry about developing a physical illness (Howard Hughes)

Dissociative disorders 577

1. Sudden loss of memory or change in identity

2. Dissociative identity disorder (DID)

a. Two or more identities that control a person’s behavior

b. evidence includes changes in brain and body states and handedness

c. Skeptics counter that it is a cultural phenomenon with few cases outside America

3. Dissociation: a sense of being separated from your body and watching yourself with a sense of detachment

4. Some psychologists find physical evidence for personality changes.

a. Massive dissociation of self from ordinary consciousness

b. role playing occurs: suggestions and leading by the therapist

c.Nick Spanos (1986): dissociation is essentially role playing; Paul McHugh (1995) says the phenomenon is manufactured out of the patient-therapist relationship.

Mood Disorders 579

What are mood disorders, and what forms do they take?

Lethargic, withdrawn, feeling worthless or unlovable

1 Major Depressive Disorder

18. personal worthlessness

19. Dysthymic disorder: less disabling form of depression

20. low levels of norepinephrine

21. more females

22. last less than 3 mos.

23. therapy not need most times to recover

24. research: it’s increasing

25. Reduction of norepinephrine and serotonin has been implicated in depression.

Drugs that alleviate mania reduce norepinephrine.

2 Bipolar Disorder

26. alternating between lethargy and overexcitement

27. manic episode: overexcitement, hyperactivity, wild optimism

3 Understanding Mood Disorders 582

What causes mood disorders, and what might explain the Western world’s rising incidence of depression among youth and young adults?

Close Up: Suicide 584

1. Higher rates among men

2. Highest rates among older men

3. Depressed have 5x higher rate

4. Few who talk of actually commit

5. Most who commit have talked of it

6. Whites more than blacks

7. Women more likely to attempt

28. The biological perspective

a. Genetic influences; heritability of depression is 35 to 40 percent

Linkage analysis searchers for the genes responsible

b. The Depressed Brain

c. neurotransmitters: lower levels of norepinephrine and/or serotonin

d. The hippocampus is vulnerable to stress related damage

e. The left frontal lobe is less active during depression

29. The socio cognitive perspective

a. self-blaming attributions,

b. negative thoughts and negative moods interact; women tend to overthink leading to higher rates than men (Susan Nolen-Hoeksema, 2003)

c. maladaptive explanations of failure, your explanatory style: stable, internal and global thinkers display this negative approach

d. Martin Seligman has describe this pessimistic style of thinking (1991).

Schizophrenia 589

What patterns of thinking, perceiving, feeling, and behaving characterize schizophrenia?

B. Symptoms

1. disorganized and delusional thinking

Ex: thinking you’re “King of the Universe” (when you’re not)

Ex: disordered speech (word salad)

2. Hallucinations: perceiving things that are not there; frequently such hallucinations are auditory and lesser visual, somatosensory, olfactory or gustatory.

3. Inappropriate emotions and actions

A schizophrenic person may laugh at the news of someone dying, or show no emotion at all (apathy).

Patients with schizophrenia can continually rub an arm or rock a chair or remain motionless for hours (catatonia).

Positive and Negative symptoms

+ Delusions

+ Hallucinations

+ Disorganized speech

+ Disordered behavior

- Lack of expression

- Lack of speech

- Lack of direction

C. Understanding Schizophrenia 592

What causes schizophrenia?

1. Brain abnormality: excess receptors for dopamine

2. Abnormal brain activity and abnormality: Schizophrenia patients may express morphological changes in the brain like enlargement of fluid filled ventricles.

Maternal virus during pregnancy: Schizophrenia has also been observed individuals who contracted viral infection (flu) during the middle of their fetal development.

Genetics: predisposition for

The likelihood of individuals suffering from schizophrenia is 50% if their identical twins have the disease (Gottesman, 1991).

Early warning sign: early physical maturation

4. Psychological factors: early warning signs include emotional issues, poor peer interaction, separation from parents, disruptive behavior, and mother with the disorder.

John Nash from A Beautiful Mind as an example

Personality Disorders 596

What characteristics are typical of personality disorders?

Personality disorders: disruptive, enduring behavior patterns that interfere with normal social functioning

•A. Antisocial Personality Disorder

–1. Disorder in which the person (usually man) exhibits a lack of conscience for wrongdoing, even toward friends and family members

–2. May be aggressive and ruthless or a clever con artist

Understanding Antisocial Personality Disorder

Genes put these people at risk

A biology based on fearlessness.

Narcissistic

2. preoccupied with self importance

Avoidant

i. being withdrawn

Schizoid

ii. eccentric and social disengaged

Histrionic

1. Attention getting behavior; seeking praise

F. Murderous minds

1. frontal cortex has reduced activation failing to check impulses and/or aggression

2. PET scans of 41 murderers revealed reduced activity in the frontal lobes. In a follow-up study repeat offenders had 11% less frontal lobe compared to normals (Raine et al., 1999; 2000).

Rates of Psychological Disorders 599

How many people suffer, or have suffered, from a psychological disorder?

Key terms: 602 (see study guide)

AP Quiz: 602-603

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