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Advanced Placement Psychology

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Title: Advanced Placement Psychology


1
Advanced Placement Psychology
  • Module 22
  • Disorders I Definitions and Anxiety

2
Psychological Disorders
  • Psychological Disorder
  • a harmful dysfunction in which behavior is
    judged to be
  • atypical--not enough in itself
  • disturbing--varies with time and culture
  • maladaptive--harmful
  • unjustifiable--sometimes theres a good reason

3
Definitions of Abnormal Behavior
  • How do we determine what is abnormal? What is
    the definition of Abnormal?
  • Jeffrey Dahmer (Mass Killings)
  • Kate Premo (Flying)
  • Richard Thompson (Living in Sewer)

4
Definitions of Abnormal Behavior
  • We use 3 methods to decide what is considered
    normal
  • 1) Statistical Frequency
  • 2) Deviation from Social Norms
  • 3) Maladaptive Behavior

5
1) Statistical Frequency
  • A behavior may be considered abnormal if it
    occurs rarely or infrequently in relation to the
    behaviors of the general population.
  • Example Thompson living in a sewer would be
    considered abnormal since out of 250 Million
    people in the U.S., only a very few would live
    this way.

6
Deviation from Social Norms
  • A behavior is considered abnormal if it deviates
    greatly from accepted social standards, values,
    or norms.
  • Example Thompsons living in a storm sewer
    deviates greatly from where societys norms about
    where people should live.

7
Maladaptive Behavior
  • A behavior that is psychologically damaging or
    abnormal if it interferes with the individuals
    ability to function in ones personal life or in
    society.
  • Example Being terrified of flying, hearing
    voices that dictate dangerous acts, starving
    oneself to the point of death, committing serial
    murders and eating the victims.

8
Historical Perspective
  • Perceived Causes
  • movements of sun or moon
  • lunacy--full moon
  • evil spirits
  • Ancient Treatments
  • exorcism, caged like animals, beaten, burned,
    castrated, mutilated, blood replaced with
    animals blood

9
Psychological Disorders
  • Medical Model
  • concept that diseases have physical causes
  • can be diagnosed, treated, and in most cases,
    cured
  • assumes that these mental illnesses can be
    diagnosed on the basis of their symptoms and
    cured through therapy, which may include
    treatment in a psychiatric hospital

10
Psychological Disorders
  • Bio-Psycho-Social Perspective
  • assumes that biological, sociocultural, and
    psychological factors combine and interact to
    produce psychological disorders

11
Psychological Disorders
  • Cognitive-Behavioral Approach
  • Emphasizes that mental disorders result from
    deficits in cognitive processes, such as thoughts
    and beliefs, and from behavioral problems, such
    as deficits in skills and abilities.

12
Psychological Disorders
  • Psychoanalytic Approach
  • Mental disorders are due to unconscious conflicts
    or problems with unresolved conflicts at one or
    more of Freuds psychosexual stages.

13
Psychological Disorders
14
Clinical Assessments
  • In dealing with Mental Disorders, in order to
    determine the disorder, the patient would go
    through a series of Clinical assessments.

15
Clinical Assessments
  • Clinical Assessment
  • A systematic evaluation of an individuals
    various psychological, biological and social
    factors, as well as identifying past and present
    problems, stressors, and other cognitive or
    behavioral symptoms. There are three major
    techniques Clinical interviews, psychological
    tests, and neurological exams.

16
Clinical Assessments
  • 1) Neurological Tests
  • These include evaluating reflexes, motor
    coordination, and brain structures.
  • These are given because things like tumors,
    disease, or infections can cause abnormal
    behaviors.

17
Clinical Assessments
  • 2) Clinical Interview
  • A method of gathering information about a
    persons past and current behaviors, beliefs,
    attitudes, emotions, and problems. Some are
    unstructured, others structured.

18
Clinical Assessments
  • 3) Personality Tests
  • Two different kinds of tests Objective
    personality tests (MMPI) and Projective tests
    such as the Rorschach inkblot test.

19
Problems with Clinical Assessment
  • 1) Individuals may hid their symptoms from
    public view
  • 2) Even after assessment, it may be difficult to
    explain what role those symptoms played in the
    persons current behavior.
  • 3) It needs to be accurate because it has
    significant implications for therapy

20
Problems with Clinical Assessment
  • 4) The diversity, complexity, and peculiarities
    of symptoms mean that mental health professionals
    may have difficulty making or agreeing on their
    assessments.

21
Psychological DisordersEtiology
  • DSM-IV
  • American Psychiatric Associations Diagnostic and
    Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders (Fourth
    Edition)
  • a widely used system for classifying
    psychological disorders
  • presently distributed as DSM-IV-TR (text revision)

22
DSM-IV-TR
  • Is divided into 5 Axis They serve as guidelines
    for making decisions about symptoms.

23
DSM-IV-TR
  • AXIS I Nine Major Clinical Syndromes
  • Axis I contains lists of symptoms and criteria
    about the onset, severity, and duration of these
    symptoms. In turn these lists of symptoms are
    used to make a clinical diagnosis of the
    following nine major clinical syndromes.

24
DSM-IV-TR
  • 1) Disorders usually first diagnosed in infancy,
    childhood, or adolescence.
  • Includes disorders that arise before adolescence,
    such as ADD, autism, Mental Retardation,
    enuresis, and stuttering.

25
DSM-IV-TR
  • 2) Organic Mental Disorders
  • Temporary or permanent dysfunctions of brain
    tissue caused by disease or chemicals. Examples
    Delirium, dementia, and amnesia

26
DSM-IV-TR
  • 3) Substance-Related Disorders
  • Refers to the maladaptive use of drugs and
    alcohol. This category requires an abnormal
    pattern of use, as with alcohol abuse and cocaine
    dependence.

27
DSM-IV-TR
  • 4) Schizophrenia and other Psychotic Disorders
  • Psychotic symptoms (grossly disorganized,
    delusions, and hallucinations) by over 6 months
    of behavioral deterioration. Also includes
    delusional disorder and schizo-affective disorder.

28
DSM-IV-TR
  • 5) Mood Disorders
  • The cardinal feature is emotional disturbance,
    Patients may, or may not, have psychotic
    symptoms. These include Bi-polar disorder,
    major depression.

29
DSM-IV-TR
  • 6) Anxiety Disorders
  • Characterized by physiological signs of anxiety
    and subjective feelings of tension, apprehension,
    or fear.
  • Example Phobias

30
DSM-IV-TR
  • 7) Somatoform Disorders
  • Disorders dominated by somatic symptoms that
    resemble physical illnesses. These symptoms
    cannot be accounted for by organic damage. There
    must also be strong evidence that these symptoms
    are produced by psychological factors or
    conflicts. Example Hypochondriasis

31
DSM-IV-TR
  • 8) Dissociative Disorders
  • This disorder features a sudden, temporary
    alteration or dysfunction of memory,
    consciousness, identity, and behavior, as in
    dissociative amnesia and multiple personality.

32
DSM-IV-TR
  • 9) Sexual and Gender-Identity Disorders
  • Three basic types of disorder in this category
    gender-identity, paraphilias, sexual dysfunction.

33
DSM-IV-TR
  • AXIS II
  • This axis refers to disorders that involve
    patterns of personality traits that are
    longstanding, maladaptive, and inflexible and
    involve impaired fuctioning or subjective
    distress. Examples Borderline schizoid,
    antisocial personality disorders. (Jeffrey Dahmer)

34
DSM-IV-TR
  • AXIS III
  • General Medical Conditions This Axis refers to
    physical disorders or conditions, such as
    diabetes, arthritis, and hemophilia.

35
DSM-IV-TR
  • AXIS IV
  • Psychosocial and Environmental Problems This
    refers to problems that may affect the diagnosis,
    treatment, and prognosis of mental disorders in
    Axes I and II. Example A negative life event,
    Family stress, PTSD

36
DSM-IV-TR
  • AXIS V
  • Global Assessment of Functioning (GAF) Scale
    Used to rate the overall psychological, social,
    and occupational functioning of the individual on
    a scale from 10 (In danger of hurting self) to
    100 (superior functioning).

37
DSM-IV-TR
  • Advantages
  • There re three advantages of using DSM-IV
  • 1)Mental Health professionals use the
    classification system to communicate with one
    another.

38
DSM-IV-TR
  • 2)Researchers use the classification system to
    study and explain mental disorders
  • 3) Therapists use the classification system to
    design their treatment program so as to best fit
    their client problems.

39
Problems with DSM-IV
  • Labeling
  • Identifying and naming differences among
    individual. The label places individuals into
    specific categories, may have either a positive
    or negative association.

40
Anxiety Disorders
  • Anxiety Disorders
  • distressing, persistent anxiety or maladaptive
    behaviors that reduce anxiety
  • Generalized Anxiety Disorder
  • person is tense, apprehensive, and in a state of
    autonomic nervous system arousal

41
Generalized Anxiety Disorder
  • Symptoms
  • Psychological symptoms. They include being
    irritable, difficulty concentrating, and unable
    to control worrying.
  • Physical Symptoms restlessness, easily
    fatigued,seating, flushing, pounding heart,
    insomnia, clammy hands, headaches, and muscle
    tension or aches
  • Treatment Psychotherapy, Tranquilizers,
    alrazolam and diazepam, part of a group of drugs
    known as benzodiazepines

42
Anxiety Disorders
  • Panic Disorder
  • marked by a minutes-long episode of intense dread
    in which a person experiences terror and
    accompanying chest pain, choking, or other
    frightening sensation

43
Panic Disorder
  • Symptoms intense fear or discomfort in which
    for or more of the following symptoms are
    present Pounding heart, sweating, trembling,
    shortness of breath, feelings of choking, chest
    pain, nausea, feeling dizzy, fear of losing
    control, or dying.
  • Treatment Benzodiazepines or antidepressants,
    Psychotherapy

44
Anxiety Disorders
  • Phobia
  • persistent, irrational fear of a specific object
    or situation
  • Obsessive-Compulsive Disorder
  • unwanted repetitive thoughts (obsessions) and/or
    actions (compulsions)

45
Obsessive-Compulsive Disorder
  • Symptoms Irrational, recurring thoughts,
    impulses, or images that a person unable to
    control and interfere with normal functioning,
    and compulsions, irresistible impulses to perform
    over and over some senseless behavior or ritual.
  • Treatment Exposure Therapy and anti-depressant
    drugs.

46
Anxiety Disorders
  • Common and uncommon fears

47
Anxiety Disorders
48
Anxiety Disorders
  • PET Scan of brain of person with Obsessive/
    Compulsive disorder
  • High metabolic activity (red) in frontal lobe
    areas involved with directing attention

49
Somatoform Disorders
  • A pattern of recurring, multiple, and significant
    bodily (somatic) symptoms that extend over
    several years.
  • The symptoms are not under voluntary control,
    have no known physical causes, and are believed
    to be caused by psychological factors.
  • (pain, vomiting, paralysis, blindness)

50
Somatoform Disorders
  • 1) Somatization Disorder Begins before age 30,
    last several years, and is characterized by
    multiple symptomsincluding pain,
    gastrointestinal, sexual and neurological
    symptomsthat have no physical causes but are
    triggered by psychological problems or distress.

51
Somatoform Disorders
  • 2) Conversion Disorder Changing anxiety or
    emotional distress into real physical, motor,
    sensory, or neurological symptoms for which no
    physical or organic cause can be identified.
  • (headaches, nausea, dizziness, loss of sensation,
    paralysis)

52
Somatoform Disorders
  • 3) Mass Hysteria A condition experienced by a
    group of people, who through suggestion,
    observation, or other psychological processes,
    develop similar fears, delusions, abnormal
    behaviors, or physical symptoms.

53
Somatoform Disorders
  • 4) Hypochondriasis Mis-interpreting normal
    physical sensations as symptoms of a disease
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