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Chapter 13: Psychological Disorders

Chapter 13: Psychological Disorders

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Chapter 13: Psychological Disorders. Abnormal Behavior. The medical model What is abnormal behavior? Deviant Dysfuntional/Maladaptive Distressing. Psychodiagnosis: The Classification of Disorders. American Psychiatric Association - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Chapter 13: Psychological Disorders

Chapter 13: Psychological Disorders

Page 2: Chapter 13: Psychological Disorders

Abnormal Behavior

• The medical model

• What is abnormal behavior?– Deviant– Dysfuntional/Maladaptive – Distressing

Page 3: Chapter 13: Psychological Disorders

Psychodiagnosis:The Classification of Disorders

• American Psychiatric Association

• Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders – 4th ed.rev. (DSM – IV-TR)

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Psychological Disorders

• Not uncommon – 26% in a given year, 46% in a lifetime.

• Cultural– What is accepted in one culture, may not

be in another• Not Dangerous

– Most people who suffer from a disorder are not dangerous.

Page 5: Chapter 13: Psychological Disorders

Five Axes

• Axis I – Clinical Syndromes

• Axis II – Personality Disorders or Mental Retardation

• Axis III – General Medical Conditions

• Axis IV – Psychosocial and Environmental Problems

• Axis V – Global Assessment of Functioning

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Important Terms

• Diagnosis– Identification of a disorder

• Prognosis– Indication of the outcome of a disorder

• Etiology – Apparent cause or developmental history

of a disorder.

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Anxiety Disorders

• Generalized anxiety disorder– “free-floating anxiety”

• Phobic disorder– Specific focus of fear

• Panic disorder and agoraphobia• Obsessive compulsive disorder

– Obsessions– Compulsions

• Posttraumatic Stress Disorder

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Etiology of Anxiety Disorders

• Biological factors– Genetic predisposition– GABA circuits in the brain

• Conditioning and learning– Acquired through classical conditioning– Maintained through operant conditioning

• Cognitive factors– Judgments of perceived threat

• Stress/Adverse experiences—a precipitator

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Figure 13.3 Twin studies of anxiety disorders

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Figure 13.4 Conditioning as an explanation for phobias

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Figure 13.5 Cognitive factors in anxiety disorders

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Somatoform Disorders

• Somatization Disorder

• Conversion Disorder

• Hypochondriasis

• Etiology of somatoform disorders– Cognitive factors– Personality factors– The sick role

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Figure 13.6 Glove anesthesia

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Dissociative Disorders

• Dissociative amnesia and fugue

• Dissociative identity disorder

– Etiology• severe emotional trauma during

childhood– Controversy

• Media creation?

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Mood Disorders

• Major depressive disorder– Dysthymia

• Bipolar disorder– Cyclothymia

• Etiology– Genetic vulnerability– Neurochemical factors– Cognitive factors– Interpersonal roots– Precipitating stress

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Figure 13.7 Episodic patterns in mood disorders

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Figure 13.9 Twin studies of mood disorders

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Figure 13.10 Interpreting the correlation between negative thinking and depression

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Figure 13.11 Interpersonal factors in depression

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Schizophrenia

• General symptoms

– Delusions and irrational thought– Deterioration of adaptive behavior– Distorted perception– Disturbed emotion

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Subtyping of Schizophrenia

• Four subtypes– Paranoid type– Catatonic type– Disorganized type– Undifferentiated type

• New model for classification– Positive vs. negative symptoms

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Etiology of Schizophrenia

• Genetic vulnerability

• Neurochemical factors

• Structural abnormalities of the brain

• The neurodevelopmental hypothesis

• Expressed emotion

• Precipitating stress

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Figure 13.13 The dopamine hypothesis as an explanation for schizophrenia

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Figure 13.15 The neurodevelopmental hypothesis of schizophrenia