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Abnormal Psychology
Abnormal Psychology- Athabasca University
95
Social Work
Undergraduate 1
08/17/2011

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Cards

Term

Why it is so difficult to define abnormal behaviour.

 

Definition
  • no one element of abnormality is sufficient in or of itself to define or determine abnormality
  • changing values and expectations of society at large
  • only a prototype model of abnormality exists to which normality is assessed
Term
Purpose of classifying mental disorders
Definition
  • to provide a nomenclature
  • enable us to structure information in a more helpful manner
  • organized information allows the disorders to be studied to learn more about their causes and treatments
  • determines what mental health problems health professionals can address
  • determines insurance reimbursements
Term
DSM definition of mental disorder
Definition
  • a clinically significant behavioural or psychological syndrome or pattern
  • associated with distress or disability
  • not simply a predictable or sanctioned response to a particular event
  • considered to reflect behavioural, psychological, or biological dysfunction in the individual
Term
How cultural issues can influence the definition of abnormal psychology
Definition
  • psychiatry based on Euro-American definitions
  • language barriers
  • cultural beliefs
  • behaviours that deviate from the norms of the society in which it is enacted
Term
What does epidemiology tell us about the incidence and occurrence of mental illness
Definition
  • tells us about the distribution of diseases, disorders, or health-related behaviours in a given population
  • it tells us about the number of new cases over a given time period

 

Term
Inpatient treatment
Definition
  • hospitalization of a patient in a psychiatric unit of a general hospital or a private psychiatric hospital that specializes in mental disorders.
  • Stays tend to be shorter in today's society institutions due to more effective medications and budget cuts
Term
Outpatient Treatment
Definition
  • requires that patients visit a mental health facility, or mental health practitioner, but the patient does not have to be admitted overnight
Term
Members of a Modern Mental Health Team
Definition
  • clinical psychologist
  • counseling psychologist
  • school psychologist
  • psychiattrist
  • psychoanalyst
  • clinical social worker
  • psychiatric nurse
  • occupational therapist
  • pastoral counselor
  • community menatal health worker
  • alcohol or drug-abuse counselor
Term
Clinical Psychologist
Definition
  • Ph.D. in psychology
  • specialization in both research and clinical skill
  • Psy. D. in psychology plus 1 year internship in a psychiatric hospital or mental health center
Term
Counseling Psychologist
Definition
  • Ph.D. in psychology plus internship in a marital or student counseling setting
  • normally deals with adjustment problems not involving severe mental disorder
Term
School Psychologist
Definition
  • doctoral training in child-clinical psychology, with additional training in learning problems
Term
Psychiatrist
Definition
  • M.D. with psychiatry training in a 3 year residency at a mental health facility
Term
Psychoanalyst
Definition
  • M.D. or PhD plus intensive training in the theory and practice of psychoanalysis
Term
Clinical Social Worker
Definition
MSW or PhD with specialized training in mental health settings
Term
Psychiatric Nurse
Definition
R.N. certification plus specialized training in the care and treatment of psychiatric clients. MA or PhD possible in psychiatric nursing
Term
Occupational Therapist
Definition
B.S in occupational therapy plus internship training with physically or psychologically handicapped individuals
Term
Pastoral Counselor
Definition
Ministerial background plus training in psychology. Internship in mental health facility as a chaplain.
Term
Community Mental Health Worker
Definition
Person with limited professional training who works under professional direction; usually involved in crisis intervention
Term
Alcohol or Drug Abuse Counselor
Definition
limited professional training but trained in the evaluation and management of alcohol and drug abuse problems
Term
Case Study
Definition
reporting on the experiences, behaviours of one individual
Term
Direct observation
Definition
directly observing an individual's behaviour patterns
Term
Self-report Data
Definition
using questionaires or interviews to gain information directly from the patient/subject
Term
Sampling
Definition
selecting a group of people who are representative of the much larger group of individuals for study 
Term
Criterion Groups
Definition
people with the disorder in a study
Term
Comparison/Control Group
Definition
group of people who do not exhibit the disorder being studied but who are comparable in all other major aspects to the criterion group
Term
Retrospective studies
Definition
studying cases from the past
Term
Prospective Studies
Definition
studying individuals who have a greater risk of developing the desired condition for study
Term
Positive correlation
Definition
two areas that vary together in a direct corresponding manner
Term
Negative correlation
Definition
Divergent pattern of correlation
Term
Uncorrelated
Definition
The state of one fails to predict another
Term
experimental research
Definition
testing a hypotheses by various means including manipulating variables across groups, single case research and the ABAB design
Term
Single-case research
Definition

using case studies to develop and test therapy techniques within a scientific framework.

The same subject is studied over time.

Term
ABAB design
Definition
experimental design in which A is a baseline condition and B is the subsequent introduction to treatment. The treatment is withdrawn, thus baseline (a) returns and (b) repeated.
Term
Analogue studies
Definition
studies that study the subject by using an approximation to the subject.  i.e. animal studies, or people showing sadness to study depression
Term
3 principles to studying abnormality
Definition
  1. A scientific approach to abnormal behaviour
  2. Openness to new ideas
  3. Respect for the dignity, integrity, and growth potential of all persons
Term
Scientific approach to abnormal behaviour
Definition
  • draw on concepts and research findings from a variety of scientific fields
  • particular relevance are genetics, neuranatomy, neurochemistry, sociology, anthropology, and psychology
Term
Openness to new ideas
Definition
  • science is progessive and cummulative
  • knowledge builds on knowledge
  • Need to be open to creativity and new ideas

 

Term
Respect for the dignity, integrity and growth potential of all persons.
Definition
  • Study not only outsiders perspective of a psychological condition, but also that of the person experiencing it.
Term
Why abnormal behavior was often attributed to possession bya  demon or god in ancient times.
Definition
  • speech or behaviour that appeared to have religious or mystical significance
  • if a person became overactive or excited, engaged in behaviour contrary to religious doctrine
Term
How exorcism was administered by shamans and priests as the primary type of treatment for demonic possession
Definition

included magic, prayer, incantation, noisemaking, and the use of concoctions

 

Term
Hippocrates
Definition
  • rejection of demonology
  • classification of mental disorders into three categories- mania, meancholia, and phrenitis
  • dream interpretation
  • emphasis on natural causes, clinical observation, and brain pathology
Term

Plato

 

Definition
  • psychological phenomena a repsonse of the whole organism, reflecting its internal state and natural appetites
  • emphasized the importance of an individual's intellectual and other abilities
  • took into account sociocultural influences on behaviour and thinking
  • conversational therapy
  • hospital care
Term
Aristotle
Definition
  • descriptions of consciousness
  • rejected the idea that mental disorders could be caused by psychological factors such as frustration and conflict
  • adhered to Hippocrates' view of the role of bile in creating sickness
Term
Galen
Definition
  • contributed to the understanding of the nervous system
  • divided causes of psychological disorders into physical and mental categories
Term
Mental disorders in the Middle Ages
Definition
  • scientific inquiry was limited
  • treatment characterized by ritual or superstition
  • supernatural explanations for diseased grew in popularity
  • influence of theology

 

Term
Mass Madness/Mass Hysteria
Definition
  • widespread occurence of simultaneous group behaviour disorders that were apparently cases of hysteria
  • i.e. tarantism-dancing because of bite of a spider
Term
Paracelsus, Teresa of Avila, Johan Wyer, Reginald Scot, St. Vincent de Paul
Definition

All largely rejected superstitious explanations and inhumane treatment of mentally ill patients. 

Ridiculed as heretics for criticizing the cruel treatment of mentally ill

Term
Early Asylums of Europe and US
Definition
  • patients exhibited
  • poor nutrition
  • poor sanitation
  • abusive practices
Term
Philippe Pinel
Definition
  • Removed chains of inmates as an experiment; behaviours improved
  • humanitarian institution reformist
Term
William Tuke
Definition
  • Quaker, patients lived, worked and rested in a kindly religious atmosphere
  • practiced kind acceptance
  • still in existence today
Term
Benjamin Rush
Definition
  • founder of American psychiatry
  • transitional figure between inhumane and humane treatment for mental patients
Term
Dorothea Dix
Definition
  • campaigned for forty years to change the deplorable treatment of the mentally ill in America
  • opened up institutions across America and two in Canada
Term
General Paresis
Definition
The discovery of a biological cause for general paresis was the first time medical science committed itself to curing a mental disorder.  The breakthrough raised hopes that perhaps other diseases would have an organic basis for which there was a cure. 
Term
Biological vs non biological
Definition
Organic basis vs intrapsychic basis
Term
History of Psychoanalysis
Definition
  • Mesmer's use of hypnosis was a stepping stone
Term
Nancy School
Definition
  • Liebeault practiced hypnotism
  • Berheim hysteria could be removed through hypnosis
  • Charcot proposed a pathological basis, garnering attention for both biological and non-biological roots to mental illness

 

Term
Free Association
Definition
Patients talk freely about themselves, therby providing information about their feelings, motives and so forth.
Term
Dream Analysis
Definition
Patients recorded descriptions of their dreams
Term
Benefits of Free Association and Dream Analysis
Definition
Techniques helped analysts and patients gain insihghts and achieve a better understanding of the patients' emotional problems. 
Term
Behavioural perspective
Definition
  • central theme of the role of learning in human behaviour
  • the study of directly observable behaviour and the stimuli and reinforcing conditions that control it can serve as a basis for formulating the scientific principles of human behaviour
Term
Classical conditioning
Definition
  • a form of learning in which a neutral stimulus is paired repeatedly with an unconditioned stimulus that naturally elicits an unconditioned behaviour
  • after repetition the neutral stimulus becomes conditioned to elicit a conditioned response
Term
Operant Conditioning
Definition
  • the consequences of behaviour influence behaviour
  • behaviour is shaped when something reinforces a particular activity of an organism
Term
Problems with interpreting historical events
Definition
  • perpetuation of inaccuracies
  • always open to reinterpretation
  • extrapolating facts from written documents and surveys of the time, instead of direct observation
  • linguistic differences, does possession mean what we interpret it to mean.
  • bias
Term
A necessary cause of abnormal behaviour
Definition

A necessary cause (cause x) is a condition that must exist for a disorder (disorder Y) to occur.

Eg. general paresis could not exist without contracted syphilis

Although not always sufficient to cause a disorder on its own, many variables may have to co-exist to create the disorder.

Term
A sufficient cause of a disorder
Definition

A cause that guarantees the occurrence of a disorder.

Eg. hopelessness is a sufficient cuase of depression 

Term
A contributory cause to abnormal behaviour
Definition

A cause that increases the probability of a disorder developing but is neither necessary nor sufficinet for the disorder to occur. 

Eg. parental rejection increases the probablity that a child will later have difficulty handling close personal relationships.

Term
Diathesis
Definition
Predisposition towards developing a disorder
Term
adoption method
Definition
a method of studying genetic influences. Comparative studies are made between biological and adoptive parents to detemine their genetic influence on the children.
Term
Association studies
Definition
a study using a large sample of people with and those without a disorder.  A comparison is t hen made of the frequency of certain gentic markers between the two groups. If results show a relationship between genetic markers and those with a disorder than a claim is made that those genetic markers are significant to the disorder.
Term
Attachment theory
Definition
An influential theory in child psychology and psychiarty, as well as adult psychopathology. Developed by John Bowlby. Emphasized the importance of early deveopment especially early attachment relationships, arguing these relatinoships layed the foundation for functioning in childhood, adolescence and adulthood.  Believed in the importacnce of quality parenting in developing seecure attachments, but also believed that children played a role in their development.
Term
Attributions
Definition
The process of assigning causes to the things that happen.  Behaviours may be attributed to internal/ external causes. Causeal attributions help us to explain behaviours of ourselves or others.
Term
Behaviour Genetics
Definition

Field of study focusin on the heritability of mental disorders and other psychologicla functioning.  Three methods used:

  • The family history or pedigree
  • the twin
  • the adoption
Term

 

Biopsychosocial viewpoint

Definition
 A view that biological psycosocial and sociocultural factors all interact playing a role in psychopathology and treatment.
Term
Castration Anxiety
Definition
Associated with the Oedipus complex, that a youg boy's lust for his mother will be punished by his father castrating him.  the anxiety forces the boy to repress lust for mother and anger towards father. If all goes well then boy identifies with father only to develop feelings towards other women.
Term
Chromosomes
Definition
The chainlike structures within a cell's nucleus that contain the genes.  "Normal" human cells have 46 chromosomes divided into 23 pairs.  Half father's half mother's.  Determine sex and anatomical/physiological traits.  Abnormalities in structure or number leads to defects or disorders
Term
Cognitive behavioural perspective
Definition
Thoughts and information processing can become distorted and lead to maladaptive emotions and behaviours.
Term
Concordance rate
Definition
The % of twins sharing a disorder
Term
Cortisol
Definition
a hormaone that mobilitzes the body to deal with stress.  produced by the cortical part of the adrenal gland (top of kidney).
Term
Developmental psychopathology
Definition
focuses on detemining what is abnormal at any point in development by comparing and contrasting it with the normal and expected changes that occur in the course of development.
Term
Developmental systems approach
Definition

Acknowledges the genetic activity influencing neural activity, which in turn influences behaviour, whtihc then influences the environment, but also that these influences are bidirectional.

environment-behaviour-neural-genetic

Term
Diathesis-stress models
Definition
a model that evaluates the predisposition of an individual toa disorder with the addition of a stressor operating on that person.
Term
Discrimination
Definition
occurs when a person learns to distinguish between two different stimuli and respond to them differently obased on which ones are followed by reinforcement
Term
ego
Definition
a part of the personality that develops a few months after birth. it mediated between the demands of the id and the realities of the external world. The ego operates on the "reality principle" and its adaptive measures are referred to as secondary process thinkning
Term
ego psychology
Definition
view that psycopathology deveops when the ego does not function adequeately to control or delay impulse gratification or does not make adequate use of defencse mechanisms when faced with internal conflicts.
Term
Ego defense mechanisms
Definition
mechanisms of the ego used to defend against anxiety both neurotic and moral that are derived from an unconscious level.  These defence mechanisms discharge or soothe anxiety by pushing them out of consciousness rather than dealing with them directly
Term
Electra complex
Definition
the female counterpart of the Oedipus complex
Term
Etiology
Definition
is the causal pattern of abnormal behaviour
Term
Extinction
Definition
the removal of a behaviour as a controlled stimulus fails to be reinforced by the unconditioned stimulus
Term
Family history/pedigree method
Definition
requires the observation of a sample group of the carrier of a disorder, to see if the incidence increases in proportion to the degree of hereditary relationship
Term
Generalization
Definition
when a response conditioned to one set of stimuli can be evoked by other similar stimuli
Term
Genes
Definition
are the carriers of genetic information passed on from our ancestors. Genes are made up of DNA molecules and are present at various locations on chromosomes
Term
Genotype
Definition
 A person's total genetic endowment
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