7 - Morality, Psychopathy and Psychopathology Flashcards

1
Q

Define Morality

A

Principles concerning the distinction between right and wrong, or good and bad behaviour

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2
Q

Early Views on morality: Rousseau and Golding

A

> Rousseau believed societal corrupted children’s morality

> Golding believed children have inherently bad impulses that society reigns in
lord of the flies

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3
Q

Cognitive, Behavioural and Emotional aspects of morality

A
  • Cognitive
    > knowledge of ethical rules and judgements of behaviour
  • Behavioural
    > behaviours that invoke ethical considerations (from adults)
  • Emotional
    > feelings that invoke moral and ethical decisions
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4
Q

Approaches to morality (3)

A

Evolutionary
Cultural
Forensic Anthropometry

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5
Q

Evolutionary Approach to morality

A
  • how might evolution select for particular moral traits?
    > sharing and empathy gives an advantage, encourages reciprocal behaviours
    > fewer enemies, more mates, more survival success
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6
Q

Cultural approach to morality

A
  • how do cultures install moral sense?

- moral similarities across cultures may indicate nativism

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7
Q

Forensic Anthropometric approach to morality

A
  • you can tell a criminal by the morphological features of their faces
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8
Q

Piaget’s 3 stages of moral development

A

Piaget believed there was a strict stage-development of morality

Pre-moral development (0-4)
Heteronomous Stage (4-10)
Autonomous Stage (10+)
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9
Q

Pre-moral development stage

A
0-4y
 > no explicit awareness of rules
 > no use of moral principles
 > no notions of justing 
  \+ supports Golding
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10
Q

Heteronomous Stage

A

4-10y
> rules are seen as unchanging and external, like physical laws
> judgements of culpability are based on the consequences rather than intentions
> little sense of appropriate punishment

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11
Q

Autonomous Stage

A

10+
> rules are seen as human agreements that can be changed
> judgements of culpability are based on intentions and punishment should be appropriate
+ more sophisticated evaluation of judgement

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12
Q

Piaget’s Morality task and limitations

A
  • Children have difficulty integrating the intention of the actor into their judgements of morality
  • Two Scenarios:
    > A: the child unknowingly causes multiple cups to smash
    > B: the child knowingly attempts to grab a glass, and breaks one cup

Results:

  • children think that A is a worse transgression (due to consequence)
  • adults think that B is a greater transgression (due to intention)

Limitations:
- Social Conventions vs. Moral Laws
> driving side of road vs. stealing
> the problem Piaget was looking at did not encapsulate rules necessarily, if these laws are not that distinct early on

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13
Q

Kohlberg’s view on morality

A

Believed that there’s a lot of limitation previously, due to lack of looking at what morality itself is

  • theorised that children learn to become moral thinkers, which takes time to develop accuracy
  • they often confuse morality with power coercion or authority
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14
Q

Kohlberg’s 6 stages of morality development (3 stages)

A
Level 1:
Pre-conventional morally (2-10)
{arises from basic needs}
- Stage 1
 > Obedience and punishment orientation
 \+ moral judgement is driven by the need to avoid punishment
- Stage 2
 > Instrumental-relativist orientation
  \+ moral judgements are driven by the desire to meet personal needs

Level 2:
Conventional Morality (9y+)
> arises from conforming to expected roles and pleasing others
- Stage 3
> Good boy/good girl orientation
+ moral judgements are driven by a need to be accepted by others as a good person
- Stage 4
> Law and order orientation
+ moral judgements are driven by a desire to adhere to the law

Level 3:
Post-conventional morality (12y+)
> arises from abstract principles that transcend individual circumstances are local cultural contexts
- Stage 5
> Social contract orientation
+ moral judgements arise from adherence to laws that are set up as social constructs for the common good
- Stage 6
> Principled conscience-driven orientation
+ moral judgements arise from adherence to personal principles (i.e. the Golden Rule)

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15
Q

Kohlberg’s Heinz Dilemma

A

Kohlberg used to measure morality using a moral dilemma
> Heinz’s wife is dying of cancer
> a druggist has a potential cure he discovered, that costs $200 to make and he’s charging $2000
> Heinz can only make up $1000
> the druggist still refuses, on the basis of profiteering
> Heinz steals the medicine
- morally right or wrong?

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16
Q

Cognitive Theories of Moral Development

A
  • distinguish moral judgements from social rules
  • many rules
    > moral rules
    > social convention, nonmoral rules (vary across cultures)

Children

  • tend to be selective of beliefs that they tolerate
  • sensitive to variations across different belief domains
  • responses of other socialising agents affects their moral learning (zone of proximal development)
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17
Q

Development of Self-regulation and delay of gratification

A

> Control phase (12-18m)
+
Self-control phase (preschool)
+ passive inhibition system (fear and anxiety)
+ active inhibition system (conscious control)

  • Self-regulation phase
    > child learns to delay gratification and a strong sense of moral self
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18
Q

Development of consciousness

A
  • there are several ways in which consciousness develops
    > requires some sense of anxiety and fear
    + individuals that do not develop anxiety may have impaired consciousness
  • there is an affective side of morality
    > fearful people may achieve better self control through guilt, a result of temperament and parental socialisation
    > a child’s early ability to inhibit impulses and delay gratification may enhance later competence
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19
Q

Prosocial (altruistic) Behaviour

A
  • voluntary and intended to benefit another
  • evident between 12-18m
  • increases in repertoire as children age

Developmental trends

  • 13-14m: approach others when distressed
  • 18m: approach in a specific way
  • 2y: verbal advice, helping, sharing, distraction, defence
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20
Q

Psychopathy and it’s 2 types of development, primary and secondary

A
  • children that are high in Callous and Unemotional traits have a high risk of becoming Psychopaths

Development
Karpaman defined 2 types:
- Primary
> biologically rooted

  • Secondary
    > environmentally mediated
    > normally struggled through adversity
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21
Q

What is the specifier for psychopathy type?

A
  • anxiety is the type specifier
  • no anxiety indicates primary psychopathy
  • high anxiety indicates secondary psychopathy (developed through the adversity)
22
Q

Aggression and it’s development

A

Aggression
- unwelcome, negative behaviour that is threatening to others

Development
- infancy (0-2): anger and frustration

  • preschool (2-5): instrumental aggression
    > use aggression to get what they want
  • early years (6-7): hostile aggression
  • elementary school (7-10): physical and relational aggression
    > rumours, social media
  • adolescence: selective aggression
  • there is a strong relationship between childhood physical aggression and criminal convictions
    > especially amongst males compared to females
23
Q

When is the peak of physical aggression?

A
Preschool age (2-3) is the peak of physical aggression
- because individuals cannot desist from using it to solve problems
24
Q

Psychopathology

A

study of disorders of the mind

  • dysfunctional adult behaviour often seen as a product of development
  • resilience is a factor
25
Q

The 4 basic principles of Developmental psychopathology

A
  • frequency and pattern of symptoms
  • deviations from normal behaviour
  • early, precursor behaviours of disorder
  • the pathways to normal and abnormal development
26
Q

Measuring abnormality in psychopathology, 2 methods

A
  • Statistical Model
    > abnormality is a deviation from the average
    + IQ of 100 is normal, 70/130 is abnormal
  • Alternative Model
    > abnormality is a deviation from the ideal
    + what determines ideal?
    + differs by culture and subculture
27
Q

Diagnostic and Empirical approaches to classifying child pathology

A

Diagnostic Approach
- rooted in medical tradition
- uses diagnosis for etiology (causes) of disorder
- classification system forms DSM-5 (diagnostic manuals)
- diagnostic reliability is needed
> do different psychologists make the same diagnoses?

Empirical method
 > alternative to diagnostic approach
 > behaviours are rated
 > statistical tests
 > useful for identifying risk factors
28
Q

What are the two types of child psychological disorders?

A
  • Undercontrolled
  • Overcontrolled
    > such as phobias, mood disorders, and anxiety disorders
  • based on the amount of control the child has over them
29
Q

Child anxiety disorders

A
  • first shown is separation anxiety
  • before 7y, specific phobias can begin to appear
  • Generalised anxiety disorder
    > age 8,9,10
  • Social anxiety disorder
    > fear about social evaluation
    > emerges around 12 (adolescence)
  • as you grow, anxiety changes it’s focal point
30
Q

Anxiety and Comorbidity

A

Anxiety shows Comorbidity

> if someone is diagnosed with 1 disorder, they are 50% likely to show symptoms of another disorder

31
Q

Causes of child anxiety

A
  • insecurely attached children, may have had caregivers with higher levels of anxiety or depression
    > can result in overactivity of vulnerability of anxiety related schemas
    > can increases attention or memory biases to situational interpretations that can enhance anxiety
32
Q

Childhood depression

A
  • frequency of diagnosis increases as children age
    > anxiety is more common earlier on, depression later
    > high anxiety early on predisposes to depression
  • depression seems to be at it’s fullest in late childhood-adolescence
    > when child reaches the stage of formal operations
  • rates of depression are increasing among young males
  • depression is associate with increased risk of suicide
33
Q

Causes of childhood depression

A
  • biological theories show it’s heritable (twin studies)
    > gene-environment studies show different genotypes can improve vulnerability to depression
  • Social and psychological theories
  • Cognitive theories
    > children raised in certain circumstances can develop learned helplessness that filters into other aspects of life
  • depression symptoms more present in females than males
34
Q

Obsessive-Compulsive Disorder

A
  • being obsessed to a focal point
  • Obsessions that relate to factors to create compulsions
    > sexual obsession
    > forbidden thoughts (factor)
    > checking compulsion
  • effects 2-3% of population
  • begins to emerge 6-15y
  • diagnoses follow observation of unwanted behaviour
  • adults recognise their behaviour is not rational, children do not
35
Q

Eating Disorders

A
- Anorexia Nervosa
 > body weight voluntarily maintained at below normal
 > intense fear of gaining weight
 > amenorrhea (in females)
  \+ abnormal absence of menstruation 
  • Bulimia Nervosa
    > large uncontrolled eating binges at least twice weekly
    > inappropriate compensatory behaviour (vomiting)
    > self-esteem closely linked to body weight/shape
  • both disorders are much more common in females
  • anorexia nervosa has an earlier onset
    > more consistent historically and across cultures
    > more closely associated with genetic influences
36
Q

Causes of Eating Disorders

A
  • Body dysmorphia
    > inaccurate representations of our own body weight/shape
  • little evidence that parenting style causes anorexia
37
Q

Conduct disorder

A

repetitive and persistent behaviour in which a child or adolescent violates the basic rights of others or violates age-appropriate societal norms

  • an Undercontrolled behavioural disorder
    > lack of remorse or empathy for one’s actions
38
Q

3 categories of conduct disorder

A
  • Aggression against people or animals
  • Wilful destruction of property
  • Theft or violation of trust
  • Violation of major rules

Conduct disorder is diagnosed when 3 or more of these behaviours are present within a 1-year interval

39
Q

Categories of conduct disorder in more detail

A
- Aggression against people or animals
 > bully
 > fights a lot
 > using weapons to threaten another
 > physical cruelty to people or animals
 > robbing a person through force or intimidation
 > forcing someone into sexual activity
  • Wilful destruction of property
    > sets fires intentionally to cause damage
    > intentional destruction of others’ property
  • Theft or violation of trust
    > has broken into a place
    > lies for personal gain
    > has stolen items in a way that does not involve direct confrontation of the owner (i.e. using someone’s card)
  • Violation of major rules
    > stays out late at night opposing strict rules against it
    > bunks school as preteen
    > run away from home overnight at least twice
40
Q

Treating Conduct disorders

A
- Social learning and behavioural techniques
 > time out for inappropriate behaviours
 > intervention programs
 > prevention and abstinence programs
 > detoxification and counselling

*the earlier the intervention, the higher the chance of success

41
Q

Define Substance abuse

A

the excessive use of drugs in a way that interferes with one or more important areas of functioning

Substance use
- correlated with:
> friends, family and peers who use drugs
> under controlled and impulsive behaviours
> poor academic records and truancy (bunking)
- even the best programs have a high rate of recidivism

42
Q

Disorders associated with substance abuse (3)

A

Conduct Disorder
Anxiety
Depression

43
Q

Psychopathy Checklist

A
  • impress management (superficial charm)
  • grandiose sense of self-worth
  • stimulation seeking
  • pathological lying
  • manipulation for personal gain
  • lack of remorse/guilt
  • shallow affect (no deep emotions, but pretends to)
  • callousness (lacks empathy)
  • parasitic orientation (exploits others)
  • poor anger control
  • promiscuous sexual behaviour
  • early behavioural problems
  • lacks goals
  • impulsivity
  • irresponsibility
  • failure to accept responsibility
  • unstable interpersonal relationships
  • serious criminal behaviour
  • serious violations of conditional release (from jail)
  • criminal versatility (engages in at least six kinds of criminal behaviour
44
Q

Psychopathy and Fear Processing

A
  • children that show symptoms of high callousness are slower to recognise fear
    > indication of affective disorder
45
Q

ADHD

A

Attention Deficit/Hyperactivity Disorder

  • most common disorder in males
  • problem in being able to delay gratification
- children:
 > have conflicts with adults and peers
 > perform poorly in school
 > create serious classroom-management problems for teachers
 > often low self-esteem
46
Q

Characteristics of ADHD

A
  • overactivity and impulsivity
  • problems following instructions and rules
  • poor attention
  • inappropriate activity seems to diminish in adolescence, other problems persist
47
Q

Causes of ADHD

A
  • Biological Factors
    > psychostimulant medications (caffeine, ritalin)
  • Psychological factors
    > social stressors
    > appears to be a heterogenous disorder with multiple causes
48
Q

Treatment for ADHD

A
  • Medication approach
    > rapid and noticeable improvement
  • Behaviour therapy
    > psychological intervention
  • Combined treatment
49
Q

Classical Conditioning as a treatment

A
  • good for phobias and OCD

> extinguish relation between trigger and response

50
Q

Operant Conditioning as a treatment

A
  • good for phobias and OCD

> use reward and punishment to modify behaviour

51
Q

Modelling as a treatment

A
  • good for conduct disorder

> role model to model appropriate behaviour

52
Q

Cognitive Behavioural Therapies (CBT)

A
  • requires effort on part of the patient
    > must identify a behavioural goal
  • makes the patient aware of thoughts that are habitual
    > when I’m stressed i wash my hands
  • make the irrationality of thoughts and behaviours apparent