Psychopathology Flashcards

1
Q

What are the four explanations for abnormality?

A

Deviation from Social Norms
Deviation from Ideal Mental Health
Statistical Infrequency
Failure to function adequately

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2
Q

Describe Rosenhan and Seligman’s Failure to function adequately theory

A
Individual is incapable to cope with day-to-day life due to psychological distress. More criteria fulfilled, more abnormal
Suffering 
Unpredictability
Maladaptiveness 
Observer Discomfort 
Vividness 
Irrationality 
Violation of Moral Standards
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3
Q

Describe Jahoda’s Deviation from Ideal mental health theory

A

Argued the concepts of abnormality and normality were too vague - focuses on positive mental health.
Autonomy - independence of societal pressures
Perception of Reality
Personal Growth
Integration - ability to cope with day-to-day stressors
Environmental Mastery - well-rounded individual
Self-attitudes

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4
Q

Describe the theory of statistical infrequency

A

Most people are within the average (95%) and ‘abnormal’ individuals lie on either extremes - any unusual behaviour is abnormal.

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5
Q

Describe the theory of deviation from social norms

A

Any behaviour that doesn’t follow social norms is deemed abnormal - varies between cultures and time periods. Focuses on the impact of individual’s on others, rather than on themselves

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6
Q

State three behavioural characteristics of phobias

A

Freeze/Faint, Disruption of functioning, Avoidance, Panic

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7
Q

State three emotional characteristics of phobias

A

Screaming/Crying, Fear, Panic/Anxiety

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8
Q

State three cognitive characterisics of phobias

A

Selective Attention, Insight, Cognitive distortions, Irrational thinking

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9
Q

Describe systematic desensitisation as a behavioural technique of treating phobias

A

Wolpe (1958)
Weekly sessions for however long necessary to gradually overcome phobia. Replaces irrational fears on principle that it’s impossible to experience two opposing emotions at once
1) Hierarchy of fear
2) Relaxation techniques - PMR, the relaxation response, deep breathing
3) Exposure

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10
Q

Describe flooding as a behavioural technique of treating phobias

A

Patient is exposed to object immediately (one session only) until phobic response is removed. Taught relaxation techniques beforehand. Can be in vivo or virtual.

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11
Q

State three behavioural characteristics of depression

A

Social impairment, poor hygiene, weight changes, aggression/self-harm

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12
Q

State three emotional characteristics of depression

A

Anger, loss of enthusiasm, worthlessness

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13
Q

State three cognitive characteristics of depression

A

Absolutist thinking, poor memory, thoughts of death, negative thinking

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14
Q

Describe the cognitive triad as a cognitive explanation for depression

A

Beck (1960)
States patients have distorted and negative thinking - have developed negative schemas from childhood that provide a negative framework (ineptness and self-blame).
Negative thought process: SELF - WORLD - FUTURE

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15
Q

Describe the ABC model as a cognitive explanation for depression

A

Ellis (1957)
Caused by irrational and negative beliefs, model explains how they form:
Activating Event
Beliefs
Consequences
Mustabatory thinking refers to irrational and idealistic thinking that can be emotionally damaging

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16
Q

Describe CBT as a cognitive treatment for depression

Beck

A

Aims to challenge maladaptive thoughts to become more rational and help the patient think in a more positive way. Cognitive triad is used as a basis - patients encouraged to challenge thoughts and keep record of positive life events. Weekly sessions alone or in group

17
Q

Describe REBT as a cognitive treatment for depression

Ellis

A

Uses the ABC model in a more positive and rational way. Patients encouraged to practice positive thinking. Three stages: 1) Disputing irrational thoughts
2) Effective attitude to life
3) Feelings/emotions
Patients given homework, encouraged to participate in pleasurable activities, and shown unconditional positive regard

18
Q

State three behavioural characteristics of OCD

A

Compulsions, social impairment, hindrance of everyday functioning, repetitive behaviours, avoidance of triggers

19
Q

State three emotional characteristics of OCD

A

Anxiety/Distress, Guilt/Disgust, Depression

20
Q

State three cognitive characteristics of OCD

A

Obsessions, Attention bias, realisation of inappropriateness, uncontrollable urges, recognition of self-generation

21
Q

Describe the neural explanation of OCD

A

Sufferers have high dopamine and low serotonin levels. High dopamine linked to over activity in basal ganglia area (motor functioning, learning). Low serotonin causes malfunction of caudate nucleus (uses past to influence actions) - can’t control transmission of anxious thoughts

22
Q

Describe the genetic explanation of OCD

A

Classed as polygenic:
COMT - regulates production of dopamine, more common in OCD patients
SERT - affects transportation of serotonin, mutation in gene associated with OCD. Ozaki (2003) found 6/7 family members with OCD had mutated gene

23
Q

How do SSRIs work to treat OCD?

A

Inhibits the re-uptake of serotonin so it’s readily available for receptor sites. Start on the lowest dosage possible

24
Q

How do tricyclics work to treat OCD?

A

Blocks the re-uptake of serotonin and noradrenaline - more serotonin available

25
Q

How do benzodiazepines work to treat OCD?

A

Acts as a sedative - reduces activity in the CNS and reduces brain arousal. Increases GABA - inhibitory neurotransmitter. Decreases serotonin levels, increasing depression.