Chapter 13 Flashcards

(48 cards)

1
Q

what is abnormal behaviour

A
  • strange within person’s culture?
  • causing personal distress?
  • maladaptive?
  • danger to self or others?
  • legally responsible for own acts?
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2
Q

what are the 5 perspective on causes of abnormal behaviour

A
  • biological
  • psychodynamic
  • learning
  • cognitive
  • humanistic
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3
Q

what is the biological perspective on the cause of abnormal behaviour

A
  • biochemical abnormality in the brain, genetic inheritance or infection
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4
Q

what is the psychodynamic perspective on the cause of abnormal behaviour

A
  • early childhood experiences, unresolved conflict, imbalance of id, ego and superego
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5
Q

what is the learning perspective on the cause of abnormal behaviour

A
  • abnormal thoughts, feelings and behaviours with failure learn appropriate responses
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6
Q

what is the cognitive perspective on the cause of abnormal behaviour

A
  • negative thinking patterns
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7
Q

what is the humanistic perspective on the cause of abnormal behaviour

A
  • blocking the normal tendency toward self-actualization
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8
Q

what is the DSM-5

A
  • DSM-5 = diagnostic and statistical manual of mental disorders
  • enables professionals to speak some language when diagnosing, treating, researching, conversing about variety of psychological disorders
  • describes 300 mental disorders
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9
Q

what is neurosis

A
  • obsolete term

- personal distress, impairment in functioning, no loss of contact with reality or violation of social norms

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10
Q

what is psychosis

A
  • loss of contact with reality, delusions, hallucinations, impaired ability to function
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11
Q

what is anxiety

A
  • vague, general uneasiness, feeling something bad about to happen
  • anxiety disorders + obsessive compulsive + related disorder = most common category of mental disorders in canada
  • affect 12 percent of canadians
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12
Q

what is generalized anxiety disorder

A
  • diagnosis if excessive anxiety and worry difficult to control
  • symptoms: trembling, palpitations, sweating, dizziness, nausea, diarrhea, frequent urination
  • many more women than men affected
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13
Q

what are panic attacks

A
  • attacks of overwhelming anxiety, fear, terror
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14
Q

what is panic disorder

A
  • diagnosed with recurring panic attacks

- genetic factors play a role

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15
Q

what are phobias

A
  • persistent, irrational fear and avoidance of object, situation, activity
  • release their fear is irrational
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16
Q

what is agoraphobia

A
  • intense fear in situations where immediate escape is not possible or no help
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17
Q

what is social anxiety disorder

A
  • irrational fear of social or performance situations if might embarrass, humiliate self in front of others
  • one third only speaking in public
  • higher incidence of drug use
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18
Q

what is specific phobia

A
  • phobias other than agoraphobia and social anxiety disorder
  • frequency: situational; fear of natural environment; animals; blood-injection-injury phobia
  • fear is not a phobia unless great distress or interferes with life in a major way
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19
Q

what can cause phobias

A
  • genetic predisposition
  • conditioning
  • observational learning
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20
Q

what is obsessive compulsive disorder

A
  • recurrent obsessions, compulsions
21
Q

what is obsession

A
  • persistent, recurring, involuntary thoughts, images, impulses, cause great distress
22
Q

what are compulsions

A
  • compelled to repeat certain acts over and over or perform specific rituals repeatedly
23
Q

what can cause OCD

A
  • early autoimmune system diseases, strep infections, changes in the brain from infections
  • twin studies suggest genetics
  • genes affecting serotonin functioning suspected
24
Q

what are somatic symptom disorders

A
  • bodily symptoms not explained by known medical conditions
25
what is illness anxiety disorder
- overly concerned about health | - fear that bodily symptoms are sign of serious disease
26
what is conversion disorder
- loss of motor or sensory functioning in some part of the body - no physical cause - solves a psychological problem - la belle indifference
27
what are dissociative disorders
- dissociated from identity and memories of important personal events - mental escape from intolerable circumstances
28
what are the 2 types of dissociative disorders
- dissociative amnesia | - dissociative identity disorder ("multiple personality")
29
what is dissociative amnesia
- complete or partial loss of ability to recall personal information or identify pat experiences - not from forgetfulness or substance use - psychological cause
30
what is dissociative identity disorder
- 2 or more distinct, unique personalities in the same individual - host personality has executive control over body most times - alter personalities may differ radically even in gender, age, sexual orientation - trauma as cause, way to cope
31
what is schizophrenia
- most serious of the psychological disorders - affects one person in 100 - begins in adolescence and early adulthood - social disruption and misery for sufferers and their families
32
what are positive symptoms of schizophrenia
- hallucinations: imaginary sensations - delusions: false beliefs not shared by others in the culture - delusions or grandeur: believe they are a famous person - delusions of persecution: false belief that others will cause harm - thought disturbances - grossly disorganized behaviour - inappropriate affect: facial expressions, tone of voice, gestures not reflecting emotion expected
33
what are negative symptoms of schizophrenia
- loss or deficiency in normal thoughts and behaviours - flat affect: no usual emotional response; robotic - those with negative symptoms have the poorest outcomes
34
what causes schizophrenia
- brain abnormalities - low activity levels from in frontal lobes - defects in neural circuitry - reduced volume of hippocampus, amygdala, thalamus, front lobe grey matter - abnormal lateralization of brain functions
35
what are the 4 types of schizophrenia
- catatonic: display complete stillness/stupor (physically frozen) - disorganized: social withdrawal, hallucinations, delusions, inappropriate laughter, mannerisms - paranoid: suffering delusions of grandeur - undifferentiated: catch-all of symptoms that don't fall in other categories
36
what can cause the development of schizophrenia
- genetic inheritance plus highly stressful environmental conditions - excessive dopamine activity and/or other neurotransmitters (glutamate, GABA) - gender: more men than women have schizophrenia
37
what is depressive bipolar disorder
- moods or emotions that are extreme or unwarranted - depressive episodes - manic episodes - or both depressive and manic episodes
38
what is major depressive disorder
- overwhelming sadness, despair, hopelessness, no pleasure - psychotic depression = delusions, hallucinations - persistent depressive disorder (dysthmia) = milder but chronic
39
what is seasonal affective disorder
- depression triggered by seasons, light deficiency
40
what is bipolar disorder
- manic episodes and depression, with normal periods in between
41
what is a manic episode
- excessive euphoria, inflated self-esteem, wild optimism, hyperactivity
42
what are biological causes of bipolar
- genetic inheritance, brain chemistry | - norepinephrine, serotonin, dopamine
43
what are cognitive causes of bipolar
- depression from distortions in thinking
44
what are personality disorders
- enduring pattern of inner experience and behaviour deviating from cultural expectations - indelible; onset in adolescence or early adulthood; stable - leads to distress or impairment
45
what are the 3 'clusters' of personality disorders
- cluster A: odd behaviour. paranoid, schizoid, schizotypal - cluster B: erratic, overly dramatic behaviour. narcissistic histrionic, borderline, antisocial - cluster C: avoidant, fearful behaviours. obsessive-compulsive, avoidant, dependent
46
what are sexual dysfunctions
- persistent or recurrent problems causing marked distress and interpersonal difficulty - male erectile disorder = inability to have or sustain erection for coitus - female organismic disorder = inability to reach orgasm
47
what is paraphilia
- recurrent sexual urges, fantasies, behaviours involving children, other non-consenting partners, nonhuman objects, or the suffering, humiliation of the individual or partner
48
what is gender dysphoria
- difficulties accepting one's identity as a male or female | - genetic influence