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Abnormal Psychology

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Humanistic Perspective C. Classifying Mental Illness Slide 13 D. 7 types of mental illness (disorders) 1. Anxiety Disorders 2. Somatoform Disorders 3. – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Abnormal Psychology


1
Unit 3
  • Abnormal Psychology

2
Please write down only underlined info today in
your notes! These notes are in outline form!
3
A. Possible Indications of Abnormal Behavior
4
  • Maladaptiveness
  • Does behavior interferes with regular life
    activities?
  • Irrationality
  • Does the person think logically?
  • Observer discomfort
  • Does the persons behavior make others feel
    uncomfortable?

5
  • 4. Unpredictability
  • Is their behavior consistent or out of the
    blue?
  • 5. Distress
  • Does the person have distress such as extreme
    anxiety or prolonged depression?
  • 6. Unconventionability
  • Is their behavior bizarre?

6
B. 5 different perspectives on the causes of
mental illness
7
1. Biological Perspective
  • Biological factors affect mental health
  • Genetics
  • Chemical imbalances
  • Brain structure
  • Injuries to the brain
  • Infections

8
2. Psychodynamic Perspective
  • Look to an individuals unconscious for the cause
    of the disorder
  • Do this through conversations with patient to
    explore events and relationships throughout their
    life that have shaped their attitude

9
3. Behavioral Perspective
  • Believe disorders are the result of faulty
    learning
  • Life experiences have conditioned us to respond
    to events or situations in a particular way
  • To remedy the situation we must unlearn these
    behaviors (like phobias)

10
4. Cognitive Perspective
  • Disorders arise from faulty thoughts
  • Ex. If a person always thinks , Im not very
    interesting, nobody likes me.
  • This person may then mis-interpret how others
    respond to her and begin believing these things
  • To remedy the situation we must change the
    thoughts
  • Many popular self help books are based on
    cognitive psychology

11
5. Humanistic Perspective
  • Disorders develop due to people adopting
    standards and values that conflict with their
    true inner feelings
  • To remedy this therapists work to help them
    identify and embrace their genuine goals and
    desires

12
C. Classifying Mental Illness
13
  • Mental illnesses today are classified based on
    their symptoms
  • American Psychiatric Association defines them in
    the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental
    Disorders IV-TR (DSM-IV)

14
D. 7 types of mental illness (disorders)
15
1. Anxiety Disorders
  • Among the most common psych. disorder10-15 of
    US pop./ year
  • Anxiety is a feeling of apprehension that danger
    or misfortune is looming
  • Physical symptoms rapid heart rate,
    perspiration, nausea, dizziness
  • Types of anxiety disorders
  • Phobic disorder
  • Generalized Anxiety Disorder
  • Panic Disorder
  • Post-traumatic Stress Disorder
  • Obsessive-Compulsive Disorder

16
2. Somatoform Disorders
  • Physical symptoms arise from psychological causes
  • A person may suffer physical symptoms even though
    there is nothing physically wrong or no physical
    explanation
  • Types of somatoform disorders
  • Conversion disorder
  • Hypochondriasis

17
3. Dissociative Disorders
  • Escape from painful problems or situations by
    dissociating (cutting themselves off) from
    certain parts of themselves
  • May happen gradually or suddenly
  • May be temporary or permanent
  • Can disturb normal life function and cause
    extreme distress
  • Types of Dissociative disorders
  • Amnesia
  • Dissociative fugue
  • Dissociative Identity Disorder

18
4. Affective Disorders (Mood disorders)
  • Experiences moods so extreme that they interfere
    with their daily life
  • Types of affective disorders
  • Dysthymic disorder (moderate depression)
  • Major depression
  • Bipolar disorder

19
5. Psychotic Disorders
  • People lose contact with reality so very
    difficult to carry on normal life activity
  • During a psychotic episode may experience
    hallucinations or delusions
  • Hallucinations Person senses something that
    isnt there
  • Auditory most common
  • Delusions unshakable beliefs that are obviously
    not true (believing they are Santa)
  • Person may have coherent periods in between
    psychotic episodes

20
  • Types of psychotic disorders
  • Schizophrenia
  • Disorganized
  • Catatonic
  • Paranoid
  • Undifferentiated
  • Delusional Disorder

21
6. Personality Disorders
  • Maladaptive personality traits usually more
    disturbing to other people than the individual
  • Types of personality disorders
  • Antisocial Personality Disorder
  • Borderline Personality Disorder

22
7. Childhood Disorders
  • Categorized separately from disorders that occur
    in adulthood due to the differences in children
    and adults
  • Abnormal behavior difficult to assess in children
    because they each develop at different rates
  • Types of childhood disorders
  • Attention-Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder
  • Autistic Disorder

23
Etiology
  • Genetics
  • Investigated through family studies, mainly of
    monozygotic (identical) and dizygotic (fraternal)
    twins, often in the context of adoption.
  • These studies allow calculation of a heritability
    coefficient.
  • Biological factors
  • Investigates effects of hormones,
    neurotransmitters and neuron damage in mental
    illness, for example Alzheimer's Disease
    (neuronal degeneration), Seasonal Affective
    Disorder (hormonal imbalance) and
    depression/anxiety.
  • Different theories focus on structural,
    biochemical and genetic theories.

24
Etiology
  • Psychological factors
  • Psychoanalysis (Freud)
  • Behavioural therapy (Wolpe) based on
    behaviourism, and involving classical and operant
    conditioning.
  • Humanistic therapy aiming to achieve
    self-actualisation (Carl Rogers, 1961)
  • Cognitive Behavioural Therapy aims to influence
    thought and cognition (Beck, 1977).
  • Socio-cultural factors
  • Effects of urban/rural dwelling, gender and
    minority status on state of mind.
  • Conducted by Jenkins (1998)

25
Etiology
  • Systemic factors
  • Family systems
  • Negatively Expressed Emotion playing a part in
    schizophrenic relapse and anorexia nervosa.
  • Biopsychosocial factors
  • Holistic causal model
  • Illness dependent on stress 'triggers'.
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