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Individual Differences

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Title: Individual Differences


1
  • Individual Differences
  • Abnormality

2
  • Who is the most normal? rank these celebrities
    from 1-5. 1 Most normal.

3
  • Would someone be considered abnormal if..
  • They were gay?
  • They had depression?
  • They were a single parent?
  • If they were a bigamist?
  • If they had a learning difficulty?
  • If they wore a bikini?

4
  • What is abnormality?
  • How would we decide what is normal or abnormal?
  • How would we measure/decide upon the extent of an
    abnormality?

5
  • HOW DO WE DEFINE WHAT IS NORMAL?
  • In social terms
  • We might use the standard of adequate functioning
  • Or the concept of ideal mental health

6
  • DEVIATION FROM SOCIAL NORMS
  • This approach to abnormality considers that an
    individuals behaviour can impact on others and
    states that
  • Behaviour which doesnt conform to socially
    acceptable patterns may be considered abnormal.

7
  • Are these behaviours socially deviant?
  • Walking around in the nude?
  • Refusing to go outside?
  • Have several wives?
  • Eating another human being?
  • Holding up (making) the OK sign with your hand?
  • Having a child out of wedlock?
  • Being gay?

8
  • There are a number of problems with this approach
    can you think of any?
  • Social deviancy is related to moral standards
    which can change with time. Therefore this
    approach also had to change or would be
    historically biased.
  • Social deviancy is also defined by the context in
    which a behaviour occurs. (It is ok to be in a
    bikini on a beach)

9
  • Social deviancy is not necessarily a bad thing
    some people are socially deviant because they
    have a non-conformist lifestyle others because
    their behaviour is motivated by high principles
    (Nazi Germany)
  • SOCIAL DEVIANCY CANT BE THE SOLE CRITERION OF
    ABNORMALITY BUT IT IS IMPORTANT THAT PEOPLE TRY
    TO BEHAVE IN WAYS THAT ARE SOCIALLY ACCEPTABLE SO
    THAT THEY DONT UPSET OTHERS.

10
  • The failure to function adequately approach to
    define abnormality
  • If an individuals behaviour, mood or thoughts
    adversely affects their
  • (1) Well-being, i.e. their ability to retain
    relationships and employment.
  • (2) Becomes a danger to their own safety
  • (3) Become a danger to the safety of others
  • Then they are considered abnormal.

11
  • Many mental disorders result in an inability to
    function adequately in terms of every day life
    and interactions.
  • SO
  • many people who seek psychiatric help are
    recognising that they are not functioning
    adequately so this could serve as a standard
    for abnormality

12
  • Rosenhan and Seligman (1989) have extended the
    failure to function approach to cover seven
    features associated with abnormality.
  • Each of the features individually may not be
    enough to cause a problem - BUT when several are
    present then they are symptomatic of abnormality.

13
  • THE SEVEN FEATURES ARE -
  • Suffering (personal distress)
  • Maladaptiveness (destructive behaviour)
  • Vividness and unconventionality of behaviour
    (strange behaviour)
  • Unpredictability and loss of control
  • Irrationality and incomprehensibility
  • Observer discomfort (making others feel
    uncomfortable)
  • Violation of moral and ideal standards

14
  • Group Activity the seven features of
    abnormality.
  • Imagine a continuum from normal behaviour at one
    end and extremely abnormal at the other. Bearing
    in mind Rosenhan and Seligman's definitions,
    consider the experiences on the next page and for
    each of them describe what would be acceptable
    behaviour and what would be regarded as abnormal.

15
  • Suffering Grief Personal Distress
  • Maladaptiveness Disregard for ones own safety
    taking part in extreme sports
  • Vividness and unconventionality Tattooing/
    Piercing
  • Unpredictability and loss of control losing
    ones temper
  • Irrationality and incomprehensibility Remaining
    friendly towards someone who is hostile
  • Observer discomfort Laughing inappropriately
  • Violation of moral and ideal standards Removing
    ones clothes to sunbathe

16
  • LIMITATIONS of the failure to function approach
  • The approach requires subjective decisions
    (Involves opinions)
  • Some of the features also apply to people who are
    simply non-conformists or who are grieving etc.
  • Not all people who have mental abnormalities are
    aware of their failure to function and so can
    deny that they have a problem.

17
  • Activity
  • Write a description of yourself call this (A)
    then write a brief description of how you would
    like to be (B)
  • How different are the two descriptions? If your
    ideal self is very different from your perceived
    self -
  • Would NEVER achieving your ideal self result in
    you becoming mentally unbalanced depressed etc??

18
  • Deviation from Ideal Mental Health.
  • Humanistic Psychologists (Carl Rogers, Maslow)
    have been instrumental founders of this final
    approach of defining abnormality -

19
  • Rogers (1959) believed that abnormal behaviour
    occurs when a child receives conditional love
    from their parents (therefore the child will have
    to become somebody else in order to receive the
    love that they want) .
  • Healthy psychological development or normal
    behaviour will therefore be a result of
  • Unconditional love which leads to high
    self-esteem and freedom to seek self-actualisation

20
  • Jahoda (1958) expanded on the ideal mental
    health theory and suggested that it was
    preferable to identify the criteria for positive
    mental health. She proposed 6 categories

21
  • Selfattitudes (positive)
  • Personal growth (being able to achieve)
  • Integration (being able to cope with stress)
  • Autonomy. (being independent)
  • Perception of reality (being relaistic knowing
    what is real and what is not.)
  • Environmental mastery (the extent to which you
    can love and be loved)

22
  • Assessment of the deviation from ideal mental
    health model
  • Pros
  • The approach focuses on positive characteristics
    Identifies characteristics that people need to
    be mentally healthy rather than looking for
    problems
  • Limitations -
  • Criteria used are hard to define, vague and
    difficult to measure (how do you rate someones
    attitudes/integration?) Criteria is bound to time
    and culture. less likely to apply to
    collectivist societies.

23
  • Cultural Relativism
  • A major problem with ALL psychological
    definitions of Abnormality is that they often
    fail to consider differences between cultures.
  • Cultural Relativism means that value judgments
    are up to individual cultural context SO we
    cannot make absolute statements about what is
    normal or abnormal.

24
  • Different cultures will have different criteria
    as to what constitutes as normal and abnormal
    behaviour. What maybe considered deviant or
    abnormal in one culture may be normal in another
  • Dhat Syndrome in India is an example of this.

25
  • Dhat syndrome is found in Males of the Indian
    sub-continent. Sufferers have physical and mental
    exhaustion and blame it on the presence of blood
    in their semen. A PHYSICAL ILLNESS
  • WE would state that they have depression!

26
  • Also what is considered abnormal changes over
    time.
  • For example Homosexuality ceased to be
    categorised as a mental disorder in the 1980
    edition of DSM (Diagnostic and statistical manual
    of mental disorders) But was considered abnormal
    in America until the 1970s

27
  • BUT There are some features (identified by
    Rosenhan and Seligman) that are universal
    indicators of undesirable behaviour Failure to
    eat, chronic depression etc
  • Conclusion The 7 features proposed by Rosenhan
    and Seligman may offer the most realistic
    approach the more of these features possessed
    by an individual the more likely it is that they
    can be categorised as abnormal
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