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Models of Abnormal behavior

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Title: Models of Abnormal behavior


1
Models of Abnormal behavior
  • Naomi Wagner, PhD

2
Categories of Explanations of Abnormal Behavior
  • Biological genetics, brain anatomy, biochemical
    imbalance, central nervous system, etc
  • Psychological Emotions, thoughts. Personality,
    learning
  • Social issues with relationships
  • Sociocultural norms for behavior, expectations,
    cultural climate

3
What is a Model?
  • Etiology
  • Cause or origin of a disorder
  • Model
  • An analogy used by scientists, usually to
    describe or explain a phenomenon or process they
    cannot directly observe
  • Model, viewpoint, and perspective are often used
    interchangeably
  • A multipath model considers interactions among
    all possible layers of causes
  • Etiology
  • Cause or origin of a disorder
  • Model
  • An analogy used by scientists, usually to
    describe or explain a phenomenon or process they
    cannot directly observe
  • Model, viewpoint, and perspective are often used
    interchangeably

4
Models (cont-d)
  • These one-dimensional views are overly
    simplistic
  • Set up a false either-or dichotomy between
    nature and nurture
  • Fail to recognize the reciprocal influences of
    one on the other
  • Mask the importance of acknowledging the
    contributions of all four dimensions in the
    origin of mental disorders

5
The Biopsychosocial Model
  • Interaction between the possible causes
  • Multiple pathways to any disorder
  • Not all causes contribute equally to a disorder
  • People exposed to the same factors may not
    develop the same disorder
  • People exposed to different factors may develop
    similar disorders

6
The Structure of the nervous System
7
The Structure of the Nervous system
  • The Central Nervous System The brain and spinal
    cord
  • The Peripheral Nervous System
  • A. The Somatic NS
  • B. The Autonomic NS (sympathetic and
    para-sympathetic.)

8
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9
Neural Transmission How is information
transmitted in the brain
  • Neurons are separated by a gap (synapse)
  • The neurons communicate at the synapse
  • Neuron structure dendrite, cell-body, axon
  • Electrical signals are transmitted chemically
    across the synapse
  • The signals stimulate the pockets at the tip of
    the axon to release neurotransmitter

10
Cont-d
  • Electro- chemical transmission
  • The signal stimulates the vesicles
  • Vesicles release the neurotransmitter into the
    synapse
  • Neurotransmitter Chemical substance released
    from a neuron into the synaptic cleft it drifts
    across the synapse and is absorbed by the
    receiving neuron
  • The signal floats on the neurotransmitter to
    the next neuron
  • Neurons form inter-connected pathways

11
Cont-d
  • The neurotransmitters can either excite or
    inhibit the neuron receiving the signal
  • The activity of the neuron depends on the balance
    between on and off signals
  • Serotonin is implicated in depression and the
    OCD.
  • Dopamine is implicated in schizophrenia (too
    much) and Parkinson (too little)
  • GABA (an inhibitory) is implicated in anxiety

12
Biochemical Theories
  • Basic premise
  • Chemical imbalances underlie mental disorders
  • Dendrites
  • Receive signals from other neurons
  • Axons
  • Send signals to other neurons

13
Neural Transmission
14
Selected Neurotransmitters Involved in Some
Mental Disorders
15
Abnormalities in Brain Structure
  • It is not always possible to connect brain
    structures to psychological symptoms researchers
    believe that abnormally developed brain
    structures
  • In 1848 an explosion during the paving of a rail
    road caused a metal rod to pierce Phineas Gage
    eye socket and to enter his brain
  • As a result he showed significant changes in
    personality

16
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17
The Human Brain
18
Functions of the brain
  • The forebrain
  • Controls all the higher mental functions, such as
    learning, speech, thought, and memory
  • Thalamus
  • Relay station transmits nerve impulses
    throughout brain
  • Hypothalamus
  • Regulates bodily drives and body conditions
  • Limbic system
  • Involves experiencing and expressing emotions and
    motivation

19
Cont-d
  • The midbrain
  • Involved in vision and hearing, and along with
    the hindbrain, controls sleep, alertness, and
    pain
  • Manufactures serotonin, norepinephrine, and
    dopamine
  • The hindbrain
  • Controls heart rate, sleep, and respiration
  • Manufactures serotonin

20
Genetic Influences
  • Each cell of our body contains 46 chromosomes
  • They are made of DNA our genetic material
  • A gene is a segment of DNA along the length of
    the chromosome that contain the instructions for
    forming proteins which in turn determine how the
    cell works
  • Proteins are the building blocks of our body

21
Human Chromosomes
22
Genetics (cont-d)
  • Genetic abnormalities can come about through
  • Inheritance of particular combinations of genes
  • Faulty copying when cells reproduce
  • Mutations that a person acquires over the course
    of life
  • Cells possess the ability to repair many of the
    mutations
  • The 46 chromosomes are arranged in 23 pairs
  • One chromosome from mother and one from father

23
Genetics (cont-d)
  • Genetic makeup plays an important role in
    developing abnormal conditions
  • Autonomic nervous system reactivity may be
    inherited
  • Hereditary factors are implicated in alcoholism,
    schizophrenia, and depression

24
What do genes do?
  • Genes control the manufacturing of
    neurotransmitters as well as the way the
    neurotransmitters behave at the synapse
  • Genes also determine how the brain structures
    develop throughout life
  • Any factor that can alter the genetic code can
    alter how those structures perform

25
Genotype and Phenotype
  • The 46 chromosomes are arranged in 23 pairs
  • Twenty-two of the pairs are identical (the 23rd
    pair is the sex chromosomes XX and XY )
  • It means that the same gene is located in the
    same place on each of the chromosomes
  • Two forms of the same gene are called alleles
  • The Genotype is the overall genetic makeup
  • The Phenotype is the expression in your physique
    and psychological attributes

26
Dominant Recessive Relationship
  • The Alleles are related to each other in
    Dominant- Recessive relationship
  • a dominant allele prevails over a recessive
    allele
  • However, human characteristic and psychological
    disorders are polygenic- more than one gene
    participates in determining a given
    characteristic
  • Epigenetics is the attempt to understand how the
    environment affects genes to produce genotypes

27
PATTERN OF DOMINANT-RECESSIVE TRAIT INHERITANCE
28
Genes-environment Interactions
  • Interactions between genes and the environment
  • Passive exposure Children are exposed to
    environments that their parents create based on
    the parents genetic predisposition
  • The childs genetically- based traits elicits
    responses from the environment
  • Niche-Picking the child seeks out an environment
    that gratifies his/her genetically- based
    inclinations

29
Diathesis-Stress Model
  • Proposal that people are born with a
    predisposition that places them at risk for
    developing a psychological disorder if exposed to
    certain extremely stressful life experiences.

30
Assessment of Genetic Factors
  • Family inheritance studies Researchers compare
    the disorder rates across relatives who have
    varying degrees of genetic relatedness
  • Usually comparing Identical twins who share 100
    of their genes to Fraternal twins who share 50
    of their genes
  • Studies comparing parents and children are
    confounded because of possible environmental
    effect

31
Biologically- Based Therapis
  • Psychopharmacology
  • Study of effect of drugs on mind and behavior
  • Electroconvulsive therapy
  • Application of electric voltage to the brain to
    induce convulsions
  • Psychosurgery
  • Brain surgery for the purpose of correcting a
    severe mental disorder
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