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2. Abnormal Behavior. AbnormalDeviating from Normal or AverageBehaviorPersonal Conduct. 3. Defining Abnormal Behavior. Norm ViolationStatistical RarityPersonal DiscomfortMaladaptive Behavior. 4 Perspectives. 4. 1. Norm Violation. Norms =
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1. Abnormal Behavior: Historical Perspectives
2. 2 Abnormal Behavior
Abnormal
Deviating from Normal or Average
Behavior
Personal Conduct
3. 3 Defining Abnormal Behavior
Norm Violation
Statistical Rarity
Personal Discomfort
Maladaptive Behavior
4. 4 1. Norm Violation Norms = “Right” vs. “Wrong”
Deviance Associated With:
Incomprehensibility
Rarity
Observer Discomfort
Violation of Social/Cultural Standards
5. 5 Andrew Martinez
“NORMAL” GUY?
6. 6 The Naked Guy, Andrew Martinez
“ABNORMAL”?
UC Berkeley student who attended classes in the nude
7. 7 Madonna: Norm Violation?
LIKE A VIRGIN!
Society Rewarding of Conformity
8. 8 Marilyn Manson: Norm Violation?
Male wearing heavy makeup
Abnormal?
9. 9 2. Statistical Rarity Normal
Falls within average
Abnormal Behavior
Deviation from the average
Example: Mental Retardation
10. 10
11. 11 Homosexuality
STATISTICAL ABNORMALITY?
12. 12 3. Personal Discomfort Distressing feelings, thoughts or behaviors
Judged from the person’s own perspective as distressing
OCD
13. 13 4. Maladaptive Behavior Behavior Pattern
Focuses on the adaptiveness of the behavior
Functioning
Focuses on various levels of functioning
Disability
Impaired ability to function
14. 14 Marijuana Abuse
15. 15 Psychopathology
Scientific study of psychological disorders
16. 16 Culture & Gender - Abnormality Determine the ways people express distress or lose touch with reality
Relate to people’s willingness to admit to psychological disturbances
Influence the types of treatment people will accept
17. 17 Definition of Abnormality in DSM-IV Behavioral, emotional, or cognitive dysfunctions that are unexpected in the cultural context and associated with personal distress or substantial impairment in functioning
18. 18 History of Treatment of Abnormal Behavior Supernatural Model
Agents outside our bodies and the environment influence our emotions, thinking, and behaviors
Demons, Divinities, Spirits, Magnetic Field
19. 19 History of Treatment of Abnormal Behavior 8000 B.C. - Stone Age
Archeological Evidence – Skulls with holes drilled in them
Believed that evil spirits were trapped inside the head
Releasing the evil spirits would cause a return to normality
20. 20 History of Treatment of Abnormal Behavior
TREPHINING
21. 21 History of Treatment of Abnormal Behavior
22. 22 History of Treatment of Abnormal Behavior Hippocrates (460-377 BC)
Humoral Theory
Good Health Associated With 4 bodily fluids
Black bile
Yellow bile
Phlegm
Blood
23. 23 History of Treatment of Abnormal Behavior
EXORCISM
Another method of driving away evil spirits
24. 24 Recent Exorcism? Minister Barred from Exorcisms (Milwaukee Journal Sentinel)--A self-described minister facing a criminal charge in the death of an autistic child during a prayer session was ordered not to perform exorcisms as a bail condition during a Wednesday court appearance.
Crimenews2000.com
MILWAUKEE, Wisconsin (AP) -- A pastor said Saturday that church leaders were trying to heal an autistic 8-year-old boy when he inexplicably stopped breathing and died during a prayer service Friday night.
CNN.com (August 24, 2003)
25. 25 History of Treatment of Abnormal Behavior Paracelsus (1493-1541)
Swiss Physician
Rejected notions of possession by the devil
Suggested that the movements of the moon & stars had effects on psychological functioning
Inspired the word “LUNATIC” derived from the Latin word for moon, Luna
26. 26
27. 27 History of Treatment of Abnormal Behavior
Bleeding or Bloodletting
Measured amount of blood removed from the body, typically with leeches
28. 28 History of Treatment of Abnormal Behavior
Induction of Vomiting
Eating tobacco or half-boiled cabbage to induce vomiting (Burton, 1621)
29. 29 History of Treatment of Abnormal Behavior
15th Century
THE WITCH HUNTS
Witches are causes of madness
30. 30 History of Treatment of Abnormal Behavior
EARLY ASYLUMS
Middle Ages or “Dark Ages”
Very Poor Conditions
Example: Bedlam (Hospital of St. Mary of Bethlehem in London)
31. 31
32. 32
33. 33
34. 34 History of Treatment of Abnormal Behavior
35. 35 History of Treatment of Abnormal Behavior 1st half of 18th Century
REFORM MOVEMENT
Jean Baptisete Pussin in Paris
Philippe Pinel
(1745-1826)
William Tuke in England
(1732-1822)
Benjamin Rush in America
(1745-1813)
36. 36 History of Treatment of Abnormal Behavior Tranquilizing Chair
Purpose was to reduce stimulating blood flow to the brain by binding the patient’s head and limbs
Benjamin Rush
37. 37 History of Treatment of Abnormal Behavior
Hydrotherapy
Surprise immersions into cold water
38. 38 History of Treatment of Abnormal Behavior MORAL TREATMENT
Treating patients as normally as possible in a setting that reinforced normal social interaction
Dorothea Dix (1802-1887)
39. 39 History of Treatment of Abnormal Behavior 19th Century
Syphilis
A sexually transmitted disease caused by a bacterial microorganism entering the brain
40. 40 History of Treatment of Abnormal Behavior Insulin Shock Therapy
Dosage of insulin used to bring about convulsions
Dangerous: Resulted in prolonged coma or death
Polish Physician
1927 – Manfred Sakel
41. 41 History of Treatment of Abnormal Behavior Electroconvulsive Therapy
Induced brain seizures to cure schizophrenia
Joseph von Meduna
42. 42 History of Treatment of Abnormal Behavior Emergence of Modern Perspectives
Psychoanalysis
Behaviorism
Cognitive
43. 43 History of Treatment of Abnormal Behavior
Deinstitutionalization
1960’s
Mentally ill integrated into communities