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Chapter 13: Psychological Disorders. Abnormal Behavior. The medical model What is abnormal behavior? Deviant Dysfuntional/Maladaptive Distressing. Psychodiagnosis: The Classification of Disorders. American Psychiatric Association
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Abnormal Behavior • The medical model • What is abnormal behavior? • Deviant • Dysfuntional/Maladaptive • Distressing
Psychodiagnosis:The Classification of Disorders • American Psychiatric Association • Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders – 4th ed.rev. (DSM – IV-TR)
Psychological Disorders • Not uncommon • 26% in a given year, 46% in a lifetime. • Cultural • What is accepted in one culture, may not be in another • Not Dangerous • Most people who suffer from a disorder are not dangerous.
Five Axes • Axis I – Clinical Syndromes • Axis II – Personality Disorders or Mental Retardation • Axis III – General Medical Conditions • Axis IV – Psychosocial and Environmental Problems • Axis V – Global Assessment of Functioning
Important Terms • Diagnosis • Identification of a disorder • Prognosis • Indication of the outcome of a disorder • Etiology • Apparent cause or developmental history of a disorder.
Anxiety Disorders • Generalized anxiety disorder • “free-floating anxiety” • Phobic disorder • Specific focus of fear • Panic disorder and agoraphobia • Obsessive compulsive disorder • Obsessions • Compulsions • Posttraumatic Stress Disorder
Etiology of Anxiety Disorders • Biological factors • Genetic predisposition • GABA circuits in the brain • Conditioning and learning • Acquired through classical conditioning • Maintained through operant conditioning • Cognitive factors • Judgments of perceived threat • Stress/Adverse experiences—a precipitator
Somatoform Disorders • Somatization Disorder • Conversion Disorder • Hypochondriasis • Etiology of somatoform disorders • Cognitive factors • Personality factors • The sick role
Dissociative Disorders • Dissociative amnesia and fugue • Dissociative identity disorder • Etiology • severe emotional trauma during childhood • Controversy • Media creation?
Mood Disorders • Major depressive disorder • Dysthymia • Bipolar disorder • Cyclothymia • Etiology • Genetic vulnerability • Neurochemical factors • Cognitive factors • Interpersonal roots • Precipitating stress
Figure 13.10 Interpreting the correlation between negative thinking and depression
Schizophrenia • General symptoms • Delusions and irrational thought • Deterioration of adaptive behavior • Distorted perception • Disturbed emotion
Subtyping of Schizophrenia • Four subtypes • Paranoid type • Catatonic type • Disorganized type • Undifferentiated type • New model for classification • Positive vs. negative symptoms
Etiology of Schizophrenia • Genetic vulnerability • Neurochemical factors • Structural abnormalities of the brain • The neurodevelopmental hypothesis • Expressed emotion • Precipitating stress
Figure 13.13 The dopamine hypothesis as an explanation for schizophrenia
Figure 13.15 The neurodevelopmental hypothesis of schizophrenia