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Chapter 13: Psychological Disorders

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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Chapter 13: Psychological Disorders

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  1. Chapter 13: Psychological Disorders

  2. Abnormal Behavior • The medical model • What is abnormal behavior? • Deviant • Dysfuntional/Maladaptive • Distressing

  3. Psychodiagnosis:The Classification of Disorders • American Psychiatric Association • Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders – 4th ed.rev. (DSM – IV-TR)

  4. 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.

  5. 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

  6. Important Terms • Diagnosis • Identification of a disorder • Prognosis • Indication of the outcome of a disorder • Etiology • Apparent cause or developmental history of a disorder.

  7. 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

  8. 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

  9. Figure 13.3 Twin studies of anxiety disorders

  10. Figure 13.4 Conditioning as an explanation for phobias

  11. Figure 13.5 Cognitive factors in anxiety disorders

  12. Somatoform Disorders • Somatization Disorder • Conversion Disorder • Hypochondriasis • Etiology of somatoform disorders • Cognitive factors • Personality factors • The sick role

  13. Figure 13.6 Glove anesthesia

  14. Dissociative Disorders • Dissociative amnesia and fugue • Dissociative identity disorder • Etiology • severe emotional trauma during childhood • Controversy • Media creation?

  15. Mood Disorders • Major depressive disorder • Dysthymia • Bipolar disorder • Cyclothymia • Etiology • Genetic vulnerability • Neurochemical factors • Cognitive factors • Interpersonal roots • Precipitating stress

  16. Figure 13.7 Episodic patterns in mood disorders

  17. Figure 13.9 Twin studies of mood disorders

  18. Figure 13.10 Interpreting the correlation between negative thinking and depression

  19. Figure 13.11 Interpersonal factors in depression

  20. Schizophrenia • General symptoms • Delusions and irrational thought • Deterioration of adaptive behavior • Distorted perception • Disturbed emotion

  21. Subtyping of Schizophrenia • Four subtypes • Paranoid type • Catatonic type • Disorganized type • Undifferentiated type • New model for classification • Positive vs. negative symptoms

  22. Etiology of Schizophrenia • Genetic vulnerability • Neurochemical factors • Structural abnormalities of the brain • The neurodevelopmental hypothesis • Expressed emotion • Precipitating stress

  23. Figure 13.13 The dopamine hypothesis as an explanation for schizophrenia

  24. Figure 13.15 The neurodevelopmental hypothesis of schizophrenia

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