Download Abnormal Psychology Powerpoint

Survey
yes no Was this document useful for you?
   Thank you for your participation!

* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project

Document related concepts

Anxiety wikipedia , lookup

Schizotypy wikipedia , lookup

Substance use disorder wikipedia , lookup

Claustrophobia wikipedia , lookup

Memory disorder wikipedia , lookup

Death anxiety (psychology) wikipedia , lookup

Eating disorders and memory wikipedia , lookup

Dysthymia wikipedia , lookup

Autism spectrum wikipedia , lookup

Social anxiety disorder wikipedia , lookup

Bipolar disorder wikipedia , lookup

Personality disorder wikipedia , lookup

Panic disorder wikipedia , lookup

Major depressive disorder wikipedia , lookup

Bipolar II disorder wikipedia , lookup

Anxiety disorder wikipedia , lookup

Schizophrenia wikipedia , lookup

Antisocial personality disorder wikipedia , lookup

Conduct disorder wikipedia , lookup

Depersonalization disorder wikipedia , lookup

Asperger syndrome wikipedia , lookup

Conversion disorder wikipedia , lookup

Eating disorder wikipedia , lookup

Psychological trauma wikipedia , lookup

Schizoaffective disorder wikipedia , lookup

Sluggish schizophrenia wikipedia , lookup

Pro-ana wikipedia , lookup

Treatment of bipolar disorder wikipedia , lookup

Anxiolytic wikipedia , lookup

Separation anxiety disorder wikipedia , lookup

Munchausen by Internet wikipedia , lookup

Mental disorder wikipedia , lookup

Diagnosis of Asperger syndrome wikipedia , lookup

Social construction of schizophrenia wikipedia , lookup

Generalized anxiety disorder wikipedia , lookup

DSM-5 wikipedia , lookup

Spectrum disorder wikipedia , lookup

Depression in childhood and adolescence wikipedia , lookup

Dissociative identity disorder wikipedia , lookup

Glossary of psychiatry wikipedia , lookup

Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders wikipedia , lookup

Child psychopathology wikipedia , lookup

Causes of mental disorders wikipedia , lookup

History of mental disorders wikipedia , lookup

Externalizing disorders wikipedia , lookup

Transcript
Abnormal Psychology

Created by David Silverman
Defining Abnormal Psychology

Common characteristics of abnormality include:

1. It is harmful and/or disturbing to the individual. Someone who has coulrophobia
(fear of clowns) and is unable to attend carnivals is experiencing something
maladaptive and disturbing.

2. It is disturbing to others. Zoophilia, being sexually aroused by animals, for
example, disturbs the general public.

3. It is “unusual”, meaning most people don’t do it. In the United States, having
visions is atypical, while in other cultures it happens more.

4. It is irrational; it does not make sense to the average person. Feeling depressed
when your family first moves away from all your friends is not seen as irrational,
but prolonged depression due to almost any situation is.

People may be diagnosed with a psychological disorder even if they are not
experiencing all, or even most, of the symptoms characterized for that
disorder.

Insane is not a medical term

Insanity is a legal term

People who can be held entirely responsible for their crimes are considered sane

People who cannot be held fully responsible for their actions because of a
psychological disorder can plead insanity

When defendants plead” not guilty by reason of insanity” (NGRI), they are claiming
that the court acquit them due to psychological factors.
Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of
Mental Disorders (DSM)

Psychologists use a book called the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of
Mental Disorders to determine whether or not someone has a psychological
disorder.

The DSM-IV-TR contains the symptoms of everything currently considered to be a
psychological disorder.

The various revisions of the book has lead to a huge growth in the number and
kinds of disorders included since the original DSM.

Some behaviors classified as disorders (like homosexuality) have been removed
from the definition of abnormality in later editions of the book.

Usually when a psychologist first meets with a client the psychologist bases his
assessment of the client on the following five axes:

Axis I — Clinical disorders—The first axis diagnosis is generally what we think of as the
client’s major diagnosis (major depressive disorder, generalized anxiety disorder,
paranoid schizophrenia).

Axis II — Personality and developmental -Personality disorders are maladaptive, longterm ways a person has of interacting with people and the environment (antisocial,
paranoid, dependent personality disorders).

Axis III — Medical conditions—Psychologists consider how any physical ailments (cancer, a
brain injury, diabetes) could impact a person’s psychological well-being.

Axis IV — Psychosocial conditions—Psychosocial conditions are environmental factors that
may affect a person’s mental health. Factors like divorce, the loss of a job, or starting a
new school can be stressful for people.

Axis V — Global assessment of functioning— Psychologists use the global assessment of
functioning scale (GAF) to classify a person’s overall level of functioning.
Psychological approaches to disorders

Psychoanalytic theorists- Think the cause of psychological disturbances is based on
unconscious conflicts from traumatic events that occurred during the psychosexual
development stages

Behaviorists- Claim psychological problems result from the person’s history of
reinforcement

Cognitive theorists- Think the root of psychological disorders is a result of
maladaptive ways of thinking.

Humanistic psychologists- Say disorders are in a person’s feelings, self-esteem, and
self-concept.

Sociocultural perspective- View social factors such as racism, sexism, and poverty
as the main problem of psychological disorders.

Biomedical model- Sees that psychological disorders are caused by biological
factors such as hormones, neurotransmitter imbalances, or differences in brain
structure.
Anxiety Disorders

Specific phobia- Is an intense irrational fear of a situation or object such as
claustrophobia (fear of enclosed spaces) or arachnophobia (fear of spiders).

Generalized anxiety disorder- (GAD) Experiences constant low-level anxiety.
This is a person who constantly feels nervous and out of sorts.

Panic disorder- Suffers from episodes of intense anxiety without any apparent
reason.

Panic attacks tend to increase in frequency, and people frequently suffer additional
anxiety from dreading the attacks.

Obsessive-compulsive disorder- (OCD) is when persistent, unwanted thoughts
(obsessions) cause someone to feel the need (compulsion) to engage in a
particular action.


A man experiencing the obsession of cleanliness might wash his hands and shower
repeatedly, even if he has just done so.
Post-traumatic stress disorder usually involves flashbacks or nightmares to a
person’s involvement in witnessing an extremely troubling event like a war or
natural disaster.
Somatoform Disorders

Somatoform disorders- occur when a person exhibits a psychological problem
through a physiological symptom. In other words, a person experiences a
physical problem without any physical cause.

Hypochondriasis- when people have frequent physical complaints which
medical doctors can’t find the cause.


A person may believe that minor problems like headaches or occasional shortness
of breath are really severe physical illness even after they are assured by doctors
that no physiological problems exists.
Conversion disorder- People will report a severe physical problem (paralysis
or blindness), and they will actually be unable to move their arms or see.

No biological reason for this problem can be identified
Dissociative Disorders

Dissociative disorders, “involve a disruption in conscious processes”.

Psychogenic amnesia is when a person cannot remember things and no
physiological basis for the disruption in memory can be identified.

Fugue- People who experience psychogenic amnesia but also find themselves
in an unfamiliar environment.


One day Dave wakes up with no memory of who or where he is and no one else in
the environment can help him with any of that.
Dissociative identity disorder (DID), formerly known as multiple personality
disorder, is when a person has several personalities rather than one. The
different personalities can represent many different ages and both sexes.
Mood (Affective) Disorders

Someone with a mood or affective disorder experiences extreme or
inappropriate emotions.



Laughing at a funeral
Major depressive disorder, also known as unipolar depression, is the most
common mood disorder.

People who are clinically depressed remain unhappy for more than two weeks for
no apparent reason.

Other symptoms of depression include loss of appetite, fatigue, change in sleeping
patterns, lack of interest in normally fun activities, and feelings of worthlessness.
Seasonal affective disorder (SAD)- Some people experience depression but
only during certain times of the year. This usually occurs when there is less
sunlight.


Bipolar disorder, formerly known as manic depression, usually involves both
depressed and manic episodes.

The depressed episodes include loss of appetite, fatigue, change in sleeping
patterns, lack of interest in normally fun activities, and feelings of worthlessness.

People feel manic episodes in different ways but they usually experience feelings
of high energy. Some feel a heightened sense of confidence and power, but many
others feel anxious and irritable. Some of the people feel an inflated sense of wellbeing during the manic period, but they often participate in excessively risky and
dangerous behavior that usually has negative consequences for them.

A small number of people appear to experience mania without depression.
Dysthymic disorder- The symptoms are similar to major depressive disorder
but are usually less intense. A diagnosis of dysthymic disorder in an adult
requires a period of depressed mood that lasts at least two years.
Schizophrenic Disorders

Schizophrenia is probably the most severe and debilitating of the psychological disorders.

It tends to emerge as people enter young adulthood.

The main symptom of schizophrenia is disordered, distorted thinking that is often demonstrated
through delusions and/or hallucinations.

Delusions are beliefs that have no basis in reality.

Delusions of persecution—the belief that people are out to get you.
 Delusions
of grandeur—the belief that you enjoy greater
power and influence than you really do.
 Believing
that you are the president of the United States or
a Nobel prize-winner.

Hallucinations are, “perceptions in the absence of any sensory stimulation.”

If I keep seeing Pennywise the clown holding a red balloon on every street corner, and next to every sewer
grate, then I am suffering from hallucinations.
Types of Schizophrenia

Disorganized schizophrenics -They may make up their own words (neologisms) or
string together series of nonsense words that rhyme (clang associations). People
with disorganized schizophrenia often show inappropriate affect.

They might laugh when hearing someone has died.

They may also consistently not show any emotional response at all (flat affect).

The main symptom in paranoid schizophrenia is delusions of persecution.

People who suffer from catatonic schizophrenia engage in odd movements.

They might remain motionless in strange positions for hours at a time

They might move erratically and quickly for no apparent reason


Or they might exhibit a combination of the two
Undifferentiated schizophrenia -if patients show disordered thinking but no
symptoms of one of the other types of schizophrenia.
References and Resources


Crash Course

Psychological Disorders

Anxiety Disorders

Depressive and Bipolar Disorders

Trauma and Addiction

Schizophrenia and Dissociative
Disorders
Discovering Psychology

Psychopathology

This powerpoint presentation was
adapted using information from
the Barron’s AP Psychology 5th
edition prep book.

Weseley, Allyson, Robert
McEntarffer, and Robert
McEntarffer. AP® Psychology.
Hauppauge, N.Y.: Barron's
Educational Series, 2014. Print.