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Integrative Approach to Abnormal Behavior Chapter 2 genetic brain emotional developmental psychological disorder cognitive social behavioral The Contributions of Behavioral and Cognitive Science Conditioning and Cognitive Processes Respondent (classical) and operant learning Learned helplessness (Seligman) as a paradigm for understanding depression. Attributional model Modeling and vicarious learning (social learning)-symbolic representations of experiences of others. Prepared learning-notion of being “wired to learn”. Cognitive Science and the Unconscious Implicit learning, Stroop paradigm Cognitive-Behavioral Therapy The Role of Emotion in Psychopathology The Nature of Emotion Defined as a tendency to behave in a particular way, elicited by an external event and feeling state, and accompanied by characteristic physiological responses. To elicit or evoke motion Action tendency different from affect (momentary emotional tone) and mood (more persistent period of affect or emotionality. Intimately tied with several forms of psychopathology Components of Emotion Behavior, physiology, and cognition Example of fear The Role of Emotion in Psychopathology Harmful Side of Emotional Dysregulation Anger, hostility, emotional suppression, illness, and psychopathology Cultural, Social, and Interpersonal Factors in Psychopathology Cultural Factors Influence the form and expression of normal and abnormal behavior Gender Effects-linked to specific disorders, e.g., depression, ADHD, oppositional defiant disorder, bulimia. Social Relationships Frequency and quality related to mortality, disease, and psychopathology Interpersonal Psychotherapy Stigma of Psychopathology Is Culturally, Socially, and Interpersonally Situated Life-Span and Developmental Influences Over Psychopathology Life-Span Developmental Perspective Addresses developmental changes, and critical periods of development during which we might be more “vulnerable”. Example of childhood cancer. Such changes influence and constrain what is normal and abnormal, i.e., senescence and memory problems. The Principle of Equifinality Concept in developmental psychopathology Several paths to a given outcome Paths may operate differentially at different developmental stages Summary of the Multidimensional Perspective of Psychopathology Multiple Causation Is the rule, not the exception in explaining normal and abnormal behavior Take a Broad, Comprehensive, Systemic Perspective Addressing biological, psychological, social, cultural, and developmental factors Useful in Understanding the Causes of Psychopathology and its Alleviation genetic brain emotional developmental psychological disorder cognitive social behavioral