Psychopathology Scientific Study of Psychological Disorders What you should know how to do when you finish studying Chapter 1: 1.

Similar documents
Abnormal Psychology. Prepared By: Dr. Vijay Kumar

CHAPTER 1 ABNORMAL BEHAVIOUR IN HISTORICAL CONTEXT WHAT IS A PSYCHOLOGICAL DISORDER? (PP.2-3) APPROACHES TO DEFINING ABNORMAL BEHAVIOUR

Chapter 1 Abnormal Behavior in Historical Context

Psychopathology: Historical Overview

Chapter Two: An Integrative Approach to Psychopathology. Rick Grieve, Ph.D. Western Kentucky University

Chapters Three & Four: Historical and Current Perspectives on Psychopathology. Rick Grieve, Ph.D. Western Kentucky University

History of Psychopathology. How our understanding and treatment of disorders has changed, mostly for the better

MULTIPLE CHOICE. Choose the one alternative that best completes the statement or answers the question (30 points)

Chapter 1--Abnormal Behavior in Historical Context Key

Name Chapter 1--Abnormal Behavior in Historical Context Description Instructions

Major Psychological Perspectives

Quiz 1c for Unit 1 There are three quizzes for Unit 1 Do them all!

Name the Psychologist D-Fence Definitions. Trait Theory. What Perspective? Freud

Reading Guide Name: Date: Hour: Module 55: Freud s Psychoanalytic Perspective: Exploring the Unconscious (pg ) Personality:

Name Chapter 1--Abnormal Behavior in Historical Context Description Instructions

Psychopathology: Historical Overview

PERSONALITY CHAPTER 11 MEYERS AND DEWALL

Personality. Radwan Banimustafa MD. Copyright 2010 Allyn & Bacon

Classic Perspectives on Personality

Name: Period: Chapter 13 Reading Guide Personality Introduction & The Psychoanalytic Perspective (pg ) 1. Personality:

Abraham Maslow. Albert Bandura. Alfred Adler. 2nd stage. Child's development during which bowel control is the primary conflict ages 1-2.

Chapter 11. Personality

Chapter 2 THEORIES OF CHILD DEVELOPMENT

Historical and Contemporary Views of Abnormal Behavior. Chapter 2. Historical Views of Abnormal Behavior. Ancient Treatment

AP Psychology Guided Reading Unit 1 Psychology s History and Approaches

Methods of research:

6. Athletes often attribute their losses to bad officiating. This best illustrates A) an Electra complex. B) learned helplessness. C) the spotlight ef

PSYCHOLOGY - MR. DUEZ Unit 1 - Part 3 - PERSONALITY - LEARNING TARGETS

ANCCI UNIVERSITY PT 302 THEORIES OF PERSONALITY

PERSONALITY THEORIES FREUDIAN PSYCHODYNAMICS

Written Assignment 3. Chapters covering Human Development, Personality and Motivation and Emotion. Corresponds with Exam 3

ABNORMAL PSYCHOLOGY: An Integrative Approach

Psychological Approaches to Counseling. Mr. Lema, Isaac Clinical Psychologist (MSc.) 25 th November 2015

Psychology Summative-Foundations

Goal: To identify the extent to which inner psychological factors might be important in the development of different forms of psychopathology

Personality. Trait Perspective. Defining Personality: Consistency and Distinctiveness. PSY 1000: Introduction to Psychology

What is Personality? Personality. an individual s characteristic pattern of thinking, feeling, and acting

1/29/2015 THIS IS. Name the. Trait Theory. What Perspective? Psychologist D-Fence Definitions Freud

Personality. Formal and Informal Approaches to Personality

Schools of Psychology

TABLE 11.5 The Major Personality Perspectives Perspective Key Theorists Key Themes and Ideas

1. The Greek philosopher who believed that intelligence was inherited was: A) Aristotle. B) Plato. C) Descartes. D) Simonides.

What is Personality? How do you define personality? CLASS OBJECTIVES 12/4/2009. Chapter 12 Personality and its assessment. What is personality?

Psych 120. General Psychology. Personality. What is personality? 7/21/2010

Periods of Development. Areas of Development. What is Human Development? Why Should We Study Development? Human Development Topic 1

Review Sheet Personality (5-7%)

A Brief History of Psychology. Chapter 1, Section 2

Chapter 14 Personality

PERSONALITY UNIT. Who am I? What do we know about why people are they way they are?

Psychology: Final Exam Study Guide

AP Review Session 1: History & Approaches. History of Psychology Psychological Perspectives Psychological Subfields

AP Psychology Summer Assignment

Important Psychologists

Goal: To identify the extent to which inner psychological factors might be important in the development of different forms of psychopathology

Who practices psychology?

Some basic terms, approaches, and issues in our study of human psychopathology. Term 1: abnormal What is abnormal? Term 2: psychopathology

Theories of Personality

History and Approaches CHAPTER

Chapter 1 What is Psychology?

pattern thinking (cognitive), feeling (emotive), and acting (behavioral)

download full file at

Jones-Smith Theories of Counseling and Psychotherapy Instructor Resource Chapter 2 Test

Personality Personality Personality Psychoanalysis Freud s Theory of Personality

Personality SSPVB2: The student will evaluate assessment tools and theories in personality.

SOCIAL THEORY PSYCHOANALYSIS AND RACISM SOCIAL THEORY PSYCHOANALYSIS AND PDF PSYCHOANALYSIS - WIKIPEDIA FEMINIST THEORY - WIKIPEDIA

Personality. An individual s characteristic pattern of thinking, feeling, and acting. Each dwarf has a distinct personality.

Motivation in Historical Perspective. Chapter 2

Psychology can provide insight into behavior and give one the chance to acquire practical information Psychology scientific study of behavior, mental

Myers EXPLORING PSYCHOLOGY (7th Ed) Chapter 12. Modified from: James A. McCubbin, PhD Clemson University. Worth Publishers

FAQ: DSM Disorders and Treatment

Chapter 12. Personality

Using Lectures You May Already Have Prepared As a Basis for Teaching this Course

Psychology AP Mid-Term Review Packet

PSYC University of New Orleans. Natalie M. Costa University of New Orleans. University of New Orleans Syllabi.

Nature of Personality Psychodynamic Perspectives Behavioral Perspectives Humanistic Perspectives Biological Perspectives Contemporary Empirical

COUNSELING FOUNDATIONS INSTRUCTOR DR. JOAN VERMILLION

Assessing personality

FAQ: Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders: Disorders and Treatment

erapies

Chapter 14: Theories of Personality

Counselling Theory for Practice: an Introduction (SCQF level 6)

Highlights of what you may have learned from General Psychology 202?

PSY 201 FINAL EXAM STUDY GUIDE

PSY320: Personality Theories Spring

Personality. Personality Theories Personality Assessment

Myers Psychology for AP, 2e

Pre-Ap Psychology is only taught in the Fall semester and is the prerequisite for AP Psychology which is taught in the Spring semester.

Chapter 2: Sigmund Freud, Carl Jung, and the Genesis of Psychotherapy

Personality. Chapter 13

What Does Illumination Mean

Content Area: Social Studies Course: Introduction to Psychology Grade Level: R14 The Seven Cs of Learning

Personality: What is it? Personality: Part 1. Psychodynamic Approach. Freud s Model of Personality. Freud s Model of Personality

Developmental Theories

Jean Martin Charcot Josef Breuer Anna O. catharsis: free association

id = the part of the mind connected to desire ego = the part of the mind connected to logic superego = the part of the mind connected to morality

Chapter 13 Psychoanalysis: In the Beginning

Core Course of BSc Counselling Psychology VI Semester-CUCBCSS 2014 admn onwards

3. For students to understand various topics related to the behavioral sciences.

Psychology 2250 Abnormal Psychology Oltmanns and Emery. SD Reeder, Ph.D.

What is Personality?

Transcription:

Psychopathology Scientific Study of Psychological Disorders What you should know how to do when you finish studying Chapter 1: 1. Define Abnormal Behavior (AKA, psychological disorders) 2. Define psychological dysfunction, distress, and atypical or unexpected cultural response 3. Describe the background and training of mental health care professionals and know the meaning of scientist-practitioner 4. Understand the importance of science and scientific methods in studying abnormal behavior (continued)

Psychopathology Scientific Study of Psychological Disorders What you should know how to do when you finish studying Chapter 1 (Cont.) 5. Be aware of historical views of abnormal behavior and how they affect today s views. 6. Understand what is meant by multidimensional, integrative approaches to diagnosing and evaluating abnormal behavior.

Defining Abnormal Behavior (AKA, psychological disorders) Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders Fourth Edition (DSM-IV-TR) Behavioral, emotional or cognitive dysfunctions that are unexpected in their cultural context and associated with personal distress or substantial impairment in functioning. Text pg. 4

Defining Abnormal Behavior (AKA, psychological disorders) Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders Fourth Edition (DSM-IV-TR) Behavioral, emotional or cognitive dysfunctions that are unexpected in their cultural context and associated with personal distress or substantial impairment in functioning. Text pg. 4 Application to Judy?

Defining psychological dysfunction, distress, and atypical cultural response Psychological Dysfunction: A breakdown in healthy cognitive, emotional or behavioral functioning. Examples? Distress: Person experiences extreme upset (not always the case maybe others do instead--impairment) Examples? Atypical cultural response: Not expected within the person s culture. Examples? Each is inadequate in isolation as a definition.

Clinical Descriptions of Abnormal Behavior (terms to know ) Presenting problem (sometimes called Chief Complaint) Precise behavioral description (also see rule out ) to specify what makes the disorder different than normal and different from other disorders. Prevalence Proportion of population who has the disorder (AKA Base rate) Incidence Number of new cases per year Course Pattern over time Prognosis Often related to course Acute vs. Insidious (slow) onset Important related features (e.g. age, gender)

Clinical Descriptions of Abnormal Behavior (terms to know ) Etiology studying factors or dimensions that are believed to be causes of the disorder. Strong associations (often referred to as correlations) are sometimes used to infer etiology, but until an actual mechanism is shown, the jury is out. Treatment application of psychological and/or physical (including pharmacological) principles intended to alleviate the disorder. Successful outcome Not always completely successful, but changes also assist in inference process of defining causes

Mental health care professionals and scientist-practitioners Psychologists (Clinical, Counseling, Other) Psychiatrists Psychiatric Social Workers Social Workers Psychiatric Nurses Marriage and Family Therapists Licensed Counselors Licensed Clinical Addiction Specialists

Mental health care professionals and scientist-practitioners All should be scientist-practitioners in the sense that they are consumers of science. Importance of Continuing Education In addition, they should be well-enough trained to be evaluators of science evaluators of science Creators of science? Mostly psychologists, but could be others

Scientific methods in studying abnormal behavior Knowledge about psychopathology should be based on scientific principles Not clinical hunches, untestable or idiosyncratic hypotheses, a cool idea, common sense or whatever. Can the hypothesis be phrased in a way that it can be tested? More (much more) in Chapter 4

Historical views of abnormal behavior Maybe not all so historical Supernatural ideas Good vs. Evil; Sin; Spirits entering the body; Possession; Moral weakness Biology Hippocrates (hysteria) Galen (humoral theory chemical imbalances in the blood) Syphilis (General paresis) Comparison to physical illnesses Development of psychopharmacology Emil Kraepelin first physical theory-based diagnoses

Historical views of abnormal behavior Psychological Traditions Moral Therapy Phillippe Pinel (France); William Tuke (England); Benjamin Rush (US); European Community Support Asian Therapies spirituality Psychodynamic/Psychoanalytic; Anton Mesmer; Jean Charcot; Josef Breuer Sigmund Freud

Historical views of abnormal behavior Psychological Traditions Freud: Neurologist, but not satisfied with purely physical explanation of disorders Id = pleasure principle (sex & consumption) Ego = reality principle (defense mechanisms) Superego = Society (culturally) induced to suppress Id s impulses Developmental stages: oral, anal, phallic, latent, genital

Historical views of abnormal behavior Psychological Traditions Anna Freud: self-psychology Melanie Klein & Otto Kernberg: Object relations Carl Jung: Collective unconscious Alfred Adler: Inferiority/Superiority complex Karen Horney, Erich Fromm, Erik Erickson: Lifespan developmental

Historical views of abnormal Humanistic Tradition: behavior View that people are basically striving towards spiritual meaning and being good Abraham Maslow: hierarchy of needs Viktor Frankel: Search for meaning Fritz Perls & Carl Rogers: striving towards self-actualization

Historical views of abnormal Behavioral Tradition behavior Ivan Pavlov: Classical Conditioning John Watson: Scientific study of behavior and how consequences influence future behavior Mary Cover Jones: Beyond theory, applying principles B. F. Skinner: Operant Conditioning

Historical views of abnormal behavior Social Learning Theory Grew out of behavioral tradition, view that cognitive behavior, though not directly observable, is important to development and modification of psychopathology Examples: Modeling, expectations, reciprocal relationships Albert Bandura

Multi-dimensional, integrative approaches Integration of these diverse approaches Sometimes referred to as: Bio-psycho-social models Will be addressed in more detail in Chapter 2

Summary Definitions and descriptions of Psychopathology Know your mental health professionals Describe the importance and place of scientific methods for studying behavior Know the historical traditions of attempts to understand psychopathology Know what the Bio-psycho-social approach means