Psy 200 CH.12 Tucker
Paranoid personality disorder
Characterized by persistent suspiciousness but not involving the disorganization of paranoid schizophrenia.
Stupor
Condition in which the senses, thought, and movement are dulled
Acrophobia
: Fear of high places
Dissociative disorders
Disorders in which there are sudden, temporary changes in consciousness or self-identity
Biological Views
Evolutionary psychologists suggest that anxiety may reflect natural selection. Humans are genetically predisposed to fear stimuli that may have posed a threat to their ancestors. The autonomic nervous system may stimulate the production of excessive quantities of adrenaline (epinephrine) and noradrenaline (norepinephrine).These chemicals normally pump up the body in preparation for the fight-or-flight response—both sides of which can make up self- preserving responses to threats.
Delusions
False, persistent beliefs that are unsubstantiated by sensory or objective evidence.
Claustrophobia
Fear of tight, small places
Learned helplessness
Possible explanation for some depressive behavior, based on findings that organisms in aversive situations learn to show inactivity when their behavior is not reinforced.
Psychomotor retardation
Slowness in motor activity and in thought
Medical Model
The so-called medical model assumes that illnesses have physical or biological causes that can be identified and that people afflicted by them are to be cured through treatment or therapy.
Social anxiety disorder
An irrational, excessive fear of public scrutiny.
Sociocultural Views
Classic research in New Haven, Connecticut, showed that the rate of schizophrenia was twice as high in the lowest socioeconomic class as in the next higher class on the socioeconomic ladder
Dissociative identity disorder
(DID) (formerly termed multiple personality disorder): Disorder in which a person appears to have two or more distinct identities or personalities that may alternately emerge. The identities of an individual with dissociative identity disorder might have different eyeglass prescriptions and different allergic responses. In other cases, different identities within a person might show various responses to the same medicine. Or one identity might exhibit color blindness while others have normal color vision.
Schizotypal personality disorder
: Characterized by oddities of thought and behavior but not involving bizarre psychotic behaviors.
Agoraphobia
: Fear of open, crowded places
La belle indifférence
A French term descriptive of the lack of concern for their (imagined) medical problem sometimes shown by people with conversion disorders.
Conversion disorder
A disorder in which anxiety or unconscious conflicts are converted into physical symptoms that often have the effect of helping the person cope with anxiety or conflict.
Acute stress disorder
A disorder, like PTSD, that is characterized by feelings of anxiety and helplessness and caused by a traumatic event. It occurs within a month of the event and lasts from 2 days to 4 weeks.
Hallucination
A perception in the absence of sensory stimulation that is confused with reality
Major depressive disorder
A serious to severe depressive disorder in which the person may show loss of appetite, psychomotor retardation, and impaired reality testing.
Illness anxiety disorder
A somatoform disorder characterized by persistent belief that one is ill despite lack of medical findings. People with this disorder become preoccupied with minor physical sensations and continue to believe that they are ill despite the reassurance of physicians that they are healthy.
Obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD)
Anxiety disorder defined by recurrent, anxiety-provoking thoughts or images that seem irrational and beyond control (obsessions) and seemingly irresistible urges to engage in thoughts or behaviors that tend to reduce the anxiety (compulsions).
Biopsychosocial Views
Biological imbalances may initially trigger attacks in panic disorder. But subsequent fear of attacks may heighten discomfort and give one the idea there is nothing one can do about them. Feelings of helplessness increase fear.
Borderline personality disorder
Characterized by instability in relationships, self-image, mood, and lack of impulse control
Schizoid personality disorder
Characterized by social withdrawal
Antisocial personality disorder
Diagnosis given to a person who is in frequent conflict with society, yet who is undeterred by punishment and experiences little or no guilt and anxiety.
Depersonalization-derealization disorder:
Disorder in which one feels detached from oneself or that one's surroundings are not real
Bipolar disorder
Disorder in which the mood alternates between two extreme poles (elation and depression); also referred to as manic depression.
Dissociative amnesia
Disorder marked by loss of memory or self-identity; skills and general knowledge are usually retained
Post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD)
Disorder that follows a distressing event outside the range of normal human experience and that is characterized by features such as intense fear, avoidance
Somatoform disorders
Disorders in which people complain of physical (somatic) problems even though no physical abnormality can be found.
Demonological Model
During the 17th and 18th centuries, people assumed the behaviors associated with psychological disorders were caused by possession by the Devil. The ancient Greeks believed that the gods punished humans by causing madness
Manic
Elated, showing excessive excitement
Personality disorders
Enduring patterns of maladaptive behavior that are sources of distress to the individual or others.
Ideas of persecution
Erroneous beliefs that one is being victimized or persecuted.
Waxy flexibility
Feature of catatonic schizophrenia in which people can be molded into postures that they maintain for quite some time
Generalized anxiety disorder
Feelings of dread and foreboding and sympathetic arousal of at least 6 months' duration
Psychological Views
Learning theorists consider phobias to be conditioned fears that were acquired in early childhood. Avoidance of feared stimuli is reinforced by the reduction of anxiety. Observational learning may also play a role in the acquisition of fears. Cognitive theorists note that people's appraisals of the magnitude of threats help determine whether they are traumatic and can lead to PTSD.
Psychological Views
Most learning theorists have explained schizophrenia in terms of conditioning and observational learning. Inner fantasies then become more reinforcing than social realities. Hospital staff may reinforce schizophrenic behavior by paying more attention to patients who behave bizarrely.
Psychological disorders
Patterns of behavior or mental processes that are connected with emotional distress or significant impairment in functioning.
Specific phobia
Persistent fear of a specific object or situation
Hallucinations
Person cannot distinguish from reality
Avoidant personality disorder
Person is unwilling to enter relationships without assurance of acceptance because of fears of rejection and criticism.
Neuroticism
Personality trait characterized largely by persistent anxiety
Catatonia
Psychotic condition characterized by striking motor impairment
Rapid flight of ideas
Rapid speech and topic changes, characteristic of manic behavior
Panic disorder
Recurrent experiencing of attacks of extreme anxiety in the absence of external stimuli that usually elicit anxiety
Mutism:
Refusal to talk
Positive symptoms
Schizophrenia symptoms that indicate the presence of inappropriate behavior, such as hallucinations, delusions, agitation, and inappropriate giggling.
Negative symptoms
Schizophrenia symptoms that reflect the absence of appropriate behavior, such as blank faces, monotonic voices, and motionless bodies.
Attributional style
Tendency to attribute one's behavior to internal or external factors, stable or unstable factors, and global or specific factors
Contemporary Psychological Models:
The diathesis-stress model assumes that there may be biological differences between individuals—diatheses—that explain why some people develop certain psychological disorders under stress, whereas others do not. The biopsychosocial model explains psychological disorders in terms of a combination of (a) biological vulnerability, (b) psychological factors; and (c) sociocultural factors.