Abnormal Psychology chapters 7 & 8
Exposure with response prevention
A behavioral technique in which a patient is carefully prevented from engaging in his or her usual maladaptive response after being exposed to a stimulus that usually elicits the response.
Somatic symptom disorders
A category of psychological disorders characterized by symptoms about physical well-being along with cognitive distortions about bodily symptoms and their meaning; the focus on these bodily symptoms causes significant distress or impaired functioning.
Obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD)
A disorder characterized by one or more obsessions or compulsions.
Dissociative identity disorder (DID)
A dissociative disorder characterized by the presence of two or more distinct personality states, or an experience of possession trance, which gives rise to a discontinuity in the person's sense of self and agency.
Dissociative amnesia
A dissociative disorder in which the sufferer has significantly impaired memory for important experiences or personal information that cannot be explained by ordinary forgetfulness.
Depersonalization-derealization disorder
A dissociative disorder, the primary symptom of which is a persistent feeling of being detached from one's mental processes, body, or surroundings.
Identity problem
A dissociative symptom in which a person is not sure who he or she is or may assume a new identity.
Derealization
A dissociative symptom in which the external world is perceived or experienced as strange or unreal.
Depersonalization
A dissociative symptom in which the perception or experience of self- either one's body or one's mental processes- is altered to the point that the person feels like an observer, as though seeing oneself from the "outside."
Somatic symptom disorder (SSD)
A somatic symptom disorder characterized by at least one somatic symptom that is distressing or disrupts daily life, about which the person has excessive thoughts, feelings, or behaviors.
Illness anxiety disorder
A somatic symptom disorder marked by a preoccupation with a fear or belief of having a serious disease in the face of either no or minor medical symptoms and excessive. behaviors related to this belief.
Conversion disorder
A somatic symptom disorder that involves sensory or motor symptoms that are incompatible with known neurological and medical conditions.
Acute stress disorder
A traumatic stress disorder that involves (a) intrusive re-experiencing of the traumatic event, (b) avoidance of stimuli related to the event, (c) negative changes in thought and mood, (d) dissociation, and (e) hyperarousal and reactivity, with these symptoms lasting for less than a month.
Posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD)
A traumatic stress disorder that involves persistent (a) intrusive re-experiencing of the traumatic event, (b) avoidance of stimuli related to the event, (c) negative changes in thoughts and mood, and (d) hyperarousal and reactivity that persist for at least a month.
False
About 80% of those with PTSD also have another psychological disorder.
True
Among females, symptoms typically emerge between the ages of 20 and 29.
Hoarding disorder
An obsessive-compulsive-related disorder characterized by persistent difficulty throwing away or otherwise parting with possessions—to the point that the possessions impair daily life, regardless of the value of those possessions.
True
Approximately 2-3% of Americans will develop OCD at some point in their lives.
True
Approximately 50% of those with acute stress disorder go on to develop PTSD.
How does operant conditioning explain the maintenance of OCD symptoms?
Because the compulsions temporarily relieve anxiety, the behavior is negatively reinforced.
What is the difference between a compulsion and an obsession
Compulsions involve behaviors, whereas obsessions involve thoughts, urges, and images.
True
Compulsions involve behaviors.
False
Culture does not seem to affect the way in which PTSD manifests. For example, both Mexicans and Americans are likely to develop arousal symptoms over intrusive symptoms.
False
Culture does not seem to affect the way in which PTSD manifests. For example, both Mexicans and Americans are likely to develop intrusive symptoms over arousal symptoms.
True
Culture does not seem to affect the way in which PTSD manifests. For example, both Mexicans and Americans are likely to develop intrusive symptoms over arousal symptoms.
False
Culture may affect the way in which PTSD manifests. For example, Mexicans are more likely to develop arousal symptoms, whereas Americans are more likely to develop intrusive symptoms.
possession trance
During a hypnotic trance, a kind of spirit is believed to assume control of the person's body. Later, the person has amnesia for the experience, and is otherwise normal
Obsessions
Intrusive and unwanted thoughts, urges, or images that persist or recur and usually cause distress or anxiety.
Amnesia
Memory loss, which in dissociative disorders is usually temporary but, in rare cases, may be permanent.
False
Men are more likely to be victims of trauma than are women.
grisi siknis
Miskito of Nicaragua and Honduras
False
Obsessions neutralize compulsions and decrease anxiety and distress.
True
Over 70% of those with OCD have an anxiety disorder.
Compulsions
Repetitive behaviors or mental acts that a person feels driven to carry out and that usually must be performed according to rigid "rules" or correspond thematically to an obsession
The class of medication used most often to treat PTSD is _____.
SSRIs
False
Socioeconomically disadvantaged people have fewer emotional resources available to cope with a traumatic event, and they may be less likely to experience trauma.
True
Socioeconomically disadvantaged people have fewer emotional resources available to cope with a traumatic event, and they may be more likely to experience trauma.
False
Socioeconomically disadvantaged people have more emotional resources available to cope with a traumatic event, and they may be less likely to experience trauma.
False
Socioeconomically disadvantaged people have more emotional resources available to cope with a traumatic event, and they may be more likely to experience trauma.
hippocampi
The neurological factors that contribute to PTSD include abnormal _____ and overly strong sympathetic nervous system reactions.
True
Typically, compulsions must be performed according to rigid rules.
amok
Western Pacific cultures
False
Women are at greater risk than men for developing OCD.
False
Women who have been exposed to trauma develop PTSD more often than do men.
Novelty seeking
_____ is a dimension of temperament characterized by the pursuit of activities that are exciting and stimulating.
Trichotillomania
_____ is marked by the persistent compulsion to pull one's hair, leading to hair loss and distress or impaired functioning.
Eye movement desensitization and reprocessing
a widely used treatment for PTSD that rests on the idea that symptoms arise from the inability to adequately process the images and cognitions that arise when a person experiences a traumatic event.
Dissociation
an altered sense of reality of surroundings or oneself.
Like OCD, PTSD involves
avoidance.
According to neuroimaging studies, which area(s) function abnormally in patients with OCD?
both the frontal cortex and the basal ganglia
Skin-picking disorder
characterized by compulsive skin picking to the point that lesions emerge on the skin.
Hair-pulling disorder
characterized by the persistent compulsion to pull one's hair, leading to hair loss and distress or impaired functioning.
Dr. Warner is a(n) _____ therapist. His goals for therapy are to reduce the irrationality and frequency of the patient's intrusive thoughts and obsessions.
cognitive
excoriation disorder
compulsively picks at his skin, to the point that painful lesions emerge.
Which beliefs make a person vulnerable to developing PTSD
considering oneself unable to control stressors; the conviction that the world is a dangerous place
The neurological factors that contribute to PTSD include abnormal _____ and overly strong _____ nervous system reactions
hippocampi; sympathetic
running syndrome
involves a sudden onset of a trancelike state and behavior such as running or fleeing, which leads to exhaustion, sleep, and subsequent amnesia for the experience
latah
involves fleeting episodes in which the person uses profanity and experiences amnesia and trancelike states.
Eye movement desensitization and reprocessing
involves having the client think about a disturbing image or belief relating to the trauma while moving their eyes from side to side for 15 or more seconds.
dissociative fugue
involves sudden, unplanned travel and difficulty remembering the past.
pibloktoq
native Arctic people
In terms of operant conditioning, behaving in a manner to avoid triggering PTSD symptoms is:
negatively reinforced
Preoccupations and ritualistic behaviors are symptoms of _____.
obsessive-compulsive disorder
Selective amnesia
person can remember only some of what happened in an otherwise forgotten period of time.
Generalized amnesia
person can't remember his or her entire life
Localized amnesia
person has a memory gap for a specific period of time, often a period of time just prior to the stressful event. most common form of dissociative amnesia
Body dysmorphic disorder
preoccupations with a perceived defect in appearance and repetitive behaviors to hide the perceived defect.
Lucy suffers from OCD. Her doctor prescribes her a medication that prevents the reuptake of the neurotransmitter _____ to treat her symptoms.
serotonin
The neurological factors that contribute to PTSD include abnormal hippocampi and overly strong _____ nervous system reactions.
sympathetic
In terms of classical conditioning, _____ is the unconditioned stimulus, whereas _____ is the conditioned stimulus.
traumatic stress; internal sensations