AP Psych Unit 12

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Major Depressive Disorder

A disorder characterized by feelings of personal worthlessness. Major depressive disorder is said to occur when signs of depression last at least two weeks. The experience of depression inhibits risk-taking and aggression. The evolutionary perspective emphasizes that normal depression serves an adaptive function by slowing people down and preventing them from engaging in life-threatening behaviours.

Bipolar Disorder

A disorder in which people alternate between states of lethargic hopelessness and unrealistic optimism. Between 1994-2003, adolescents with strong mood swings were increasingly likely to be diagnosed with bipolar disorder.

Demoralization of Poverty

Among women, the stresses and demoralization of poverty are especially likely to precipitate depression.

Glutamate Receptors

Drugs that interfere with glutamate receptors produce the flat affect.

Stressful Events

Stressful life events like the loss of a job are most likely to increase one's risk of depression.

PET Scan Study

A PET scan study of people with paranoia found increased activity in the amygdala.

Prevalence of Mental Disorders

A World Health Organization study of 20 countries estimated that the United States had the highest prevalence of mental disorders during the prior year.

Generalized Anxiety Disorder

A disorder characterized by a continuous state of tension, apprehension, and autonomic nervous system arousal. GAD is often accompanied by depression. Freud suggested that for those suffering a generalized anxiety disorder, the anxiety is cyclical. Example: You feel apprehensive and fearful most of the time, but you don't know why. Without warning, your heart begins to pound, your hands get icy, and you break into a cold sweat.

Antisocial Personality Disorder

A disorder characterized by a lack of guilt feelings and a lack of conscience. Antisocial personality disorder is more common among men than among women. The distinctive older term psychopath refers to an individual with antisocial personality disorder. Example: Anthony is well above average in intelligence and quite charming. He has swindled several older people out of their life savings, has little feeling for his victims, and does not fear the consequences of getting caught.

Dissociative Identity Disorder

A disorder characterized by a massive dissociation of self from ordinary consciousness. Exhibiting two or more distinct and alternating personalities is a symptom of dissociative identity disorder.

Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder

A disorder characterized by inattention, distractibility, hyperactivity, and impulsivity that is a consequence of genetic influences. Individuals diagnosed with ADHD experience a normal but delayed thinning of the frontal cerebral cortex. Although the brain maturation of children diagnosed with ADHD is normal, it lags behind their peers by about 3 years. Example: Larry has difficulty organizing his daily schedule of work responsibilities. He often makes careless mistakes or fails to complete his work because he is easily distracted.

Conversion Disorder

A disorder characterized by very specific physical symptoms that have no apparent physiological basis. Conversion disorder was more common in Freud's day. Example: Experiencing physical symptoms, such as blindness or paralysis, that make no physiological sense.

Mania

A disorder in which an individual is overexcited, hyperactive, and wildly optimistic. Example: George Frideric Handel composed his Messiah during three weeks of intense, creative energy. He suffered a mild form of bipolar disorder.

Schizophrenia

A group of severe disorders characterized by disorganized thinking, disturbed perceptions, and inappropriate emotions and actions. A breakdown in selective attention is most likely to be experienced by those who suffer from schizophrenia. Flat affect and catatonia are symptoms closely associated with schizophrenia. Example: A schizophrenic's speech is a "word salad"; it is full of unrelated words and phrases. Schizophrenia is associated with an excess of receptors for dopamine. Example: Cocaine may increase symptoms of schizophrenia by increasing dopamine levels.

Phobias

A persistent, irrational fear of a specific object or situation. Incapacitating efforts to avoid specific anxiety-producing situation is indicative of certain phobias. Example: An immediate and irrational anxiety response to the mere sight of blood is indicative of a specific phobia.

Short Attention Span

A short attention span and/or poor muscle coordination is an early warning sign of schizophrenia. One study monitored teens and young adults who had two relatives with schizophrenia. Those who subsequently developed schizophrenia displayed a tendency to be socially withdrawn prior to the onset of the disorder.

Psychoanalytic Perspective

According to the psychoanalytic perspective, anxiety is sometimes produced by the submerged mental energy associated with repressed impulses.

Chronic Schizophrenia

Also known as process schizophrenia. Schizophrenia that develops gradually over a long period of time. People are less likely to recover from process schizophrenia.

Actue Schizophrenia

Also known as reactive schizophrenia. Schizophrenia that develops rapidly, seemingly as a reaction to stress. People with reactive schizophrenia more often have the positive symptoms that respond to drug therapy. People are more likely to recover from reactive schizophrenia.

Schizophrenia in the brain

Among schizophrenia patients, the fluid-filled areas of the brain are abnormally large and the thalamus is abnormally small.

Shrinkage of Cerebral Tissue

An abnormal shrinkage of cerebral tissue is associated with schizophrenia.

Obessive-Compulsive Disorder

An anxiety disorder characterized by unwanted repetitive thoughts and actions. Example: The billionaire aviator Howard Hughes insisted that his assistants carry out elaborate hand-washing rituals and wear white gloves when handling any document he would later touch.

Social Phobia

An incapacitating and highly distressing fear about being embarrassed in the presence of others.

Agoraphobia

Anxiety about being in places or situations from which escape might be difficult. A person who has agoraphobia is most likely to stay close to home. Example: After Charles Darwin began suffering from panic disorder, he lived in relative seclusion and traveled only in his wife's company.

Suffering Depression

Compared with men, women are much more likely to be diagnosed as suffering from depression.

Alcohol Abuse

Compared with those who suffer no disorder, those who abuse alcohol have a higher risk of committing suicide. Compared with the general population, those who have been depressed have a higher risk of committing suicide.

Dissociative Disorder

Disorders that are characterized by disruptions in conscious awareness and sense of identity. The major characteristic of dissociative disorders is a disturbance of memory. Example: A sense of being separated from your body and watching yourself with a sense of detachment is a symptom of dissociation.

Mood Disorders

Disorders that are characterized by emotional extremes.

Dopamine to Hallucinations

Dopamine over-activity is related to hallucinations.

Alleviating Mania

Drugs that alleviate mania tend to reduce levels of the neurotransmitter norepinephrine.

Panic Disorder

Episodes of intense dread that last for several minutes and are accompanied by shortness of breath, trembling, dizziness, or heart palpitations. Panic attacks are most closely associated with anxiety disorders. Example: While studying, you are suddenly overwhelmed by feelings of intense apprehension. For several minutes, you feel so agitated that you cannot catch your breath.

Prenatal Viral Infections

Evidence suggests that prenatal viral infections contribute to schizophrenia.

Diagnostic Labels

Facilitates the ability of mental health professionals to quickly communicate the characteristics of their patients' complex symptoms. A fundamental problem with the diagnostic labeling of psychologically disordered behaviours is that the labels often bias our perceptions of the labeled person. Example: Diagnostic labels can lead to self-fulfilling prophecies. If individuals expect someone as mentally ill to be hostile, they may act in unfriendly ways that provoke that person to respond with hostility.

Delusions

False beliefs of persecution. Example: Believing you are Christopher Columbus.

Gender Differences

Gender differences in depression are LEAST noticeable among preschool children.

Hallucinations

Hearing or seeing things that are not there. The hallucinations experienced by those who suffer from schizophrenia are most likely to involve hearing things that are not there. Example: Seeing a one-eyed monster.

Neurotransmitter Levels

In terms of neurotransmitter levels, depression is associated with low norepinephrine and serotonin levels.

Personality Disorder

Inflexible and enduring socially maladaptive behaviour patterns that impair social functioning. The distinctive features used to identify the three clusters of personality disorders are: • Anxiety • Eccentricity • Impulsivity

Low Birth Weight

Low birth weight is a known risk factor for schizophrenia.

Anxiety Disorders

Maladaptive behaviours that reduce worry and fear. Anxiety is considered disordered if it is persistent and distressing.

Negative Symptoms

Negative symptoms of schizophrenia are the absence of appropriate behaviours. Negative symptoms include: • An expressionless face • A lack of guilt feelings • Flat affect

North Americans

North Americans born during the winter and spring months are at a slightly increased risk for schizophrenia.

Attempting Suicide

Of those who talk of suicide, most actually attempt suicide. Of those who attempt suicide, only a few succeed in completing the act.

Obsessions

Offensive and unwanted thoughts that persistently preoccupy a person. Example: You are alarmed by your own intrusive and irrational thoughts that your house is contaminated by germs.

Post- Traumatic Disorder

Positive psychological changes that result from struggling with extremely challenging life crises. Although experiencing severely traumatic events may lead to PTSD, it is also likely to lead to increased personal strength and resiliency. Example: Cancer survivors who develop a fresh delight in their children and savor the joy of each new day illustrate post-traumatic growth.

Positive Symptoms

Positive symptoms of schizophrenia are the presence of inappropriate behaviours. Positive symptoms include: • Hallucinations • Loud and meaningless talking • Inappropriate laughter • Uncontrollable outbursts of rage • Feelings of supreme importance and paranoia.

Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder

Repeated distressing dreams and intrusive memories of an intensely fearful and life-threatening experience. PTSD is considered to be an anxiety disorder. Some people are more vulnerable to PTSD because they have a sensitive limbic system, which floods the body with stress hormones. Some psychologists believe that due partly to a broader definition of trauma, mental health professionals have been over-diagnosing PTSD. Example: The social withdrawal and haunting nightmares of battle-scarred war veterans best illustrate symptoms of PTSD.

Compulsions

Repetitive behaviours. Example: You brush your teeth 18 times a day. Each time, you use exactly 83 strokes up and 83 strokes down. After you eat, you must brush twice with two different brands of toothpaste.

Genetic Predisposition

Research on the causes of schizophrenia strongly suggests that there is a genetic predisposition to schizophrenia. Of all twins who share identical genes with a schizophrenic victim, about one-half develop schizophrenia. If identical twins share a single placenta rather than having separate placentas, their chances of being similarly affected by schizophrenia are dramatically increased. If an identical twin has schizophrenia, the co-twin's chances of being similarly affected are only 1 in 10 if they had different placentas.

Research on Depression

Research regarding depression indicates that with each new generation, depression is increasing in its prevalence.

Adrenaline

Researchers have found low levels of adrenaline in 13-year-old boys who were later convicted of a crime as 18-26 year-olds.

Significant Psychological Disorder

Researchers recently estimated that approximately 26% of adult Americans had suffered a clinically significant psychological disorder in the last year.

Depressed Individuals

Severely depressed individuals show reduced brain activity in the left frontal lobe.

DSM-IV-TR

The DSM-IV-TR was developed in coordination with the tenth edition of the ICD. THE DSM-IV-TR is used in order to identify various psychological disorders. Many clinicians diagnose disorders by answering questions from five levels of the DSM-IV-TR. To facilitate diagnostic reliability, the DSM-IV-TR typically bases diagnoses on observable patterns of behaviour. The DSM-IV-TR does not explain the causes of the various psychological disorders. Example: The DSM-IV-TR is criticized for classifying an excessively broad range of human behaviours as psychologically disordered.

Biological Perspective

The biological perspective argues it is easy to condition but hard to extinguish fears of the types of stimuli that threaten our ancestors. It also suggests that compulsive acts typically exaggerate behaviours that contributed to the survival of the human species. Research on anxiety disorders indicates that some people are more genetically predisposed than others to develop anxiety disorders.

Medical model

The conception that psychological disorders as biologically based sicknesses that need to be diagnosed and cured. The discovery that psychologically disordered behaviour could result from syphilis infections facilitated the credibility and acceptance of the medical model. The medical model is criticized for neglecting the importance of social circumstances and psychological factors. Example: It is helpful using a biopsychosocial approach for explaining why certain disorders occur in particular cultures. The medical model has difficulty explaining why anorexia nervosa occurs mostly in Western cultures.

Psychological Disorder

The greatest shortcoming associated with explanations of psychological disorders in terms of demonic possession is that these explanations led to some harsh and ineffective remedial treatments. Example: Trepanation involved drilling holes in the skull to release demonic spirits.

Learning Perspective

The learning perspective argues that anxiety disorders are the result of classical conditioning and observational learning. • Individuals may make present day associations with past traumatic experiences. • Individuals may engage in stimulus generalization and come to fear things related to the past traumatic event. • Individuals may develop fears by observing others' fearful responses. Learning theorists have suggested that compulsive behaviours are reinforced by anxiety reduction. Example: A therapist suggests that you continue to bite your fingernails because this behaviour reduces feelings of anxiety in the past.

Mental Health

The number one reason people seek mental health services is depression. Because it is so pervasive, depression is often considered "the common cold" of psychological disorders.

Psychoanalytic Perspective

The psychoanalytic perspective suggests that depression is a reaction to loss and the internalization of anger. Example: Laura's husband died three years ago, but she is still depressed. Her therapist suggests that she is really angry at her husband for abandoning her.

Psychoanalytic Perspective

The psychoanalytic perspective suggests that the desperate efforts of traumatized victims to detach themselves from the experience of severe and prolonged abuse may contribute to DID. Evidence that many DID patients have suffered abuse as children leads some psychologists to include dissociative disorders under the umbrella of post-traumatic stress disorder. Example: Your therapist suggests that you developed DID in order to misbehave without feeling a strong sense of personal shame.

Reduced Self-Control and Cognitive Functions

The reduced self-control and cognitive functions like planning and organization of murderers is most closely related to reduced brain activity in their frontal lobes.

Risk Of Suicide

The risk of suicide is greatest when people begin to rebound from depression.

Social-Cognitive Perspective

The social-cognitive perspective has emphasized that depression is perpetuated by self-blaming attributions and increased expectations of negative outcomes. Internal, stable, and global explanations of one's own failures are indicative of pessimism. Learned helplessness is closely associated with depression. A difficulty with attributional explanations of depression is that negative attributions may be a consequence rather than a cause of depression. Example: A therapist believes that you are chronically depressed because you take too little credit for your many achievements and assume too much responsibility for your few failures.

Surging Rates

The surging rates of violent crime in Western nations are best understood in terms of a biopsychosocial approach.

Symptoms of Antisocial Personality Disorder

The symptoms of antisocial personality disorder are likely to appear at an earlier age than the symptoms of schizophrenia.

Autonomic Nervous System

There is some evidence that a relatively low level of autonomic nervous system arousal may contribute to antisocial personality disorder.

Vigorous Activity

Vigorous activity in the thalamus of schizophrenia patients has been found to be associated with hearing voices.

Vulnerable to Depression

Women are more vulnerable to depression than men because they are more likely to sense a lack of personal control over their lives.they are more likely to overthink in response to stressful circumstances.


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