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Title: Chapter 1


1
Chapter 1 2Abnormal Behavior in Historical
Context The Causes of Psychopathology
2
Myths and Misconceptions About Abnormal Behavior
  • Many Myths Are Associated With Mental Illness
  • Lazy, crazy, dumb
  • Weak in character
  • Dangerous to self or others
  • Mental illness is a hopeless situation

3
The Myth of Mental Illness
  • Thomas Szasz - outspoken critic
  • Abnormal Behavior Unpleasant Behavior
  • Psychiatric Dx - Tells us nothing meaningful
    about person (unlike medical dxs)
  • Dx. used to control people and keep
    undesirables out of the way

4
Mental Illness - More than a Myth
  • Most believe mental illnesses are objective, and
    there is little to distinguish between mental and
    physical illnesses. Research supports this.
    This whole class will support this point.
  • However, Szasz raises two important points
  • (1) What impact does a society have on mental
    illness?
  • Homosexuality, masturbation were once dxs
  • (2) For a Dx to be given, lets make sure it does
    tell us something meaningful about a person

5
Approaches to Defining Abnormal Behavior
  • No Single Definition of Psychological Abnormality
  • No Single Definition of Psychological Normality
  • Does Infrequency Define Abnormality?
  • Does Suffering Define Abnormality?
  • Does Strangeness Define Abnormality?
  • Does the Behavior Itself Define Abnormality?
  • Should Normality Serve as a Guide?

6
Toward a Definition of Abnormal Behavior
  • Psychological Dysfunction
  • Breakdown in cognitive, emotional, or behavioral
    functioning
  • Distress or Impairment
  • Difficulty performing appropriate and expected
    roles
  • Impairment is set in the context of a persons
    background
  • Atypical or Unexpected Cultural Response
  • Reaction is outside cultural norms

7
Why We Do This Clinical Description
(phenomenology)
  • Describing the Problem
  • Description Aims to
  • Distinguish clinically significant dysfunction
    from common human experience
  • Describe Cluster of Symptoms
  • Describe Epidemiology
  • Prevalence/incidence
  • Onset of Disorders (Acute vs. insidious)
  • Course (Episodic, time-limited, or chronic
    course)

8
Why We Do This Causation, Treatment, and Outcome
  • What Factors Contribute to the Development of
    Psychopathology?
  • Study of etiology
  • How Can We Best Improve the Lives of People
    Suffering From Psychopathology?
  • Study of treatment development

9
Who deals with Psychopathology Currently?
  • Mental Health Professionals
  • The Ph.D.s Clinical and counseling
    psychologists
  • The Psy.D.s Clinical and counseling Doctors
    of Psychology
  • M.D.s Psychiatrists
  • M.S.W.s Psychiatric and non-psychiatric social
    workers
  • MN/MSNs Psychiatric nurses
  • LPC Licensed Clinical Counselors

10
Historical Conception and Causes of Psychopathlogy
11
Historical Conceptions of Abnormal Behavior
  • Major Psychological Disorders Have Existed
  • In all cultures
  • Across all time periods
  • The Causes and Treatment of Abnormal Behavior
    Varied Widely
  • Across cultures
  • Across time periods
  • Particularly as a function of prevailing
    paradigms or world views

12
The Past Abnormal Behavior and the Supernatural
Tradition
  • Deviant Behavior as a Battle of Good vs. Evil
  • Deviant behavior was believed to be caused by
    demonic possession, witchcraft, sorcery
  • Mass hysteria (St. Vitusdance or Tartanism) and
    the church
  • Treatments included exorcism, torture, beatings,
    and crude surgeries
  • Movement of the Moon and Stars as a Cause of
    Deviant Behavior
  • Paracelsus and lunacy
  • Both Outer Force Views Were Popular During the
    Middle Ages
  • Few Believed That Abnormality Was an Illness on
    Par With Physical Disease

13
Trephination A Treatment in Line with the
Hypothesized Cause
14
The Past Abnormal Behavior and the Biological
Tradition
  • Hippocrates Abnormal Behavior as a Physical
    Disease
  • Hysteria The Wander Uterus
  • Galen Extends Hippocrates Work
  • Humoral theory of mental illness
  • Treatments remained crude
  • Galenic-Hippocratic Tradition
  • Foreshadowed modern views linking abnormality
    with brain chemical imbalances

15
The Past The Biological Tradition
  • Mental Illness Physical Illness
  • The 1930s Biological Treatments Were Standard
    Practice
  • Insulin shock therapy, ECT, and brain surgery
    (i.e., lobotomy)
  • By the 1950s Several Medications Were
    Established
  • Examples include neuroleptics (i.e., reserpine)
    and major tranquilizers

16
The Past The Biological Tradition Comes of Age
  • General Paresis (Syphilis) and the Biological
    Link With Madness
  • Associated with several unusual psychological and
    behavioral symptoms
  • Pasteur discovered the cause A bacterial
    microorganism
  • Led to penicillin as a successful treatment
  • Bolstered the view that mental illness physical
    illness and should be treated as such
  • John Grey, Dorothea Dix, and the Reformers

17
The Past Abnormal Behavior andthe
Psychological Tradition
  • The Rise of Moral Therapy
  • The practice of allowing institutionalized
    patients to be treated as normal as possible and
    to encourage and reinforce social interaction
  • Philippe Pinel and Jean-Baptiste Pussin
  • William Tuke followed Pinels lead in England
  • Benjamin Rush led reforms in the United States
  • Reasons for the Falling Out of Moral Therapy
  • Emergence of Competing Alternative Psychological
    Models

18
The Past Abnormal Behavior andthe
Psychoanalytic Tradition
  • Freudian Theory of the Structure and Function of
    the Mind
  • The Minds Structure
  • Id (pleasure principle illogical, emotional,
    irrational)
  • Ego (reality principle logical and rational)
  • Superego (moral principles keeps Id and Ego in
    balance)

19
Freud and Psychopathology
  • Freudian Stages of Psychosexual Development
  • Oral, anal, phallic, latency, and genital stages
  • Defense Mechanisms When the Ego Loses the
    Battle with the Id and Superego
  • Displacement denial, rationalization, reaction
    formation, projection, repression, and
    sublimation

20
Behavioral Perspectives
  • Classical conditioning
  • Operant conditioning
  • Modeling/Social Learning
  • Behavioral treatment interventions

21
The Behavioral Tradition The Behavioral Tradition
  • Classical Conditioning (Pavlov Watson)
  • Learning ELICITED responses
  • Pairing neutral stimuli and unconditioned stimuli
  • Conditioning was extended to explain fear
    acquisition
  • Operant Conditioning (Thorndike Skinner)
  • Learning EMITTED responses
  • Voluntary behavior is controlled by consequences
  • Positive reinforcement
  • Negative reinforcement
  • Punishment
  • Both Learning Traditions
  • Greatly influenced the development of behavior
    therapy

22
The Behavioral Tradition
  • Social Learning Theory (Bandura)
  • Learning through observation of modeling
  • Bobo doll studies

23
Cognitive Perspectives
  • Cognitive explanations
  • Cognitive treatment interventions
  • Integrated cognitive-behavioral approaches

24
The Cognitive Perspective
  • Expanded upon behaviorism
  • Thoughts, attitudes, beliefs interact with
    stimuli in the environment to produce emotion and
    behavior
  • Attributions
  • Cognitive Distortions
  • Negative Automatic Thoughts

25
Cognitive-Behavioral Tradition
  • A merging of these two traditions and the
    dominant paradigm currently.
  • Stimulus-response relationships are important as
    well as cognitive processing
  • Most empirically validated treatments stem from
    this tradition

Cognitive Processing
Stimulus
Response Emotions Behaviors
26
Biological Perspectives
  • The central nervous system
  • The neuron
  • Neurotransmission
  • The Brain
  • The peripheral nervous system
  • The endocrine system
  • Genetics

27
Division of the Nervous System
28
The Central Nervous System
  • The Neuron
  • Soma Cell body
  • Dendrites Branches that receive messages from
    other neurons
  • Axon Trunk of neuron that sends messages to
    other neurons
  • Axon terminals Buds at end of axon from which
    chemical messages are sent
  • Synapses Small gaps that separate neurons
  • Neurons Function Electrically, but Communicate
    Chemically
  • Neurotransmitters are the chemical messengers

29
Diagram of a Neuron
Dendrites
Soma
Axon Direction of impulse
Axon Terminals
Synapse
30
The Synapse Neurotransmitters
  • Information from one neuron flows to another
    neuron across a synapse. The synapse is a small
    gap separating 2 neurons. The synapse consists
    of
  • a presynaptic ending that contains
    neurotransmitters, mitochondria and other cell
    organelles,
  • a postsynaptic ending that contains receptor
    sites for neurotransmitters and,
  • the synaptic cleft a space between the
    presynaptic and postsynaptic endings.

31
Neurotransmitter ReleaseDiffusion
  • The neurotransmitter molecules diffuse across
    the synaptic cleft where they can bind with
    receptor sites on the postsynaptic ending to
    influence the electrical response in the
    postsynaptic neuron. In the figure on the left,
    the postsynaptic ending is a dendrite
    (axodendritic synapse), but synapses can occur on
    axons (axoaxonic synapse) and cell bodies
    (axosomatic synapse).

32
Functions of MainTypes of Neurotransmitters
  • Figure 2.12 Manipulating serotonin in the brain.

33
Functions of MainTypes of Neurotransmitters
  • Neurotransmitters have two basic function
  • Excitation
  • Inhibition
  • Main Types and Functions of Neurotransmitters
  • Acetylcholine
  • Dopamine
  • Norepinephrine and beta blockers
  • Serotonin (5HT)
  • Endorphins
  • Gamma aminobutyric acid (GABA) and
    benzodiazepines

34
Cholinergic system (Acetylcholine)
35
ACETYLCHOLINE (ACh)
  • Acetylcholine (ACh) is a neurotransmitter
    substance that is found both in the CNS and in
    the PNS.
  • In the PNS it is the NT released at synapses on
    skeletal muscle and is also found in the ganglia
    of the autonomic nervous system.
  • In the brain it appears to be involved in
    learning and memory and in sleeping and dreaming.

36
Dopaminergic system (Dopamine)
37
DOPAMINE (DA)
  • Dopamine (DA) is an inhibitory neurotransmitter
  • It is implicated in movement, attention and
    learning.
  • Dopamine excess may be involved in Schizophrenia.
  • Most importantly it is involved in the reward
    system of the brain.

38
Noradrenergic system (Norepinephrine)
39
NORADRENALINE (NA)
  • Noradrenalin (NA) is not synthesised in the cell
    body but the dopamine synthesised there is
    converted into NA inside the synaptic vessicles.
  • Like ACh, NA is found in the autonomic nervous
    system. Here it has an excitatory role.
  • In the brain, NA is inhibitory and is primarily
    involved in control of alertness and wakefulness.
  • The release of NA from the neuron is more
    complicated than for other neurotransmitters.
  • NA stimulates the release of Adrenalin (a
    hormone) from the adrenal medulla.

40
Serotonergic system (Serotonin)
41
SEROTONIN
  • At most synapses Serotonin (5-HT) is an
    inhibitory neurotransmitter.
  • It plays a role in the regulation of mood,
    producing sedation or relaxation.
  • It also has a role in the control of eating,
    sleep and arousal. In addition, it can regulate
    pain.

42
Endorphins
  • Generally inhibitory
  • Modulate the experience of pain
  • Involved in feelings of euphoria and reward

43
GABA
  • Most prevalent inhibitory neurotransmitter in the
    brain
  • Implicated in relaxation/antianxiety
  • Many drugs target this system

44
The Brain
Forebrain
Midbrain
Hindbrain
Telencephalon
Diencephalon
Mesencephalon
Metencephalon
Myelencephalon
45
Divisions of the Brain
  • A review of this method of dividing the brain.

Forebrain
Midbrain
Hindbrain
Telencephalon
Diencephalon
Mesencephalon
Metencephalon
Myelencephalon
Cerebral Cortex Basal Ganglia Hippocampus Amygdala
Thalamus Hypothalamus
Tectum Tegmentum
Pons Cerebellum
Medulla
46
Cerebral CortexAnatomical Divisions- 4 lobes
  • The average human brain weighs about 1,400 grams
    (3 lb). The brain can be divided down the middle
    lengthwise into two halves called the cerebral
    hemispheres. Each hemisphere of the cerebral
    cortex is divided into four lobes
  • Although most people have the same patterns of
    gyri and sulci on the cerebral cortex, no two
    brains are exactly alike.

47
Neuroscience and the Brain Structure
  • Lobes of Cerebral Cortex
  • Frontal Thinking and reasoning abilities,
    memory
  • Parietal Touch recognition
  • Occipital Integrates visual input
  • Temporal Recognition of sights and sounds and
    long-term memory storage
  • Limbic System-emotion center
  • Thalamus Receives and integrates sensory
    information
  • Hypothalamus Eating, drinking, aggression,
    sexual activity

48
Major Structures of the Brain
49
Division of the Nervous System
  • Figure 2.7b Major Structures of the Brain.

50
Neuroscience Peripheral Nervous and Endocrine
Systems
  • Somatic Branch of PNS
  • Controls voluntary muscles and movement
  • Autonomic Branch of the PNS-involuntary muscles
  • Sympathetic and parasympathetic branches of the
    ANS
  • Regulates cardiovascular system body
    temperature
  • Regulates the endocrine system and aids in
    digestion

51
AUTONOMIC NERVOUS SYSTEM
CONTROLS MOBILIZATION OF BODIES RESOURCES
FIGHT/FLIGHT RESPONSE
52
THE EFFECTS OF ANS
  • SYMPATHETIC
  • INCREASE
  • HR, RESPIRATION, BP, GLUCOSE UTILIZATION
  • DECREASE
  • IMMUNE SYSTEM , DIGESTIVE FUNCTIONS
  • PARASYMATHETIC
  • RETURN TO BASELINE
  • RELAXATION DIGESTION

53
ENDOCRINE SYSTEM
54
The Endocrine System and Psychopathology
  • Integration of endocrine and nervous system
    function
  • The Hypothalamic-Pituitary-Adrenalcortical Axis
  • (HPA axis)
  • A circuit that runs through these neuroendocrine
    structures that drives the fight or flight
    response
  • This system is can become dysregulated and lead
    to psychopathology
  • Depression
  • PTSD

55
The Interaction of Genetic and Environmental
Effects
  • The Diathesis-Stress Model, simplistic model
  • Examples include blood-injury-injection phobia
    and alcoholism and probably schizophrenia (stress
    may be prenatal, not always stressful life event,
    crit periods)
  • Reciprocal Gene-Environment Model, Genes interact
    with environment born with predisposition or
    personality for risk taking influences (does
    not cause) choice of boyfriend so more break-ups
    more break-ups lead to higher level of depression
    for people with certain genetic make-up
  • stressful life events may be greater in people
    with depression . Not just coincidentalmay be
    because genetic loading may influence things like
    mate selection or procrastination that influence
    stress load

56
Cultural, Social, and InterpersonalFactors in
Psychopathology
  • Cultural Factors
  • Influence form and expression of behavior
  • Gender Effects
  • Exerts a strong and puzzling effect on
    psychopathology
  • Family Effects
  • Family System Approaches
  • Social Effects on Health and Behavior
  • Frequency and quality are important
  • Related to mortality, disease, and
    psychopathology
  • Stigma of Psychopathology
  • Culturally, socially, and interpersonally situated

57
One-Dimensional vs. Multidimensional Models
  • One-Dimensional Models
  • Explaining behavior in terms of a single cause
  • Problem Other information is often ignored,
  • Multidimensional Models
  • Interdisciplinary, eclectic, and integrative
  • What were once traditions are now integrated
    factors of causality
  • System of influences that cause and maintain
    suffering
  • Uses information from several sources
  • Abnormal behavior as multiply determined

58
Multidimensional Models of Abnormal
BehaviorOverview
  • Biological Factors
  • Genetics (diathesis?)
  • Physiology (endocrine function)
  • Neurobiology (transmitter dysregulation/cell
    death)
  • Behavioral Factors (coping)
  • Cognitive Factors (attributional style)
  • Social Factors (support of friends, family)
  • Developmental Factors (developmental insults)
  • Each of these factors may be weighted more than
    another for a particular person experiencing
    psychopathology

59
CONTEXT
Genetics
Biological Structure and Function of Systems
Psychological Cognitive and Behavioral Function
Environmental Stimuli
Behavioral Response
Emotional Response
Cognitive Response
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