Title: Chapter 13 & 14 Therapies & Social Behaviors
1Chapter 13 14Therapies Social Behaviors
2What Is Psychotherapy?
- Any psychological technique used to facilitate
positive changes in personality, behavior, or
adjustment some types of psychotherapy - Individual Involves only one client and one
therapist - Client Patient the one who participates in
psychotherapy - Rogers used client to equalize therapist-client
relationship and de-emphasize doctor-patient
concept - Group Several clients participate at the same
time
3More Types of Psychotherapy
- Directive Therapist provides strong guidance
- Insight Goal is for clients to gain deeper
understanding of their thoughts, emotions, and
behaviors - Time-Limited Any therapy that limits number of
sessions - Partial response to managed care and to
ever-increasing caseloads - Caseload Number of clients a therapist actively
sees
4Family Therapy
- Family Therapy All family members work as a
group to resolve the problems of each family
member - Tends to be brief and focuses on specific
problems (e.g., specific fights)
5Origins of Therapy
- Trepanning For primitive therapists, refers to
boring, chipping, or bashing holes into a
patients head for modern usage, refers to any
surgical procedure in which a hole is bored into
the skull - In primitive times it was unlikely the patient
would survive this may have been a goal - Goal presumably to relieve pressure or rid the
person of evil spirits
6Demonology
- Study of demons and people beset by spirits
- People were possessed, and they needed an
exorcism to be cured - Exorcism Practice of driving off an evil
spirit still practiced today!
7Origins of Therapy (cont'd)
- Ergotism Psychotic-like symptoms that come from
ergot poisoning - Ergot is a natural source of LSD
- Ergot occurs with rye
- Phillippe Pinel French physician who initiated
humane treatment of mental patients in 1793 - Created the first mental hospital
8Existential Therapy
- An insight therapy that focuses on problems of
existence, such as meaning, choice, and
responsibility emphasizes making difficult
choices in life - Therapy focuses on death, freedom, isolation, and
meaninglessness - Free Will Human ability to make choices
- You can choose to be the person you want to be
- Confrontation Clients are challenged to examine
their values and choices
9Behavior Therapy
- Use of learning principles to make constructive
changes in behavior - Behavior Modification Using any classical or
operant conditioning principles to directly
change human behavior - Deep insight is often not necessary
- Focus on the present cannot change the past, and
no reason to alter that which has yet to occur
10Aversion Therapy
- Conditioned Aversion Learned dislike or negative
emotional response to a stimulus - Aversion Therapy Associate a strong aversion to
an undesirable habit like smoking, overeating,
drinking alcohol - Response-Contingent Consequences Reinforcement,
punishment, or other consequences that are
applied only when a certain response is made - Rapid Smoking Prolonged smoking at a rapid pace
- Designed to cause aversion to smoking
11Desensitization
- Systematic Desensitization Guided reduction in
fear, anxiety, or aversion attained by
approaching a feared stimulus gradually while
maintaining relaxation - Best used to treat phobias intense, unrealistic
fear - Model Live or filmed person who serves as an
example for observational learning - Vicarious Desensitization Reduction in fear that
takes place secondhand when a client watches
models perform the feared behavior - Virtual Reality Exposure Presents computerized
fear stimuli to patients in a controlled fashion
12Operant Conditioning
- Positive Reinforcement Responses that are
followed by a reward tend to occur more
frequently - Nonreinforcement A response that is not followed
by a reward will occur less frequently - Extinction If response is NOT followed by reward
after it has been repeated many times, it will go
away - Punishment If a response is followed by
discomfort or an undesirable effect, the response
will decrease/be suppressed (but not necessarily
extinguished)
13Cognitive Therapy
- Therapy that helps clients change thinking
patterns that lead to problematic behaviors or
emotions - Selective Perception Perceiving only certain
stimuli in a larger group of possibilities - Overgeneralization Allowing upsetting events to
affect unrelated situations - All-or-Nothing Thinking Seeing objects and
events as absolutely right or wrong, good or bad,
and so on - Cognitive therapy is VERY effective in treating
depression, shyness, and stress
14Key Features of Psychotherapy
- Therapeutic Alliance Caring relationship between
the client and therapist work to solve
clients problems - Therapy offers a protected setting where
emotional catharsis (release) can occur - All the therapies offer some explanation or
rationale for the clients suffering - Provides clients with a new perspective about
themselves or their situations and a chance to
practice new behaviors
15Basic Counseling Skills
- Active listening
- Clarify the problem
- Focus on feelings
- Avoid giving advice
- Accept the clients frame of reference
- Reflect thoughts and feelings
- Silence Know when to use
- Questions
- Open Open-ended reply
- Closed Can be answered Yes or No
- Maintain confidentiality
16Medical (Somatic) Therapies
- Pharmacotherapy Use of drugs to alleviate
emotional disturbance three classes - Anxiolytics Like Valium produce relaxation or
reduce anxiety - Antidepressants Elevate mood and combat
depression - Antipsychotics Tranquilize and also reduce
hallucinations and delusions in larger dosages
17Shock
- Electroconvulsive Therapy (ECT) 150 volt
electric shock is passed through the brain for
about one second, inducing a convulsion - Based on belief that seizure alleviates
depression by altering brain chemistry - ECT Views
- - Causes memory loss in many patients
- Should only be used as a last resort
18Psychosurgery
- Any surgical alteration of the brain
- Prefrontal Lobotomy Frontal lobes in brain are
surgically cut from other brain areas - Supposed to calm people who did not respond to
other forms of treatment - Was not very successful
- Deep Lesioning Small target areas in the brain
are destroyed by using an electrode
19Hospitalization
- Mental Hospitalization Involves placing a person
in a protected, therapeutic environment staffed
by mental health professionals - Deinstitutionalization Reduced use of full-time
commitment to mental institutions - Half-way Houses Short-term group living
facilities for individuals making the transition
from an institution (mental hospital, prison,
etc.) to independent living
20Community Mental Health Centers
- Offer many health services like prevention,
education, therapy, and crisis intervention - Crisis Intervention Skilled management of a
psychological emergency - Paraprofessional Individual who works in a
near-professional capacity under supervision of a
more highly trained person
21What Is Social Psychology?
- Social Psychology Scientific studies of how
individuals behave, think, and feel in social
situations how people act in the presence
(actual or implied) of others - Great Lesson - The POWER of the
________________.
22Groups
- Group Structure Network of roles, communication,
pathways, and power in a group - Group Cohesiveness Degree of attraction among
group members or their commitment to remain in
the group - In Group A group with which a person identifies
- Out Group Group with which a person does not
identify - Cohesive groups work better together
- What kind of groups did you see on Survivor,
Road Rules, and Real World?
23Social Perception
- Attribution Making inferences about the causes
of ones own behavior and others behavior - External Cause of Behavior Assumed to lie
outside a person - Internal Cause of Behavior Assumed to lie within
the person - Fundamental Attribution Error Tendency to
attribute behavior of others to internal causes
(personality, likes, etc.). We believe this even
if they really have external causes!
24Conformity
- Bringing ones behavior into agreement with norms
or the behavior of others. - Solomon Aschs Experiment You must select (from
a group of three) the line that most closely
matches the standard line. All lines are shown to
a group of seven people (including you). - Other six were accomplices, and at times all
would select the wrong line. - In 33 of the trials, the real subject conformed
to group pressure even when the groups answers
were obviously incorrect!
25Figure 14.4
FIGURE 14.4 Stimuli used in Solomon Aschs
conformity experiments.
26Obedience (Milgram)
- Conformity to the demands of an authority.
- Would you shock a man with a known heart
condition who is screaming and asking to be
released? - Milgram studied this the man with a heart
condition was an accomplice and the teacher was
a real volunteer. The goal was to teach the
learner word pairs.
27Milgrams Conclusions
- 65 obeyed by going all the way to 450 volts on
the shock machine, even though the learner
eventually could not answer any more questions - Group support can reduce destructive obedience
28Figure 14.6
FIGURE 14.6 Results of Milgrams obedience
experiment. Only a minority of subjects refused
to provide shocks, even at the most extreme
intensities. The first substantial drop in
obedience occurred at the 300-volt level
(Milgram, 1963).
29Brainwashing
- Engineered or forced attitude change requiring a
captive audience three steps - Unfreezing Loosening of former values and
convictions - Change When the brainwashed person abandons
former beliefs - Refreezing Rewarding and solidifying new
attitudes and beliefs
30Cults
- Groups that profess great devotion to a person
and follow that person almost without question - Leaders personality is usually more important
than the issues he/she preaches - Members usually victimized by the leader(s)
- Recruit potential converts at a time of need,
especially when a sense of belonging is most
attractive to potential converts - Look for college students and young adults
- Some examples Peoples Temple and Jim Jones
Heavens Gate Branch Davidians
31Prejudice
- Negative emotional attitude held toward members
of a specific social group - Discrimination Unequal treatment of people who
should have the same rights as others - Personal Prejudice When members of another
racial or ethnic group are perceived as a threat
to ones own interests - Group Prejudice When a person conforms to group
norms
32Prosocial Behavior and Bystander Apathy
- Prosocial Behavior Behavior toward others that
is helpful, constructive, or altruistic - Bystander Apathy Unwillingness of bystanders to
offer help during emergencies - Related to number of people present
- The more potential helpers present, the lower the
chances help will be given