Title: Classification, Diagnosis,
1Classification, Diagnosis, Assessment
- Diagnosing Psychopathology
2A. Diagnosis
- Allows psychologists to determine if
psychopathology is present. - Often must rely on subtle distinctions in
behavior.
3Diagnostic standard in psychology is the DSM-IV
- Diagnostic and Statistical Manual for mental
disorders. - The DSM is based on a multi-axial classification
system. - Each individual is rated on 5 separate dimensions
or axes.
4Axis I Psychiatric disorders, excludes
personality disorders mental retardation.
- Axis II Personality disorders mental
retardation. - Axis III General medical conditions
- Axis IV Psychosocial environmental problems.
- Axis V Current level of functioning Global
Assessment Scale
5Axes I II comprise the classification of
abnormal behavior.
- Most individuals consult a clinician for an Axis
I condition (e.g., depression). - Clinician must examine if Axis II disorder is
also present. - Axis II disorders make treating Axis I disorders
more complicated.
6Axis I Disorders
- 1. Disorders Usually First Diagnosed in Infancy,
Childhood, or Adolescence - separation anxiety
- attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder
- autism
72. Mood disorders-disturbances in emotion and
behavior.
- Major Depression (unipolar depression)
- Mania
- Bipolar disorder (Manic Depression)
- Cyclothymia (Chronic mood disorder)
- Dysthymia
83. Schizophrenia-disturbances of thought,
emotions, and behavior.
- Different types
- Paranoid Schizophrenia
- Catatonic Schziophrenia
- Undifferentiated Schizophrenia
94. Anxiety disorders
- Generalized anxiety disorder (GAD)
- Phobias
- Panic Disorder
- Obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD)
- Post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD)
- Acute Stress Disorder
105. Sexual disorders
- Gender Identity disorder
- Transvestism
- Pedophilia
- Voyeurism
- Exhibitionism
- Sadism/Masochism
- Rape trauma
11Axis II personality disorders
- Schizoid PDperson is aloof, has few friends,
is indifferent to praise/criticism. - Borderline PDerratic behavior, impulsivity, and
instability in relationships/ mood, self-image. - Narcissistic PDpeople who have malignant
grandiosity of their own self-importance.
12Axis II (contd.)
- Histrionic PD- marked by an overly dramatic
display of behavior that is for show (no real
substance underneath). - Antisocial PDmarked by violent acts lack of
empathy for others.
13B. Assessment
- How do we assess abnormal behavior??
- What do you think???
14Psychological assessment
- Techniques are designed to determine cognitive,
emotional, personality, behavior factors in
psychopathological functioning. - Most methods stem from paradigms used to study
psychopathology.
151. Issues in testing
- A. Reliabilityconsistency with which a test
measures what it purports to measure. - Types of reliability
- inter-rated reliability
- test-retest reliability
16B. Validity-the accuracy of a test.
- Types of validity
- content validity-does test measure content area?
- face validityon surface does test measure what
its supposed to.
17Types contd.
- Concurrent validity-does the index being used to
measure a type of abnormal behavior agree with
another index used to measure the same behavior. - Predictive validity-does measure accurately
predict the occurrence of some event.
182. Interviews
- A. Clinical Interviews
- Clinicians interview individuals who may have
mental disorders. - Setting varies (hospital, clinic, office, court).
- Clinicians observe how individuals respond
during the interview (verbal non-verbal cues).
19Clinical interviews (contd.)
- Clinicians observe the persons emotional state
at time of interview. - (e.g., is person withdrawn, excitable,
extremely talkative, communicative, beligerant). - Paradigm of clinician will influence questions
they ask.
20B. Structured interviews
- To make reliable and valid diagnoses, clinicians
need to gather standardized information on
patients. - SCID (Structured Clinical Interview)- a
structured interview for Axis I of the DSM. - Questions are in prescribed order for interview
to ask. The SCID is a branching interview, which
means the patients response to one question,
will determine the next question asked.
213. Psychological Tests
- Standardized procedures designed to measure a
persons performance on a particular task or to
assess his/her personality. - May provide supplemental information to a
clinical interview. - (E.g., schizophrenic may be guarded during
clinical interview, but tests may pick up on
delusions hallucinations patient may be
withholding from the clinician.)
22Psychological tests
- Aid in assessment
- May be given to many individuals
- We have statistical norms for the tests. Allows
for standardization.
231. Self-Report Inventories
- A. Personality Inventories
- Minnesota Multiphasic Personality Inventory
(MMPI) widely used to screen large groups of
people for whom clinical interviews may not be
feasible. - 10 scales
242. Projective Personality Tests
- Standard stimuli are presented to the patient
(inkblots or drawings) ambiguous enough to allow
for variation in responses. - Patients responses should be based on primarily
unconscious processes will reveal his/her true
feelings, thoughts, motives.
25Types of Projective tests
- 1. Rorschach Inkblot test patient presented
with 10 inkblots. - Half of inkblots are in black, white, shades of
gray. Two have red splotches, and 3 are in
pastel colors. - Patient should report what they see.
262. Thematic Apperception Test (TAT)
- Patient is shown a series of black-and-white
pictures one by one and asked to tell a story
related to each. - What is the symbolic meaning underlying the story
the patient provides?