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Classification, Diagnosis,

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Title: Classification, Diagnosis,


1
Classification, Diagnosis, Assessment
  • Diagnosing Psychopathology

2
A. Diagnosis
  • Allows psychologists to determine if
    psychopathology is present.
  • Often must rely on subtle distinctions in
    behavior.

3
Diagnostic 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.

4
Axis 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

5
Axes 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.

6
Axis I Disorders
  • 1. Disorders Usually First Diagnosed in Infancy,
    Childhood, or Adolescence
  • separation anxiety
  • attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder
  • autism

7
2. Mood disorders-disturbances in emotion and
behavior.
  • Major Depression (unipolar depression)
  • Mania
  • Bipolar disorder (Manic Depression)
  • Cyclothymia (Chronic mood disorder)
  • Dysthymia

8
3. Schizophrenia-disturbances of thought,
emotions, and behavior.
  • Different types
  • Paranoid Schizophrenia
  • Catatonic Schziophrenia
  • Undifferentiated Schizophrenia

9
4. Anxiety disorders
  • Generalized anxiety disorder (GAD)
  • Phobias
  • Panic Disorder
  • Obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD)
  • Post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD)
  • Acute Stress Disorder

10
5. Sexual disorders
  • Gender Identity disorder
  • Transvestism
  • Pedophilia
  • Voyeurism
  • Exhibitionism
  • Sadism/Masochism
  • Rape trauma

11
Axis 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.

12
Axis 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.

13
B. Assessment
  • How do we assess abnormal behavior??
  • What do you think???

14
Psychological assessment
  • Techniques are designed to determine cognitive,
    emotional, personality, behavior factors in
    psychopathological functioning.
  • Most methods stem from paradigms used to study
    psychopathology.

15
1. Issues in testing
  • A. Reliabilityconsistency with which a test
    measures what it purports to measure.
  • Types of reliability
  • inter-rated reliability
  • test-retest reliability

16
B. 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.

17
Types 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.

18
2. 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).

19
Clinical 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.

20
B. 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.

21
3. 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.)

22
Psychological tests
  • Aid in assessment
  • May be given to many individuals
  • We have statistical norms for the tests. Allows
    for standardization.

23
1. 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

24
2. 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.

25
Types 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.

26
2. 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?
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