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Chapter 13 : Psychology

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Title: Using POCS Method of Problem-Solving Author: Michael L. Farris Last modified by: Michael L. Farris Created Date: 5/10/2001 5:45:26 AM Document presentation format – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Chapter 13 : Psychology


1
Chapter 13 Psychology Health
  • Michael L. Farris
  • Psychology 101

2
Behavioral Medicine (Coon, p. 417)
  • The study of behavioral factors in medicine,
    physical illness, and medical treatment.
  • Psychologists working in the allied field of
    behavioral medicine apply psychology to manage
    medical problems, such as diabetes or asthma.
  • Their interests include pain control, helping
    people cope with chronic illness, stress-related
    diseases, self-screening for diseases (such as
    breast cancer), and similar topics.

3
Disease-Prone Personality (Coon, p. 418)
  • A personality type associated with poor health
    marked by persistent negative emotions, including
    anxiety, depression, and hostility.
  • Such people tend to be chronically depressed,
    anxious, hostile, and frequently ill. In
    contrast, people who are intellectually
    resourceful, compassionate, optimistic, and
    non-hostile tend to enjoy good health.

4
Burnout (Nevid, p. 476)
  • A job related condition of mental, physical, and
    emotional exhaustion.
  • The problem has three aspects
  • emotional exhaustion (affected persons are
    fatigued, tense, apathetic, and suffer from
    physical ailments they feel used up, and have an
    I dont care anymore attitude toward work).
  • Depersonalization (or detachment from others), in
    which burned out workers no longer care about
    their clients and coldly treat them like objects.
    And
  • Reduced personal accomplishment (burned out
    workers do poor work and feel helpless, hopeless,
    or angry. Their self-esteem slumps and they
    yearn to change jobs or careers.

5
Burnout (Coon, p. 424, Nevid, p.476)
  • Burnout may occur in any job, but it is a marked
    problem in emotionally demanding helping
    professions, such as nursing, teaching, social
    work, child care, counseling, caring for AIDS
    patients, or police work.
  • It is ironic that the same work that produces
    burnout can also be highly rewarding.
  • People are more likely to burn out if they feel
    they have little control over their work.

6
Frustration
  • A negative emotional state that occurs when one
    is prevented from reaching a goal. Frustration
    is a common source of stress.
  • A common response to frustration is aggression.
    (Nevid, p.502 Coon, p. 426)

7
Scapegoating
  • (A scapegoat is a person who has become a
    habitual target of displaced aggression.)
  • Scapegoating is blaming a person or group of
    people for conditions not of their making.
  • Psychologists attribute much hostility and
    violence to displaced aggression.
  • An example of scapegoating is the disturbing
    finding that when unemployment increases, so does
    child abuse.
  • (Coon, p. 427)

8
Defense Mechanism
  • A habitual and often unconscious psychological
    process used to reduce anxiety. Specifically,
    defense mechanisms are used to avoid, deny, or
    distort sources of threat or anxiety. They also
    help protect an idealized self-image so that we
    can comfortably live with ourselves. Many of the
    defenses were first identified by Sigmund Freud,
    who assumed they operate unconsciously. Everyone
    at one time or another has used defense
    mechanisms.
  • Defense mechanisms prevent us from being
    overwhelmed by immediate threats.
  • Please refer to Nevid, p. 348 or Coon, p. 431.

9
Denial
  • A basic defense mechanism in which one refuses to
    accept an unpleasant reality.
  • Denial is closely linked with death, illness, and
    similar painful and threatening events. If you
    were told you have three months to live, your
    first reaction may be the doctor must be
    mistaken or it cant be true!.
  • Similar denial and disbelief are common reactions
    to the unexpected death of a friend or relative
    Its just not real. I dont believe it. I just
    dont believe it! (Nevid, page 347)

10
Repression
  • Unconsciously preventing painful or dangerous
    thoughts from entering awareness (forgetting).
  • Freud noticed that his patients had tremendous
    difficulty recalling shocking or traumatic events
    from childhood.
  • Feelings of hostility toward a family member, the
    names of people we dislike, and past failures are
    common targets of repression. (Nevid, p. 348
    Coon, p. 431)

11
Reaction Formation
  • Preventing dangerous impulses from being
    expressed in behavior by exaggerating opposite
    behavior. In Freudian theory, a defense mechanism
    involving behavior that stands in opposition to
    ones true motives and desires to prevent
    consciousness awareness of them.
  • For example, a mother who unconsciously resents
    her children may, through reaction formation,
    become absurdly overprotective and overindulgent.
    Her real thoughts of I hate them and I wish
    they were gone are replaced by I love them and
    I dont know what Id do without them. The
    mothers hostile impulses are traded for
    smother love, so that she wont have to admit
    she hates her children.
  • Thus, the basic idea in reaction formation is
    that the individual acts out an opposite behavior
    to block threatening impulses or feelings.
  • (Nevid, p. 348 Coon, p. 431)

12
Regression
  • Retreating to an earlier stage of development or
    to earlier, less demanding habits or situations.
  • If youve ever seen a child get homesick at
    summer camp or on vacation, youve observed
    regression.
  • An adult who throws a temper tantrum or a married
    adult who goes home to mother is also
    regressing. (Coon, p. 432-433)

13
Projection
  • Attributing ones own feelings, shortcomings, or
    unacceptable impulses to others.
  • Projection is an unconscious process that
    protects us from the anxiety we would feel if we
    were to discern our faults.
  • A person who is projecting tends to see his or
    her own feelings, shortcomings, or unacceptable
    impulses in others.
  • Projection lowers anxiety by exaggerating
    negative traits in others. This justifies ones
    own actions and directs attention away from
    personal failings.
  • (Nevid, pgs. 347-348 Coon, p. 432)

14
Rationalization
  • Justifying personal behavior by giving reasonable
    and rational but false reasons for it.
  • The making of excuses comes from a natural
    tendency to explain our behavior. When the
    explanation you give for your behavior is
    reasonable and convincing, but not the real
    reason, you are rationalizing.
  • (Nevid, pgs. 347-348 Coon, p. 432)

15
Rationalization
  • For example, Taylor failed to turn in an
    assignment made at the beginning of the semester
    in one of his classes. Heres the explanation he
    gave his professor
  • My car broke down 2 days ago, and I
    couldnt get to the library until yesterday.
    Then I couldnt get all the books I needed
    because some were checked out, but I wrote what I
    could. Then last night, as the last straw, the
    cartridge in my printer ran out, and since all
    the stores were closed, I couldnt finish the
    paper on time.
  • When asked why he left the assignment until
    the last minute (the real reason it was late),
    Taylor offered another set of rationalizations.
    Like many people, Taylor had difficulty seeing
    himself without the protection of his
    rationalizations.

16
Compensation (Coon, p. 433)
  • Counteracting a real or imagined weakness by
    emphasizing desirable traits or seeking to excel
    in the area of weakness or in other areas.
  • Compensatory reactions are defenses against
    feelings of inferiority. A person who has a
    defect or weakness (real or imagined) may go to
    unusual lengths to overcome the weakness or to
    compensate for it by excelling in other areas.
  • Examples of compensation include Franklin D.
    Roosevelt whose achievements in politics came
    after he was stricken with polio, and Stevie
    Wonder and Ray Charles, both blind, yet very
    successful musicians.

17
Sublimation
  • Working off frustrated desires or unacceptable
    impulses in substitute activities that are
    constructive or accepted by society.
  • For example, a very aggressive person may find
    social acceptance as a professional soldier,
    boxer, or football player. Greed may be refined
    into a successful business career. Lying could
    be sublimated into storytelling, creative
    writing, or politics.
  • (Nevid, pgs. 347-348 Coon, p.433)

18
Learned Helplessness
  • A learned inability to overcome obstacles or to
    avoid punishment learned passivity and inaction
    to aversive stimuli. (See dog example on Coon
    page 433).
  • A psychologist named Martin Seligman has
    described this reaction in Vietnam prisoner of
    war camps (Coon p. 433) in which a young marine
    POW was promised release on a certain date if he
    cooperated, then was never released. He became
    depressed, refused to eat or drink, and died
    shortly thereafter.
  • (Nevid, pgs. 401-402 Coon, p. 433)

19
Depression
  • A state of despondency marked by feelings of
    powerlessness and hopelessness.
  • Many psychologists (including Seligman) have
    argued that there is a close connection between
    depression and learned helplessness.
  • Nevid, pgs. 400-404 Coon, pgs. 434-435

20
Psychosomatic Disorders
  • Illnesses in which psychological factors
    contribute to bodily damage or to damaging
    changes in bodily functioning. (Coon, p. 440)
  • In psychosomatic disorders, physiological damage
    is caused by psychological stress.
  • Hypochondria Complaining about illnesses that
  • appear to be imaginary.
  • The difference between psychosomatic problems and
    hypochondria is that psychosomatic illnesses are
    real (asthma, a migraine headache, or high blood
    pressure can be psychosomatically caused),
    whereas a hypochondriac imagines problems that
    arent really there.
  • Severe psychosomatic disorders can be fatal.
    The person who says Oh, its just psychosomatic
    misunderstands the seriousness of stress-related
    diseases.

21
Biofeedback
  • Information given to a person about his or her
    ongoing bodily activities aids voluntary
    regulation of bodily states.
  • Biofeedback is often recommended to an individual
    who would like to learn to control his or her
    high blood pressure.
  • This Electronic yoga is described on Coon, page
    441.

22
General Adaptation Syndrome (G.A.S.)
  • a consistent series of bodily reactions to
    prolonged stress, occurring in three stages
    (alarm, resistance, and exhaustion).
  • In the alarm stage, the body mobilizes its
    resources to cope with added stress. The
    pituitary gland signals the adrenal gland to
    produce more adrenaline and noradrenaline. In
    the first phases of the alarm reaction, people
    have such symptoms as headache, fever, fatigue,
    sore muscles, shortness of breath, diarrhea,
    upset stomach, loss of appetite, and a lack of
    energy.
  • In the resistance stage, bodily adjustments to
    stress stabilize. Outwardly, everything seems
    normal.
  • In the exhaustion stage, the bodys resources are
    drained and stress hormones are depleted. Unless
    a way of relieving stress is found, the result
    will be a psychosomatic disease, a serious loss
    of health, or complete collapse. (Nevid, pgs.
    459-461 Coon, p. 443)

23
Stress Management
  • The application of behavioral strategies to
    reduce stress and improve coping skills.
  • Exercise, meditation, and relaxation are
    important factors in stress management because
    they relieve the physical tension of stress.
  • (Nevid, pgs. 475-478 Coon, p. 448)

24
Type A Personalities vs. Type B Personalities
  • Type A is a personality type with an elevated
    risk of heart disease characterized by time
    urgency, anger, competitiveness, and hostility.
  • Type B personality includes all types other than
    type A. A low cardiac risk personality.
  • Nevid, pgs. 455-456 Coon, pgs. 441-442
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