Title: Unit 12: Abnormal Psych
1Unit 12 Abnormal Psych
2Essential Question
- What is a psychological disorder, what are the
causes and symptoms of various psychological
disorders, and how do psychologists use the
DSM-IV to diagnose them?
3Unit 12 (A)
- Perspectives on Psychological Disorders
4Do Now (Discussion)
- What does it mean to be normal?
- What separates normal from abnormal?
- Should we use these labels?
5Perspectives on Psychological Disorders
- Psychologists define disorder as deviant,
distressful, and dysfunctional behavior. - The definitions of these words vary over time as
well as across cultures.
6Perspectives on Psychological Disorders
- Psychologists use The Medical Model to understand
and diagnose psychological disorders. - The Medical Model The concept that psychological
diseases/disorders have physical causes. Also,
they can be diagnosed based on physical symptoms
and treated through therapy and medication.
7Perspectives on Psychological Disorders
- Biopsychosocial Approach
- Modern approach stating that disorders are caused
by a combination of genetic predisposition,
psychological traits, and cultural experiences.
8Classifying Psychological Disorders
- How?
- Psychologists use the fifth edition of the
American Psychiatric Associations Diagnostic and
Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders (DSM-5) to
diagnose disorders based on observable symptoms.
9Classifying Psychological Disorders
- Why?
- The DSM gives psychologists and insurance
companies a common language to use when
organizing treatment and insurance plans. Many
insurance companies require a DSM diagnosis when
considering how much financial assistance to give
a patient for their treatment.
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11Labeling Psychological Disorders
- There is a lot of controversy surrounding the use
of the DSM because it puts labels on people.
Labels lead to preconceptions and bias that often
create ethical and moral dilemmas such as
insanity pleas in serious crime cases.
123 Ds of Psychological Disorders
- Deviance
- Distress
- Dysfunction
13Classification
- 5 Axes of DSM-IV
- Axis 1 Clinical Disorders
- Axis 2 Personality Disorders/Mental Retardation
- Axis 3 Medical Disorders
- Axis 4 Psychosocial Stressors
- Axis 5 Global Assessment of Functioning (GAF)
(1-100)
14Code Global Assessment of Functioning (GAF) Scale Description of Functioning
91 - 100 Person has no problems OR has superior functioning in several areas OR is admired and sought after by others due to positive qualities
81 - 90 Person has few or no symptoms. Good functioning in several areas. No more than "everyday" problems or concerns.
71 - 80 Person has symptoms/problems, but they are temporary, expectable reactions to stressors. There is no more than slight impairment in any area of psychological functioning.
61 - 70 Mild symptoms in one area OR difficulty in one of the following social, occupational, or school functioning. BUT, the person is generally functioning pretty well and has some meaningful interpersonal relationships.
51 - 60 Moderate symptoms OR moderate difficulty in one of the following social, occupational, or school functioning.
41 - 50 Serious symptoms OR serious impairment in one of the following social, occupational, or school functioning.
31 - 40 Some impairment in reality testing OR impairment in speech and communication OR serious impairment in several of the following occupational or school functioning, interpersonal relationships, judgment, thinking, or mood.
21 - 30 Presence of hallucinations or delusions which influence behavior OR serious impairment in ability to communicate with others OR serious impairment in judgment OR inability to function in almost all areas.
11 - 20 There is some danger of harm to self or others OR occasional failure to maintain personal hygiene OR the person is virtually unable to communicate with others due to being incoherent or mute.
1 - 10 Persistent danger of harming self or others OR persistent inability to maintain personal hygiene OR person has made a serious attempt at suicide.
15Unit 12 (B)
16Do Now (Discussion)
- What is anxiety?
-
- How is it different from worry or fear?
17Anxiety Disorders
- Anxiety disorders are psychological disorders
characterized by distressing, persistent anxiety
or maladaptive behaviors meant to reduce anxiety. - People with anxiety disorders feel persistently
and uncontrollably tense and apprehensive, with
no apparent cause.
18Anxiety Disorders
- Generalized Anxiety Disorder - unexplainable and
continuous tenseness and uneasiness. - Panic Disorder - unexplainable sudden episodes of
intense dread. - Phobias - irrational and intense fear of a
specific object or situation.
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20Anxiety Disorder
- Obsessive Compulsive Disorder (OCD) -
unexplainable repetitive thoughts or actions. - Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD) - lingering
memories, nightmares, and other symptoms after a
severely threatening, uncontrollable event.
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23Anxiety Disorders
- What causes them?
- Freud
- manifestation of mental energy associated with
the discharge of repressed impulses - Learning Perspective
- product of fear conditioning, stimulus
generalization, reinforcement of fearful
behaviors, and observational learning of others
fear.
24Anxiety Disorders
- Biological Perspective
- consider the roles that life-threatening animals,
objects, or situations played in natural
selection and evolution genetic inheritance of a
high level of emotional reactivity and abnormal
responses in the brains fear circuits.
25- Anxiety Disorders
- http//www.youtube.com/watch?v_Cr7IomSy8s
- OCD
- http//www.youtube.com/watch?vtPFQMRx2l3Y
- Dogs and PTSD
- http//content.time.com/time/video/player/0,32068,
671301612001_2030797,00.html - Top 10 Phobias
- http//www.youtube.com/watch?vhsr8JsUr6kU
26Unit 12 (C)
Day 3
27Somatoform Disorders
28Do Now (Discussion)
- Have you ever felt ill or as though you had a
serious medical issue only to find that nothing
was wrong with you?
29Somatoform Disorders
- Psychological disorder in which the symptoms take
a somatic (bodily) form without apparent physical
cause, or medically unexplained illnesses. - Somatoform disorders are one of the most common
problems that result in doctors visits.
30What causes them?
- Stress is a probable trigger for somatoform
disorders. Stress can manifest itself in a
somantic (or bodily) form without there being
physical causes. - People under stress are also more likely to be
more bothered by normal bodily sensations, such
as a slight headache.
31Somatoform Disorders and Culture
- Culture plays a large role in peoples physical
complaints. In China, for example, psychological
explanations for anxiety and depression are less
socially acceptable than physical symptoms of
distress.
32According to a cross national survey that
screened 90,000 people for major depressive
episodes using a standard set of questions 19.2
of Americans have experienced a depressive
episode, while only 6.5 of people in China have.
33Conversion Disorder
- A rare somatoform disorder in which a person
experiences very specific genuine physical
symptoms for which no physiological basis can be
found. - Anxiety is presumably converted into a physical
symptom.
34Conversion Disorders
- Conversion disorders, while mystifying, are no
less real than physiological disorders. - People with conversion disorders who claim to
have lost sensation in certain areas have been
known to be unaffected by pins being stuck into
them.
35Hypochondriasis
- A somatoform disorder in which a person
interprets normal physical sensations as symptoms
of a disease.
36Unit 12 (D)
37Dissociative Disorders
38Dissociative Disorders
- Disorders in which conscious awareness becomes
separated or dissociated from previous memories,
thoughts, and feelings.
39What is dissociation?
- Dissociation occurs when a persons consciousness
is separated from painful memories, feelings, and
thoughts. - It tends to be caused by extremely stressful
situations or in a response to some sort of
trauma.
40Dissociative Identity Disorder (D.I.D.)
- Dissociative identity disorder is often referred
to as multiple personality disorder. - A person with D.I.D. will have two or more
distinct identities with different personalities.
Often the original personality claims to be
unaware of the others.
41What causes D.I.D.?
- 98-99 percent of individuals with D.I.D. have
recognized personal histories of recurring,
overpowering, and often life-threatening
disturbances at a sensitive developmental stage
of childhood, usually before the age of 9.
42- http//www.youtube.com/watch?vweLvkZGr9Tw
- http//www.youtube.com/watch?v11oD_8jYy0c
43Is it legitimate?
- Is D.I.D. a genuine disorder or is it an
extension of our normal capacity for personality
shifts?
44Maybe Not
- Nicholas Spanos asked college students to pretend
they were accused murderers being examined by a
psychiatrist. When hypnotized, most students
expressed a second personality. -
45Maybe Not
- Nicholas Spanos
- Are dissociative identities more extreme versions
of selves we present? - Are people with D.I.D. simply prone to fantasy
and convincing themselves they have other
personalities? - Most people with D.I.D. are highly
hypnotizablewhat does this relationship mean?
46Maybe Not
- D.I.D. is strangely localized by time and space.
After DID was first entered in the DSM,the amount
of cases in America skyrocketed. - D.I.D. is more rare in Britain than it is in
America, and in Japan and India, it is
essentially nonexistent. - Could it be a cultural phenomenon?
47Maybe
- Handedness sometimes switches with personalities
- Ophthalmologists have detected shifting visual
acuity and eye muscle balance with personalities - People with D.I.D. have heightened activity in
brain areas associated with control and the
inhibition or traumatic memories.
48Unit 12 (E)
Day 5
49Do Now
- 1. I do things slowly.
- 2. My future seems hopeless.
- 3. It is hard for me to concentrate on reading.
- 4. The pleasure and joy has gone out of my life.
- 5. I have difficulty making decisions.
- 6. I have lost interest in aspects of life that
used to be important to me. - 7. I feel sad, blue, and unhappy.
- 8. I am agitated and keep moving around.
- 9. I feel fatigued.
- 10. It takes great effort for me to do simple
things.
- 11. I feel that I am a guilty person who deserves
to be punished. - 12. I feel like a failure.
- 13. I feel lifeless -- more dead than alive.
- 14. My sleep has been disturbed -- too little,
too much, or broken sleep. - 15. I spend time thinking about HOW I might kill
myself. - 16. I feel trapped or caught.
- 17. I feel depressed even when good things happen
to me. - 18. Without trying to diet, I have lost, or
gained, weight.
50Mood Disorders
51What are mood disorders?
- Mood disorders are characterized by emotional
extremes.
52Mood disorders come in two principal forms
- Major depressive disorder- prolonged hopelessness
and lethargy
- Bipolar disorder- altering between depression and
mania (an overexcited, hyperactive state.)
53Major Depressive Disorder
- Major depressive disorder is a mood disorder in
which a person experiences, in absence of drugs
or a medical condition, two or more weeks of
significantly depressed moods, feelings of
worthlessness, and diminished interest or
pleasure in most activities.
54How common is it?
- It is the number one reason people seek mental
health services - 13 of U.S. adults have been plagued by
depression at some point - In any given year depressive episodes effect 5.8
percent of men and 9.5 percent of women
worldwide.
55What are some main causes?
- Response to past and current loss. (25 of people
diagnosed with depression are struggling with the
emotional impact of loss.) - Other life events
- A persons biology/brain chemistry
56Bipolar Disorder
- A mood disorder in which the person alternates
between the lethargy of depression and the
overexcited state of mania.
57- Depressive phase- fatigue and decreased energy,
difficulty concentrating, feeling hopeless or
irritable, feeling sad or empty, loss of
appetite, loss of interest in daily activities.
- Manic phase- racing thoughts, elation, little
need for sleep, fewer sexual inhibitions. Speech
is often loud, flighty, and hard to interrupt.
May need protection from poor judgement, but
creativity is often fueled.
58True of false?
- 1. Few behavioral and cognitive changes accompany
depression. - 2. Depression is widespread
- 3. Compared with women, men are nearly twice as
vulnerable to major depression. - 4. Most major depressive episodes so not end
without assistance. - 5. Stressful events often precede depression
- 6. With each new generation, depression is
striking earlier and affecting more people.
59Genetic Influences of Mood Disorders
- Mood disorders are often genetic
- The heritability of major depression is about
35-40 - Risk goes up if one has a parent or sibling with
a mood disorder. - Risk goes up even higher if one has an identical
twin with a mood disorder
60The Depressed Brain
- Less activity in the brain
- The left frontal lobe is likely to be inactive
- Frontal lobes tend to be smaller
- The hippocampus is vulnerable to stress related
damage - Norepinephrine, which increases arousal and
boosts mood, is scarce. - Serotonin, which also boosts mood, is scarce as
well.
61The Social-Cognitive Perspective
- Learned helplessness result in self-defeating
beliefs, and can ultimately result in depression.
- Women are more susceptible to learned
helplessness, which factors into their higher
risk for depression.
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63Depressions Vicious Cycle
- When people feel down they are more likely to
remember bad experiences and think negatively
64Abnormal Psychology
65Venture into the mind of a Schizophrenia
sufferer. This is made to raise awareness about
mental illness. This is how they see and hear the
world. Don't turn your back on them just because
they're different. Put yourself in their shoes
and experience what they experience
everyday. Alone but never alone
Starring Alicia Gall Music By Alexander
Kokic-Schmidt
66 HOW MUCH DO YOU KNOW ABOUT SCHIZOPHRENIA?
- 1. Schizophrenia is caused by poor parenting.
- True False Dont know
- 2. Schizophrenia is caused by street drugs.
- True False Dont know
- 3. People who have schizophrenia are usually
violent and dangerous. - True False Dont know
- 4. People with schizophrenia have multiple or
split personalities. - True False Dont know
- 5. Schizophrenia can be successfully treated.
- True False Dont know
67TRUE FALSE ANSWERS
- 4 People with schizophrenia have multiple or
split - personalities-False.
- People with schizophrenia are split from reality,
rather than having a multiple or split
personality. - 5. Schizophrenia can be successfully
treated-True. - Schizophrenia cannot be cured, but the symptoms
can be treated.
- 1. Schizophrenia is caused by poor
parenting-False. - The cause of schizophrenia is not known. However,
it is definitely an organic (physical,
biological) disease and is the fault of no one. - 2. Schizophrenia is caused by street drugs-False.
- Schizophrenia is not caused by street drugs. Some
researchers believe, however, that street drugs
can precipitate schizophrenia in an individual
who has a predisposition to develop the disease. - 3. People who have schizophrenia are usually
violent and dangerous-False. - People who have schizophrenia tend to be
vulnerable, fragile people. If violent, the
violence is most often directed towards
themselves suicide.
68Schizophrenia Split Mind
- Schizophrenia Serious mental disorder
(psychosis) characterized by thought
disturbances, hallucinations, anxiety, emotional
withdrawal, and delusions. - Psychosis Disorder that is characterized with a
break from reality.
- delusions False beliefs of being persecuted
(being plotted against), grandiose, or being
controlled by others. -
- hallucinations False sensory perception such as
hearing voices or seeing images that are not
there.
69Positive Symptoms
Negative Symptoms
- Absence of appropriate behaviors
- Flattened affect
- Anhedonia Patients may fail to experience or
express pleasure in things that they once found
enjoyable. - Reduced speech.
- Lack of initiative Also called avolition.
- Presence of inappropriate behaviors
- Delusions
- Hallucinations
- Disorganized speech
- Disorganised or catatonic behavior
70Subtypes of Schizophrenia
- Categorized by
- Disorganized and delusional
- thinking.
- Disturbed perceptions.
- Inappropriate emotions and actions.
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72Theories About the Cause of Schizophrenic
Disorders
- The dopamine hypothesis, which is an older
theory, is believed to be a biological cause of
schizophrenia where high levels of dopamine are
found. It is also the most popular theory. - Some of the antipsychotic drugs used to treat the
disorder often result in lower levels of
dopamine. They often cause negative side effects
for the patients such as muscle tremors or
stiffness (tardive dyskinesia) - Schizophrenia is believed to be genetically
influenced - people who are related to someone with
schizophrenia tend to have a higher risk of
getting it the closer the genetic relationship.
(identical twins have 1 in 2 chance, yet the
general population is 1 in 100)
73Environmental
- Environmental factors may increase chances of
developing schizophrenia in people that already
have genetic predisposition. - Double binds is when a person is given
contradictory messages so they can not make their
own rational decisions. - Diathesis-stress model is another influence. It
can be applied to schizophrenia and other
psychological disorders. - Environmental stressors trigger the biological
predisposition for the mental illness to release
itself. This can explain why some twins both
don't have schizophrenia. - Schizophrenia affects young people as they mature
into adults. It affects men and women equally,
but men tend to suffer from it more severely than
women.
74Lesson Activities Divided Minds
The likelihood of an individual suffering from
schizophrenia is 50 if their identical twin has
the disease.
75Review
- Do you think schizophrenia is affected by nature
or nurture? Why or why not? Give specific
examples.
76Abnormal Psychology
77Do Now
Personality Disorder Video
78Defining Personality Disorders
Personality Disorders are maladaptive patterns of
behavior that impair social functioning including
- Distorted thinking patterns
- Problematic emotional responses
- Over or under regulated impulse control
- Interpersonal difficulties
79Cluster A- Odd Behavior
All share some of the common symptoms seen in
schizophrenia
- Paranoid Personality Disorder
- Irrational suspicions and mistrust of others
-
- Schizoid Personality Disorder
- Lack of interest in social relationships
- Schizotypal Personality Disorder
- odd behavior or thinking
80Cluster B- Dramatic
- Histrionic Personality Disorder
- Shallow or exaggerated emotions with attention
seeking behavior even it is damaging. - Narcissistic Personality Disorder
- Grandiosity, need for admiration and lack of
empathy - Borderline Personality Disorder (video)
- Unstable relationships, self image, identity, and
behavior
81Symptoms of Antisocial Personality Disorder
Cluster B- Dramatic
- Antisocial Personality Disorder, sociopath,
psychopath - 70 more prevalent in men
- Failure to conform to social norms with respect
to lawful behaviors as indicated by repeatedly
performing acts that are grounds for arrest - Deceitfulness, as indicated by repeated lying,
use of aliases, or conning others for personal
profit or pleasure - Impulsivity or failure to plan ahead
- Irritability and aggressiveness, as indicated by
repeated physical fights or assaults - Reckless disregard for safety of self or others
- Consistent irresponsibility, as indicated by
repeated failure to sustain consistent work
behavior or honor financial obligations - Lack of remorse, as indicated by being
indifferent to or rationalizing having hurt,
mistreated, or stolen from another - Children with Conduct Disorder probably won't
develop antisocial personality disorder, but many
people with antisocial personality disorder had
Conduct Disorder as a child (emotional and
behavioral problems)
82Cluster B- Dramatic Cause of Antisocial
Personality Disorder
- The main cause of antisocial personality disorder
is unknown. - Genetic and environmental factors like abuse and
abandonment, are believed to contribute to the
disorder. - Children with Conduct Disorder probably won't
develop antisocial personality disorder, but many
people with antisocial personality disorder had
Conduct Disorder as a child (emotional and
behavioral problems)
83Cluster C- Anxious
- Avoidant Personality Disorder
- social inhibition, feeling inadequate
- Dependent Personality Disorder
- general psychological dependence on others
- Obsessive Compulsive Personality Disorder
- preoccupation with orderliness, perfectionism,
and mental and interpersonal control, at the
expense of flexibility, openness, and efficiency
84Review
- http//www.funtrivia.com/playquiz/quiz3009062272eb
8.html - http//psychcentral.com/blog/archives/2010/11/30/p
ersonality-disorders-shakeup-in-dsm-5/
85Abnormal Psychology
86Rates of Psychological Disorders
87Crime Rates
The prevalence of mental health disorders among
females in the juvenile justice system is higher
than males. What do you think about this?
14.2
29.6
14..9
6.4
11.9
88 Students Silenced by Mental Health Stigma
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91Discussion