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Disease of the mind.
Depart from what is normal.
   Deviation from social norms

   Failure to function adequately

   Deviation from ideal mental health




    Definitions of
      Abnormality
What is it?
 Going against accepted codes of behaviour


Examples?
 OCD


Limitations
 Context & Extremity: Situation there in
 Dominant Beliefs: Agree/Disagree
 Era-Dependant: Fashion/Trendy
 Cultures relativity
 Legal system assumes you are responsible for your
  own action


 Definitions of
   Abnormality
What is it?
 Not being able to follow normal pattern of behaviour

 Observer Discomfort- Discomfort or distress on others

 Unpredictability- Don’t act how they usually act

 Maladaptive- Badly adaptive behaviour

 Irrationality- Doing something out of the blue

Example?
 Depression

 Agoraphobia: Don’t like tight spaces

 Schizophrenia(Split-Mind): The unit of ‘You’ is jumbled up.

Limitations
 Context

 May not be linked to a disorder

 Cultural relativity




 Definitions of
   Abnormality
What is it?
 Not in touch with own identity & feelings
 Not resistant to stress
 Not focused on the future
 Not function as individual
 Not show empathy & understanding towards others.


Example?
 Not caring for others pain


Limitations
 Western vs. Collectivists culture
 Few would match Jahod’s criteria



 Definitions of
   Abnormality
Situation                Deviation     Failure to   Deviation     Explanation
                         from Social   Function     from Mental
                         Norms         Adequately   Health
Stranger who sits next
to you.
                            YES          YES                      Observer Discomfort

Child Abuser
                            YES                       YES         No empathy

Child Genius
                            YES                                   Doesn’t accept normal behaviour

Born again Christian
                            YES                                   Dominate beliefs

Talk to their pets
                            YES          YES                      Observer Discomfort

Stressed workers, take
time of work
                                         YES          YES         Maladaptive. Doesn’t focus on future

Person In a dead end
job
                                                      YES         Not reaching potential

Person who believes
they are being watched
                                         YES                      Maladaptive. Irrational

Someone who washes
their hands a lot
                            YES          YES          YES         Not common behaviour. Irrational.
                                                                  Maladaptive. Lack of reality




       Definitions of
         Abnormality
 The biological approach: Malfunction in the
  brain system. Treated same as the psychical
  condition. Changed either caused by the
  structure or function.
Study: Watson et al (1998)- Isolating monkeys
to their social groups.
 The psychodynamic approach: The forces that
  drives into it.
 The behavioural approach: what we learn
 The cognitive approach: human memory.
  What we think

    Four Models of
      Abnormality
   Strength: Use of brain scan which shows
       everything in the brain. Drug treatment
       targets it & it is very effective

      Weakness: Needs more explanation & details
       from both sides. Drugs don’t work for eating
       disorders or phobias.




Biological Approach
   Schizophrenia: Take Antipsychotics which
       reduces the activity of the brain
       neurotransmitters dopamine.
      Depression: Therapies are highly effective
       although Prozac drug is used. Which
       increases the activity of the brain
       neurotransmitter serotonin.
      Electroconvulsive Therapy (ECT): small
       current which goes pass the brain. Works well
       with depression.


Biological Approach
 Antipsychotic Drugs
    Antidepressant Drugs
    Anti-anxiety Drugs
   Strength:
    Effectiveness
    Ease of Use
   Limitations
    Placebo Effects
    Tackles symptoms rather than problem
    Side effects




Biological Approach
   Genetic Inheritance: Passed from parents. Low
       Concordance (Phobias).
       High Concordance rates (Schizophrenia).
      Biochemistry: shows levels of hormones &
       neurotransmitters in the brain.
       High levels of neurotransmitters serotonin- anxiety
       Low levels – depression
      Neuroanatomy: Structure of brain.
       Schizophrenics have enlarged spaces, where
       there's a shortage of tissue.
      Viral Infection: Exposure to viruses in the
       womb e.g. schizophrenia.


Biological Approach
Sigmund Freud introduced this:
 Id – Desire/ cannot control
 Ego – Balancer
 Superego – Conscious


    If Id is dominate, you want pleasure.
    If superego is dominant they might obsessive.
    Ego is the mechanism

    For example: If you hide something, you try to
     put it in the unconscious part of the brain. Which
     causes Denial/ displacement.


    Psychodynamic
         Approach
    Oral Stage: Under or over fed. 0-18 months
    Anal stage: Controls pleasure of having a shit. (OCD) 18 months- 3 years
    Phallic Stage: The sexes discover other genders. 4-5 years
    Latency Period: Desire for themselves is gone & for others start. 5- puberty
    Genital Stage: puberty onwards
    If these are not met, then it remains unresolved. When you get
     stressed, you go back to doing it.

The Oedipus Complex- Boys
 Developed more for boys
 As there's psychical contact with moth & has desire for mother.
  Father seems to be a threat so they stick to their Fathers morals.
The Electra Complex- Girls
 When a girl depends on not having a penis, creating penis envy &
  wants affection of father, when closer to mother.



    Psychodynamic
         Approach
    Mental Disorders result form psychological rather than
     physical cause: Something else that goes in the brain. The
     thought & cannot physically see what it is, but knows there’s
     something in it.
    Unresolved conflicts cause mental disorders: Conscious &
     unconscious parts of the brain causes anxiety when they
     don’t work together
    Early experiences cause mental disorder: Experiences from
     childhood effect you, when reaching teenage hood( Freud's
     Psychosexual Development)
    Unconscious motivation cause mental disorders: Id- Control
     over desire e.g. Rapists. Ego-Balancer. Superego- Knows
     what's right & wrong. Not knowing the cause of change in
     behaviour.


    Psychodynamic
         Approach
    Strengths:
    Supported by Aimsworths in the Strange Situation & the
     childhood experiences & categories the child personality
     stage.
    Significance of repressed materials & unconscious
     processes widely accepted.
    Evidence: Freud used case studies of Adult with neurosis &
     linked the disorders back to the early experiences.

    Limitations:
    Abstract concepts- difficult to research & define.
    Sexism- theory is overbalanced.
    Lack of research evidence- Theory is difficult to prove
     when tested.



    Psychodynamic
         Approach
   Dream Analysis

   Free Association

   Projective Tests




Psychodynamic
     Approach
    To uncover the conflicts repressed in the
     conscious mind
    Therapist analyse the obvious content of the
     dreams & interpreters the underlying
     meaning which is called ‘latent content’




    Psychodynamic
         Approach
    Link memories & thought together extending
     back to childhood & to lower ego defences so
     repressed material can be assessed
    Therapists encourage clients to associate
     thoughts with anything that enters their
     mind, to encourage reflection & to identify
     key terms & ideas.




    Psychodynamic
         Approach
    Uncover projected feelings & beliefs linked to
     underlying anxieties
    Clients are asked what inkblots shapes mean
     to them, and therapist hope to find particular
     themes & anxiety




    Psychodynamic
         Approach
   Classical Conditioning: Where the phobia
         develops

        Operant Conditioning: Positive Reinforcement
         & Negative Reinforcement

        Social Learning Theory: Observe other
         behaviour




Behavioural Approach
   Example: Phobias- learn to get scared of
         something through experiences
        Support: Watson & Ryder. Reflex- clash of
         cymbals. Associated with rabbit. Scared of
         Cymbals not rabbits. (Nurture)
        Undermine: Preparedness(Seligman) Fear is
         evolved as spiders are dangerous, so danger
         is feared. Genetic Response. ( Nature). He
         believes that its from genetics as it is from
         Nature that its already biologically
         programed, which can be triggered.


Behavioural Approach
   Example: Anxiety & Depression occurs when
         you want to behaviour in a way to get
         attention
        Support: Explains certain disorders e.g.
         depression, from positive reinforcement &
         negative Reinforcements as you get rewired
         from early age & it carries on.
        Undermine: Reductionist- ignores other
         aspects of psychology. Shows ways you can
         get mental illness from.


Behavioural Approach
   Example: OCD, Eating disorders, child abuse,
         role models.
        Support: Emphasis on learning environment.
         Who you are influenced by
        Undermine: Kendall & Hammen (1995) don’t
         know if it’s the environment or from genetics.
         Nature & Nurture. Where Nature is the
         environment it is by eating e.g. role models
         they see & follow, where Nurture by the
         influence of the parents.


Behavioural Approach
   Abnormality is caused by faulty thinking

      Ellis A-B-C Model

      The Individual is in control




Cognitive Approach
   Distorts the beliefs on yourself.
      Automatically have negative thoughts
      Schemata: what you think of a certain thing.
      Where you have an opinion of yourself and
       over exaggerate
      Example: I always fall ( Not always true)
      Leads to depression/Anxiety




Cognitive Approach
   A: Activating Event, where something
       happens
      B: Beliefs about ‘A’, which goes through
       rational/irrational thoughts
      C: Consequences, where desirable emotions/
       undesirable emotions leads to the behaviour




Cognitive Approach
   You make decisions having the right
       thoughts & behaviours & could get out
       of abnormality




Cognitive Approach
Strength
    Clear evidence of faulty thinking & beliefs in
     depressions & anxiety disorders ( Clark 1986)
    Therapies based on this model are very
     effective for depression & anxiety disorder
   Limitation
    Blames the patient not the situational factors
    Consequence (Depression) rather than cause(Faulty
       Thinking)
      Faulty thinking leads to mental illness


Cognitive Approach
   All or none thinking (Dichotomous Thinking):
       Classifies either 1of 2 success and failure
      Arbitrary Inferences: Drawing negative conclusions
       without having the evidence to support them
      Overgeneralisation: Incorrect conclusions are drawn
       from little evidence
      Catastrophising: Where normal events are perceived
       as disasters
      Selective Abstraction: Where person pays attention to
       certain features of an event & ignores other features
       that might lead to a different conclusion
      Excessive Responsibility: Taking a lot of responsibility
       & blame things which happen.


Cognitive Approach

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Psychology - Psychopathology

  • 1. Disease of the mind. Depart from what is normal.
  • 2. Deviation from social norms  Failure to function adequately  Deviation from ideal mental health Definitions of Abnormality
  • 3. What is it?  Going against accepted codes of behaviour Examples?  OCD Limitations  Context & Extremity: Situation there in  Dominant Beliefs: Agree/Disagree  Era-Dependant: Fashion/Trendy  Cultures relativity  Legal system assumes you are responsible for your own action Definitions of Abnormality
  • 4. What is it?  Not being able to follow normal pattern of behaviour  Observer Discomfort- Discomfort or distress on others  Unpredictability- Don’t act how they usually act  Maladaptive- Badly adaptive behaviour  Irrationality- Doing something out of the blue Example?  Depression  Agoraphobia: Don’t like tight spaces  Schizophrenia(Split-Mind): The unit of ‘You’ is jumbled up. Limitations  Context  May not be linked to a disorder  Cultural relativity Definitions of Abnormality
  • 5. What is it?  Not in touch with own identity & feelings  Not resistant to stress  Not focused on the future  Not function as individual  Not show empathy & understanding towards others. Example?  Not caring for others pain Limitations  Western vs. Collectivists culture  Few would match Jahod’s criteria Definitions of Abnormality
  • 6. Situation Deviation Failure to Deviation Explanation from Social Function from Mental Norms Adequately Health Stranger who sits next to you. YES YES Observer Discomfort Child Abuser YES YES No empathy Child Genius YES Doesn’t accept normal behaviour Born again Christian YES Dominate beliefs Talk to their pets YES YES Observer Discomfort Stressed workers, take time of work YES YES Maladaptive. Doesn’t focus on future Person In a dead end job YES Not reaching potential Person who believes they are being watched YES Maladaptive. Irrational Someone who washes their hands a lot YES YES YES Not common behaviour. Irrational. Maladaptive. Lack of reality Definitions of Abnormality
  • 7.  The biological approach: Malfunction in the brain system. Treated same as the psychical condition. Changed either caused by the structure or function. Study: Watson et al (1998)- Isolating monkeys to their social groups.  The psychodynamic approach: The forces that drives into it.  The behavioural approach: what we learn  The cognitive approach: human memory. What we think Four Models of Abnormality
  • 8. Strength: Use of brain scan which shows everything in the brain. Drug treatment targets it & it is very effective  Weakness: Needs more explanation & details from both sides. Drugs don’t work for eating disorders or phobias. Biological Approach
  • 9. Schizophrenia: Take Antipsychotics which reduces the activity of the brain neurotransmitters dopamine.  Depression: Therapies are highly effective although Prozac drug is used. Which increases the activity of the brain neurotransmitter serotonin.  Electroconvulsive Therapy (ECT): small current which goes pass the brain. Works well with depression. Biological Approach
  • 10.  Antipsychotic Drugs  Antidepressant Drugs  Anti-anxiety Drugs Strength:  Effectiveness  Ease of Use Limitations  Placebo Effects  Tackles symptoms rather than problem  Side effects Biological Approach
  • 11. Genetic Inheritance: Passed from parents. Low Concordance (Phobias). High Concordance rates (Schizophrenia).  Biochemistry: shows levels of hormones & neurotransmitters in the brain. High levels of neurotransmitters serotonin- anxiety Low levels – depression  Neuroanatomy: Structure of brain. Schizophrenics have enlarged spaces, where there's a shortage of tissue.  Viral Infection: Exposure to viruses in the womb e.g. schizophrenia. Biological Approach
  • 12. Sigmund Freud introduced this:  Id – Desire/ cannot control  Ego – Balancer  Superego – Conscious  If Id is dominate, you want pleasure.  If superego is dominant they might obsessive.  Ego is the mechanism  For example: If you hide something, you try to put it in the unconscious part of the brain. Which causes Denial/ displacement. Psychodynamic Approach
  • 13. Oral Stage: Under or over fed. 0-18 months  Anal stage: Controls pleasure of having a shit. (OCD) 18 months- 3 years  Phallic Stage: The sexes discover other genders. 4-5 years  Latency Period: Desire for themselves is gone & for others start. 5- puberty  Genital Stage: puberty onwards  If these are not met, then it remains unresolved. When you get stressed, you go back to doing it. The Oedipus Complex- Boys  Developed more for boys  As there's psychical contact with moth & has desire for mother. Father seems to be a threat so they stick to their Fathers morals. The Electra Complex- Girls  When a girl depends on not having a penis, creating penis envy & wants affection of father, when closer to mother. Psychodynamic Approach
  • 14. Mental Disorders result form psychological rather than physical cause: Something else that goes in the brain. The thought & cannot physically see what it is, but knows there’s something in it.  Unresolved conflicts cause mental disorders: Conscious & unconscious parts of the brain causes anxiety when they don’t work together  Early experiences cause mental disorder: Experiences from childhood effect you, when reaching teenage hood( Freud's Psychosexual Development)  Unconscious motivation cause mental disorders: Id- Control over desire e.g. Rapists. Ego-Balancer. Superego- Knows what's right & wrong. Not knowing the cause of change in behaviour. Psychodynamic Approach
  • 15. Strengths:  Supported by Aimsworths in the Strange Situation & the childhood experiences & categories the child personality stage.  Significance of repressed materials & unconscious processes widely accepted.  Evidence: Freud used case studies of Adult with neurosis & linked the disorders back to the early experiences.  Limitations:  Abstract concepts- difficult to research & define.  Sexism- theory is overbalanced.  Lack of research evidence- Theory is difficult to prove when tested. Psychodynamic Approach
  • 16. Dream Analysis  Free Association  Projective Tests Psychodynamic Approach
  • 17. To uncover the conflicts repressed in the conscious mind  Therapist analyse the obvious content of the dreams & interpreters the underlying meaning which is called ‘latent content’ Psychodynamic Approach
  • 18. Link memories & thought together extending back to childhood & to lower ego defences so repressed material can be assessed  Therapists encourage clients to associate thoughts with anything that enters their mind, to encourage reflection & to identify key terms & ideas. Psychodynamic Approach
  • 19. Uncover projected feelings & beliefs linked to underlying anxieties  Clients are asked what inkblots shapes mean to them, and therapist hope to find particular themes & anxiety Psychodynamic Approach
  • 20. Classical Conditioning: Where the phobia develops  Operant Conditioning: Positive Reinforcement & Negative Reinforcement  Social Learning Theory: Observe other behaviour Behavioural Approach
  • 21. Example: Phobias- learn to get scared of something through experiences  Support: Watson & Ryder. Reflex- clash of cymbals. Associated with rabbit. Scared of Cymbals not rabbits. (Nurture)  Undermine: Preparedness(Seligman) Fear is evolved as spiders are dangerous, so danger is feared. Genetic Response. ( Nature). He believes that its from genetics as it is from Nature that its already biologically programed, which can be triggered. Behavioural Approach
  • 22. Example: Anxiety & Depression occurs when you want to behaviour in a way to get attention  Support: Explains certain disorders e.g. depression, from positive reinforcement & negative Reinforcements as you get rewired from early age & it carries on.  Undermine: Reductionist- ignores other aspects of psychology. Shows ways you can get mental illness from. Behavioural Approach
  • 23. Example: OCD, Eating disorders, child abuse, role models.  Support: Emphasis on learning environment. Who you are influenced by  Undermine: Kendall & Hammen (1995) don’t know if it’s the environment or from genetics. Nature & Nurture. Where Nature is the environment it is by eating e.g. role models they see & follow, where Nurture by the influence of the parents. Behavioural Approach
  • 24. Abnormality is caused by faulty thinking  Ellis A-B-C Model  The Individual is in control Cognitive Approach
  • 25. Distorts the beliefs on yourself.  Automatically have negative thoughts  Schemata: what you think of a certain thing.  Where you have an opinion of yourself and over exaggerate  Example: I always fall ( Not always true)  Leads to depression/Anxiety Cognitive Approach
  • 26. A: Activating Event, where something happens  B: Beliefs about ‘A’, which goes through rational/irrational thoughts  C: Consequences, where desirable emotions/ undesirable emotions leads to the behaviour Cognitive Approach
  • 27. You make decisions having the right thoughts & behaviours & could get out of abnormality Cognitive Approach
  • 28. Strength  Clear evidence of faulty thinking & beliefs in depressions & anxiety disorders ( Clark 1986)  Therapies based on this model are very effective for depression & anxiety disorder Limitation  Blames the patient not the situational factors  Consequence (Depression) rather than cause(Faulty Thinking)  Faulty thinking leads to mental illness Cognitive Approach
  • 29. All or none thinking (Dichotomous Thinking): Classifies either 1of 2 success and failure  Arbitrary Inferences: Drawing negative conclusions without having the evidence to support them  Overgeneralisation: Incorrect conclusions are drawn from little evidence  Catastrophising: Where normal events are perceived as disasters  Selective Abstraction: Where person pays attention to certain features of an event & ignores other features that might lead to a different conclusion  Excessive Responsibility: Taking a lot of responsibility & blame things which happen. Cognitive Approach