PSY1002 Chapter 14 Part 1
PSY1002 Chapter 14 Part 1
PSY1002 Chapter 14 Part 1
PSYCHOLOGY II
Chapter 14 – Part 1
Psychological Disorders I
Bahçeşehir University
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Are you normal?
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Changing Concept of Abnormality
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Changing Concept of Abnormality
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Changing Concept of Abnormality
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Changing Concept of Abnormality
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Changing Concept of Abnormality
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Changing Concept of Abnormality
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Changing Concept of Abnormality
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Changing Concept of Abnormality
• Subjective Discomfort:
• The experience of a great deal of personal discomfort or
emotional distress can be a sign of abnormality.
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Changing Concept of Abnormality
• Inability to Function Normally
• Thinking or behavior that does not allow the person to fit into society
or function normally can also be labeled as abnormal.
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Models of Abnormality:
Psychological Models
• Psychological Models
• Psychodynamic view
• Behaviorism
• Cognitive perspective
• Sociocultural perspective
• Biopsychosocial view
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Models of Abnormality:
Psychological Models
• Psychodynamic View
• Claim: Abnormal behavior is caused by repressed conflicts
and urges that are fighting to become conscious.
• E.g., A woman who slept with her brother-in-law feels “dirty” all the
time, washing her hands constantly to keep those thoughts and
memories away, as if ridding herself of the symbolically “dirty”
thoughts.
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Models of Abnormality:
Psychological Models
• Behaviorism
• Claim: Abnormal behavior is learned, just like normal
behavior.
• E.g., Fear of spiders is explained as a conditioned response, with the
“screaming” reaction positively reinforced by the attention of others.
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Models of Abnormality:
Psychological Models
• Cognitive Perspective
• Claim: Abnormal behavior comes from irrational beliefs and
illogical patterns of thought.
• E.g., Fear of spiders is explained as distorted thinking: “All spiders are
trying to bite me, and I will die”.
• Such distorted thinking puts an individual at greater risk for
depression and anxiety compared to other individuals.
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Models of Abnormality:
Psychological Models
• Sociocultural Perspective
• Claim: Abnormal behavior is the product of family, social,
and cultural influences.
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Models of Abnormality:
Psychological Models
• Biopsychosocial View
• Claim: Biological, psychological, and social (or cultural)
influences interact with one another in causing psychological
disorders.
• A genetically inherited tendency for anxiety may not develop into a
full-blown disorder unless the family and social environments
produce the right stressors at the right time during development.
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Diagnosing and Classifying Disorders
• Need for
• A common set of terms
• A systematic way of description
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Diagnosing and Classifying Disorders
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An overview of the psychological disorders
that will be discussed
• Disorders of Anxiety, Trauma, and Stress
• Phobia, panic disorders, generalized anxiety disorder, OCD, acute stress disorder and PTSD.
• Eating Disorders
• Anorexia nervosa, bulimia nervosa, binge eating.
• Personality Disorders
• Anti-social personality disorder, borderline disorder.
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Disorders of Anxiety, Trauma, and Stress
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Disorders of Anxiety, Trauma, and Stress
• PHOBIC DISORDERS
• An irrational, persistent fear of an object, situation, or
social activity
• Avoiding a snake vs. avoiding pictures of a snake?
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Disorders of Anxiety, Trauma, and Stress
• PHOBIC DISORDERS
• Social Phobia (Social Anxiety Disorder):
• Fear of interacting with others or being in social
situations.
• People with social anxiety disorder is afraid of being
negatively evaluated by others.
• Being in social situations might lead to embarrassment or
humiliation for those people.
• They often have a history of being shy as children.
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Disorders of Anxiety, Trauma, and Stress
• PHOBIC DISORDERS
• Specific Phobia:
• Fear of objects, specific situations, or events.
• Fear of a specific animal
• Fear of being in small, enclosed spaces (claustrophobia)
• Fear of injections (trypanophobia)
• Fear of dental work (odontophobia)
• Fear of blood (hematophobia)
• Fear of heights (acrophobia)
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Disorders of Anxiety, Trauma, and Stress
• PHOBIC DISORDERS
• Agoraphobia:
• Fear of being in a place or situation from which escape is
difficult or impossible if something should go wrong.
• Greek word that literally means “fear of the marketplace”.
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Disorders of Anxiety, Trauma, and Stress
• PHOBIC DISORDERS
• Agoraphobia:
• The anxiety should be present two situations below:
1. Public transportation,
2. Out in an open place (parking lot or bridge),
3. An enclosed place (grocery store, movie theater)
4. In crowd (concert),
5. Being out of the home alone
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Disorders of Anxiety, Trauma, and Stress
• PANIC DISORDER
• Characterized by panic attacks that occur frequently
enough, so that the person have difficulty in adjusting to
daily life.
• Panic attack: A sudden onset of intense panic, in which
multiple physical symptoms of stress occur.
• People having a panic attack usually think that they are
having a heart attack and/or that they will die.
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Disorders of Anxiety, Trauma, and Stress
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Disorders of Anxiety, Trauma, and Stress
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Disorders of Anxiety, Trauma, and Stress
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Disorders of Anxiety, Trauma, and Stress
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Disorders of Anxiety, Trauma, and Stress
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Disorders of Anxiety, Trauma, and Stress
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Causes of Anxiety, Trauma, and Stress
Disorders
• Different perspectives offer different explanations for
psychological disorders.
• Those explanations are very similar for all psychological disorders.
• E.g., psychodynamic explanations always focus on repressed
urges, thoughts, or desires when explaining different
psychological disorders.
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Causes of Anxiety, Trauma, and Stress
Disorders
• PSYCHODYNAMIC EXPLANATIONS:
• Point to repressed urges and desires that are trying to surface.
• The anxiety created by those urges and desires is controlled by
the abnormal behavior.
• A phobia is an example of displacement (remember the
psychological defense mechanisms)
• The phobic object is just a symbol for the real thing buried in the
unconscious.
• Fear of heights a hidden suicidal desire
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Causes of Anxiety, Trauma, and Stress
Disorders
• BEHAVIORIST APPROACH:
• The disordered behavior is learned through reinforcement.
• A phobia is nothing more than a classically conditioned fear
response.
• Remember “Little Albert”, who was conditioned to fear furry objects.
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Causes of Anxiety, Trauma, and Stress
Disorders
• COGNITIVE PSYCHOLOGY EXPLANATIONS:
• Excessive anxiety comes from illogical, irrational thought
processes:
• Magnification: the tendency to interpret situations as far more
dangerous, harmful, or important than they actually are.
• All-or-nothing thinking: the belief that one’s performance must be
perfect, or else the result is a failure.
• Overgeneralization: the interpretation of a single negative event as a
never-ending pattern of failure and defeat.
• Minimization: the tendency to give little or no importance to one’s
successes or positive events and traits.
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Causes of Anxiety, Trauma, and Stress
Disorders
• BIOLOGICAL EXPLANATIONS:
• Genetics
• Several anxiety disorders run in families.
• Brain studies
• There is more brain activity in amygdala and limbic system for people
with phobia, PTSD, and social anxiety disorder
• compared to people without these disorders.
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Disorders of Mood
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Disorders of Mood
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Disorders of Mood
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Disorders of Mood
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Disorders of Mood
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Disorders of Mood
• BIPOLAR DISORDER
• Characterized by periods of mood that may range from normal
to manic, with or without episodes of severe depression.
• Manic episode: a period of excessive excitement, energy, and
elation or irritability.
• Bipolar I: without episodes of depression
• Bipolar II: interspersed with episodes of major depression and
hypomania (a level that is less severe than full mania).
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Disorders of Mood
• BIPOLAR DISORDER
• Manic episodes are characterized by feelings of extreme
happiness (euphoric feeling) without a real cause.
• Restlessness, irritability, inability to sit still or remain inactive,
rapid speech (jumping from one topic to another), and
seemingly unlimited energy are also common.
• The person may become aggressive when not allowed to carry
out delusional plans.
• People in the manic stage can be very creative unless they
become disorganized due to mania.
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Causes of Disordered Mood
• PSYCHODYNAMIC VIEW
• Links depression to repressed anger which was originally aimed
at parents or other authority figures.
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Causes of Disordered Mood
• BEHAVIORAL THEORIES
• Link depression to learned helplessness.
• Learned helplessness has been associated with an increase in
self-defeating thoughts in people who experienced
uncontrollable, painful events.
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Causes of Disordered Mood
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Causes of Disordered Mood
• BIOLOGICAL EXPLANATIONS
• Focus on the effects of specific neurotransmitters:
• Serotonin
• Norepinephrine
• Dopamine
• Genetic origins
• Twin studies show that if one identical twin has either major depression
or bipolar disorder, the chance that the other twin will also develop a
mood disorder are about 40-70%.
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