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Basic Statistics for the Behavioral Sciences Chapter One Abnormal Behavior * The Concerns of Abnormal Psychology What is abnormal psychology? Area of scientific study aimed at describing, explaining,...

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Basic Statistics for the Behavioral Sciences
Chapter One
Abnormal Behavio
*
The Concerns of Abnormal Psychology
    What is abnormal psychology?
    Area of scientific study aimed at describing, explaining, predicting, and modifying behaviors that are considered unusual or strange
    Uses psychodiagnosis: attempts to describe, assess, and systematically draw inferences about psychological disorders
*
The Concerns of Abnormal Psychology (cont’d.)
    Modifying abnormal behavio
    Therapy: program of systematic intervention aimed at improving client’s behavioral, emotional, and/or cognitive state
*
Determining Abnormality
    Psychologists use the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders (DSM-V)
    Most widely used classification system
*
Determining Abnormality (cont’d.)
    DSM-V defines abnormal behavior as:
    “a behavioral or psychological syndrome or pattern that reflects an underlying psychobiological dysfunction, that is associated with distress or disability and is not merely an expectable response to common stressors or losses.” (www.dsm5.org)
*
Determining Abnormality (cont’d.)
    Limitations of DSM-V definition
    DSM definition is quite
oad and raises questions
    When is a syndrome or pattern of behavior significant enough to have meaning?
    What constitutes “present distress” and “painful symptoms”?
    What criteria are to be used in assessing symptoms?
*
Determining Abnormality (cont’d.)
    Four major means of judging abnormal behavio
    Distress
    Deviance
    Dysfunction
    Dangerousness
*
Abnormal Behavior in Context
    Culture: shared learned behavior transmitted from generation to generation
    Powerful determinant of how behavior is defined and treated
    Cultural universality:
    Origins, processes, and manifestation of disorders are the same across cultures
    Cultural relativism:
    What is normal/abnormal may vary from culture to culture
*
Sociopolitical and Cultural Limitations
    Mental illness as a sociopolitical construction
    Must be sensitive to individual value systems, societal norms and values, and potential sociopolitical ramifications
    Multicultural limitations
    How does culture affect our understanding of human behavior?
*
Sociopolitical and Cultural Limitations (cont’d.)
    Two key questions to consider:
    What is universal in human behavior that is also relevant to understanding psychopathology?
    What is the relationship between cultural norms, values, and attitudes and the incidence and manifestations of behavior disorders?
*
Frequency and Burden
of Mental Disorders
    Psychiatric epidemiology:
    Study of the prevalence of mental illness in a society
    Prevalence:
    Percentage of people in a population who suffer from a disorder at a given point in time
*
Frequency and Burden
of Mental Disorders (cont’d.)
    Lifetime prevalence:
    The percentage of people in the population who have had a disorder at some point in their life
    Incidence:
    Onset or occu
ence of a given disorder over a period of time
*
Frequency and Burden
of Mental Disorders (cont’d.)
Figure 1-1 One year prevalence of mental disorders in adult Americans and lifetime prevalence of mental disorders in American adolescents
*
Frequency and Burden
of Mental Disorders (cont’d.)
    Cost and burden to society is great:
    At least 25% of adult Americans and almost 50% of American children suffer from diagnosable disorder.
    What might account for the higher prevalence rates seen in the youth sample?
*
Stereotypes about the Mentally Distu
ed
    Mentally ill are frequently stereotyped
    Common myths:
    Mentally distu
ed people can always be recognized by their abnormal behavio
    Mentally distu
ed have inherited their disorde
    Biopsychosocial model: mental disorder are the result of an interaction of biological, psychological, and social factors
*
Stereotypes about the Mentally Distu
ed (cont’d.)
    More common myths
    Mental illness is incurable
    People become mentally ill because they’re weak
    Mental illness is always a deficit
    Mentally ill are unstable and potentially dangerous
*
Historical Perspectives on Abnormal Behavio
    Prehistoric and ancient beliefs:
    Demonology treated by trephining or exorcism
    Naturalistic explanations (Greco-Roman):
    Naturalistic explanations supplanted supernatural
    Hippocrates believed deviant behavior caused by
ain pathology, the dysfunction of the
ain
*
Historical Perspectives on Abnormal Behavior (cont’d.)
    The Middle Ages:
    Reverted to supernatural explanations
    The Dark Ages
    Mass madness, or group hysteria
    Witchcraft
    The Renaissance:
    The rise of humanism
    Humanism: emphasizes human welfare and the worth/uniqueness of the individual
*
Historical Perspectives on Abnormal Behavior (cont’d.)
    The Reform Movement:
    Moral treatment movement: shift to more humane treatment of the mentally distu
ed
    Philippe Pinel
    William Tuke
    Benjamin Rush
    Dorothea Dix
    Clifford Beers
*
Historical Perspectives on Abnormal Behavior (cont’d.)
    What role should spirituality and religion play in mental health care?
    Spirituality: animating life force or energy of the human condition that is
oader but inclusive of religion
    What does research show us about the relationship between religiosity and mental health?
*
Causes: Early Viewpoints
    Biological (organic) view:
    Mental disorders have a physical or physiological basis (Griesinger)
    Kraepelin
    Symptoms occur in clusters (syndromes) to represent mental disorders, each with a unique cause, course, and outcome.
    Classified mental disorders based on organic causes: metabolic distu
ance, endocrine difficulty,
ain disease, heredity
    Eventually became DSM of APA
*
Causes: Early Viewpoints (cont’d.)
    Biological view gained greater strength with discovery of general paresis, a progressively degenerative and i
eversible physical and mental disorde
    Lead to
    Pasteur (germ theory)
    von Kfrafft-Ebing (infection)
    Schaudinn (microorganisms)
*
Causes: Early Viewpoints (cont’d.)
    Psychological view:
    Mental disorders are caused by psychological and emotional (not biological/organic) factors
    Mesmerism and hypnotism
    The Nancy School: Charcot and hypnotism
    Josef Breuer and Sigmund Freud: relief by talking about traumatic experiences
    Cathartic method: therapeutic use of ve
al expression to release pent-up emotional conflicts
*
Causes: Early Viewpoints (cont’d.)
    Behaviorism:
    Psychological perspective that stressed the importance of learning and behavior in explanations of normal and abnormal development
    Stressed conditions that evoke, reinforce, or extinguish directly observable behaviors
    Rooted in laboratory science
*
Contemporary Trends
    Diversity/multicultural psychology:
    Culture, race, ethnicity, gender, age, and socio-economic class relevant to understand and treat abnormal behavio
    Mental health professionals need to:
    Increase cultural sensitivity
    Acquire knowledge of diversity
    Develop culturally relevant therapy approaches
*
Figure 1-2 Census 2005 Racial/Ethnic Composition of the United States The rapid
demographic transformation of the United States is illustrated in the fact that minorities
now constitute an increasing proportion of the population. Several trends are evident.
First, within several short decades, people of color will constitute a numerical majority.
Second, the number of Hispanic Americans has surpasses African Americans. Third,
mental health providers will increasingly be coming into contact with clients who diffe
from them in race, ethnicity, and culture.
Source: U.S. Census Bureau, National Population Estimates
*
Contemporary Trends (cont’d.)
    Dimensions related to cultural diversity:
    Social conditioning
    Cultural values and influences
    Sociopolitical influences
    Bias in diagnosis
*
Contemporary Trends (cont’d.)
    Positive psychology:
    Study of positive human functioning, and the strengths and assets of individuals, families, and communities
    Optimal human functioning:
    Subjective well-being, happiness, optimism, resilience, hope, courage, ability to cope with stress
    Self-actualization and self-determinism
*
Contemporary Trends (cont’d.)
    Changes in therapeutic landscape:
    The drug revolution (1950’s):
    Rapidly and dramatically decreased or eliminated symptoms
    Deinstutionalization
    Prescription privileges for psychologists
    Managed health care: industrialization of health care, whereby large organizations in the private sector control the delivery of services
*
Contemporary Trends (cont’d.)
    Industrialization of health care has
ought about major trends:
    Business interests are exerting increasing control over psychotherapy
    Cu
ent business practices are depressing income of practitioners
    Psychologists are being asked to justify use of their therapies
    Enactment of mental health and substance abuse parity legislation
*
Contemporary Trends (cont’d.)
    Appreciation for research
    Neuroanatomy:
    Role of neurotransmitters in mental disorders
    Success of psychopharmacology spawned new interest in
ain-behavior relationship
    Increasing exploration of biological bases of abnormal behavio
    Combining drug therapy with psychotherapy
    Move toward empirically based treatments
*

Basic Statistics for the Behavioral Sciences

Chapter Two
Models of Abnormal Behavio

*
One-Dimensional Models of Mental Disorders
    Psychopathology:
    Clinical term meaning abnormal behavio
    Model:
    An analogy used by scientists, usually to describe or explain a phenomenon or process that they cannot directly observe
    Model, theory, viewpoint, and perspective are often used interchangeably
*
One-Dimensional Models of Mental Disorders (cont’d.)
    Etiology:
    Causes of disorders
    In the past, different pathways of thought were used exclusively without taking into consideration aspects of other viewpoints
    Such a na
ow view of complex issues and conditions undermined understanding and treatment
*
One-Dimensional Models of Mental Disorders (cont’d.)
    Two main views of the past were:
    Mental disorders are caused primarily by biological problems
    Abnormal behavior is essentially psychosocial
*
One-Dimensional Models of Mental Disorders (cont’d.)
    These two views are overly simplistic:
    Set up a false “eithe
or” dichotomy between nature and nurture
    Fail to recognize the reciprocal influences of one on the othe
    Mask the importance of acknowledging the biological, psychological, social, and sociocultural dimensions in the origin of mental disorders
*
A Multipath Model of Mental Disorders
    Biopsychosocial model attempts to integrate biological, psychological, and social factors but has limitations:
    Provides little information about how factors interact to produce illness
    Allows practitioners to do everything without guidance
    Fails to consider the equally powerful influence of culture
*
A Multipath Model of Mental Disorders (cont’d.)
    Multipath model:
    An integrative and interacting means of viewing disorders and their causes
    Assumptions
    Multipath model consists of following dimensions:
    Biological factors
    Psychological factors
    Social factors
    Sociocultural factors
*
A Multipath Model of Mental Disorders (cont’d.)
Figure 2-1 The Multipath Model Each dimension of the multipath model contains factors found to be important in explaining abnormal behavior.
*
Dimension One: Biological Factors
    Biological pathway relies on certain assumptions:
    Genetics help make people who they are
    Human thoughts, emotions, and behaviors are associated with nerve cell activity of
ain and spinal cord
    Change in thought, emotion, or behavior will be associated with change in activity or structure of
ain
    Mental disorders are highly co
elated with some form of
ain or other organ dysfunction
    Mental disorders can be treated by drugs or somatic intervention
*
Dimension One: Biological Factors (cont’d.)
    The human
ain:
    Neurons:
    Nerve cells that transmit messages throughout the body and that make-up the
ain
    Two hemispheres control opposite sides of the body:
    Right hemisphere:
    Visual-spatial abilities and emotional behavio
    Left hemisphere:
    Language functions
*
Dimension One: Biological Factors (cont’d.)
    Human
ain has three main parts:
    Fore
ain
    Mid
ain
    Hind
ain
*
Dimension One: Biological Factors (cont’d.)
Figure 2-4 The Internal Structure of the Brain A cross-sectional view of the
ain reveals the fore
ain, mid
ain, and hind
ain. Some important
ain structures are identified within each of the divisions.
*
Dimension One: Biological Factors (cont’d.)
    Fore
ain:
    Controls all the higher mental functions, such as learning, speech, thought, and memory
    Thalamus:
    “Relay station;” transmits nerve impulses throughout
ain
    Hypothalamus:
    Regulates bodily drives and body conditions
    Limbic system:
    Involves experiencing/expressing emotions and motivation
*
Dimension One: Biological Factors (cont’d.)
    Mid
ain:
    Involved in vision and hearing (along with hind
ain) and controls sleep, alertness, and pain
    Manufactures serotonin, norepinephrine, and dopamine
    Hind
ain:
    Controls heart rate, sleep, and respiration
    Manufactures serotonin
*
Dimension One: Biological Factors (cont’d.)
    Biochemical theories:
    Basic premise:
    Chemical imbalances underlie mental disorders
    Dendrites:
    Receive signals from other neurons
    Axons:
    Send signals to other neurons
*
Dimension One: Biological Factors (cont’d.)
Figure 2-5 Major Parts of a Neuron The major parts of a neuron include dendrites, the cell body, the axon,
Answered Same Day Dec 08, 2021

Solution

Dr. Saloni answered on Dec 09 2021
124 Votes
Running Head: Mental Health 1
Mental Health
Criticism
DSM-5 critics claims that widening diagnostic criteria can widen the amount of "psychologically sick" individuals as well as pathologize "standard" action, potentially exposing many, though not thousands, of novel patients to medicines that can do more damage than good. Furthermore, one may argue that diagnosing mental diseases is very subjective. For instance, while making a diagnosis, doctors frequently rely on a patient's self-reports of the symptoms (Hsu, 2018). This is reasonable, however, given the lack of biomarkers in pathology, considerable subjectivity is to be expected. Several DSM critics perceives it oversimplifies the
oad spectrum of people’s...
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