Utilisateur
A set of concepts and methods used to collect and interpret data.
We should treat mental illness no different than any other illness.
- Genotype
- Phenotype
- Genetic polymorphism
DNA codings that occupy the same position or location on a chromosome.
Used to study genetic predisposition among members of a family (looking at probands).
Used to study monozygotic and dizygotic twins' DNA to determine if twins have same genetic predisposition.
Used to study twins who have been separated during adoption.
- Cell body (soma)
- Dendrites
- Axons (one or more; different in length)
- Axon terminals
Chemical substance that allows a nerve impulse to cross the synapse.
Reuptake occurs when too much of the NT was released from the vesicles. The NT is 'recycled' and pumped back into the presynaptic cell.
- Drug therapy: inhibits/triggers NT release and reuptake
- Electroconvulsive therapy (ECT): shock therapy; provokes seizures to promote NT production
- Transcranial magnetic stimulation (TMS)
- Psychosurgery: not used often unless specific brain region is affected
- Highly influential in psychiatry
- More medication = less psychosurgery
- Reductionist (doesn't look at other perspectives)
- Issues finding the right dosage/medication
- Pathologizing things that aren't pathological
- Insight therapy: non-directive, allows client to gain understanding of what motivates their behavior
- Action-based therapy: directive, allows therapist to give tools and strategies to client. Goal is to make a change
- Unconditioned stimulus
- Unconditioned response
- Conditoned stimulus
- Conditioned response
Systematic desensitization
Positive behavior will result in positive consequences, while negative behavior will result in negative consequences.
- Positive reinforcement
- Negative reinforcement
- Positive punishment
- Negative punishment
Behavior modification
- Applied Behvioral Analysis: highlighting where things are going well
- Systematic desensitization: desensitizing patient from stimulus/distressing factor
- Aversive conditioning: an attractive stimulus is paired with an unpleasant one. Ex.: alcohol and vomitting
Using accomodation.
Assimilation
- View of self
- View of world
- View of future
To learn a healthy response to maladaptive emotions and feelings; cope with feelings; alleviate distress; restructure cognitive processes.
It is short-term and goal oriented. It focuses on "patching up" the problem rather than getting rid of it. Clients learn to become functional with their distress, and not necessarily how to live a happy life.
- integration of two perspectives
- short term and gives valuable resources
- improving symptoms of depression, anxiety, schizophrenia, autism...
- schemas aren't well defined
- unclear differences between both persepectives
- does not look into causes of behavior
Psychopathology results from unconscious conflicts in the individual.
Id: libido, since birth, "devil on the shoulder"
Ego: primarily conscious
Superego: operates as the conscience
- Oral
- Anal
- Phallic
-Latency
-Genital
Realistic, moments of fear in real-life, threatening situations
Unrealistic, fealing of fear that is not connected to reality
Feeling guilty (the superego punishes you for not meeting expectations).
Psychoanalytic therapy
Transference
Therapist must control their own emotions so they don't get transferred to client
- childhood experiences shape adult personality
- there are unconscious influences on behavior
- defense mechanisms are used to control stress and anxiety
- Freud's theory and concepts may be unreliable
- Anecdotes in therapy sessions might not be grounded in objectivity
Greater emphasis on client's freedom of choice; therapist uses empathy and understanding
in CCT, the goal is for the client to become happy and live a meaningful life. Wile in CBT, the client learns to become functional and cope with their distress.
- empathy
- unconditional positive regard
Primary empathy (non-directive & active listening) and Advanced empathy (directive & guiding client)
- introduced positive psychology
- empirically based
- Inferences made by therapist might not be accurate
- self-awareness doesn't necessarily lead to change
- assumes people are innately good
Yes, an eclectic approach where they combine two or more paradigms.
- Authoritative (ideal)
- Authoritarian
- Neglectful (worst)
- Permissive
- Parental mental health problems
- Intersectionality
- Cultural diversity
- Peer's influence
A constitutional predisposition to mental illness
- Genetics
- Environment
- Psychological