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ABNORMAL
PSYCHOLOGY
An Integrative Approach: 7th Rd.
David H. Barlow
V. Mark Durand
ABNORMAL
BEHAVIOR IN
HISTORICAL
CONTEXT
Chapter 1
What Will I Learn?
▪
▪
▪
Define
psychopathology/psychological
disorder
Identify criteria for abnormality
Cite events/people significant to the
history of abnormal psychology
UNDERSTANDING
PSYCHOPATHOLOGY
Psychological disorder
▪ Abnormal behavior
▪ A Psychological dysfunction
▪ Associated with Distress or Impairment
in Functioning
▪ Response that is Atypical or not
culturally expected
PSYCHOLOGICAL
DISORDER
▪ Psychological dysfunction within an
individual associated with distress or
impairment in functioning and
response that is not typical or
culturally expected.
PSYCHOLOGICAL
DYSFUNCTION
▪ Refers to a breakdown in cognitive,
emotional, or behavioral functioning
▪ Out on a date- experience severe fear all
evening even though there is nothing to be
afraid of and severe fear happens every
date, your emotions are not functioning
properly.
▪ Significant enough to interfere in an
individual’s life
PERSONAL DISTRESS OR
IMPAIRMENT
▪ Distress- extremely upset
▪ Impairment- impossible for
you to interact with people
and avoid interactions even
though you would like to
have friends
ATYPICAL OR NOT
CULTURALLY EXPECTED
▪ Deviation from the average
▪ Greater the deviation, the
more abnormal it is
▪ Abnormally short or tall
▪ Violating social norms
DANGER
They found that individuals with
mental illnesses had a 25 percent
higher chance of dying from any
unnatural cause, including
homicide, suicide, and accidents.
Drug dependence
PSYCHOLOGICAL DISORDERS
▪ Psychological dysfunction
▪ Personal Distress or impairment
▪ Atypical or not culturally expected
AN ACCEPTED DEFINITION
▪ The most widely accepted definition
used in DSM-5 describes
▪ Behavioral, psychological, or biological
dysfunctions that are unexpected in
their cultural context and associated
with present distress and impairment in
functioning, or increased risk of
suffering, death, pain, or impairment.
PROTOTYPE
▪ typical profile of a disorder
▪ Diagnostic criteria for DSM-5 are all
prototypes
▪ Addition of dimensional estimates of
the severity of specific disorders in
DSM-5
THE
SCIENCE
PSYCHOPATHOLOGY
OF
▪ Psychopathology
▪ is the scientific study of psychological disorders.
▪ Clinical and Counseling psychologists receive the
Ph.D. degree or Ed.D. or Psy.D.
▪ Counseling Psychologists
▪ study
and treat adjustment and vocational issues
encountered by relatively healthy individuals
▪ Clinical psychologists
▪ concentrate on more severe psychological disorders.
▪ Ph.D. programs▪ integrate
clinical
and
research
training
▪ Experimental
and
social
psychologists▪ investigating the basic determinants
of behavior but do not assess or treat
psychological disorders.
PSYCHIATRISTS
▪ earn
an M.D. degree in medical
school and
▪ then specialize in psychiatry during
residency training that lasts
▪ 3 to 4 years
▪ Nature and causes of psych disorders
▪ Biological PoV
PSYCHIATRIC SOCIAL
WORKERS
▪ typically earn a master’s degree in
social work as they develop
expertise in collecting information
relevant to the social and family
situation of the individual with a
psychological disorder.
PSYCHIATRIC NURSES
▪ have advanced degrees, such as a
master’s or
▪ even a Ph.D., and specialize in the
care and treatment of patients
▪ with psychological disorders, usually in
hospitals as part of a
▪ treatment team.
MARRIAGE AND FAMILY
THERAPISTS AND MENTAL
HEALTH COUNSELORS
▪ typically spend 1–2 years earning a
master’s degree and are employed
to provide clinical services by
hospitals or clinics, usually under the
supervision of a doctoral-level
clinician
SCIENTIST-PRACTITIONER
▪ Many mental health professionals take a scientific
approach to their clinical work
1. Keep
up
with
the
latest
scientific
developments in their field
2. Evaluate their own assessments or treatment
procedures to see whether they work.
3. Conduct research, often in clinics or hospitals,
that produces new information about disorders
or their treatment,
RESEARCH ATTEMPTS 3 BASIC
THINGS:
1. To
describe
psychological disorders
2. To determine their causes
3. To treat them
CLINICAL DESCRIPTION
▪ Presenting problem
▪ Presents-
traditional
shorthand way of indicating
why the person came to the
clinic.
▪ Determining clinical description
▪ Clinical description- behaviors,
thoughts,
feelings that make up a specific disorder.
▪ Clinical refers both to the types of problems or
disorders that you would find in a clinic or
hospital
▪ What makes the disorder different from normal
behavior or from other disorders.
▪ Statistical data
▪ Prevalence-
how many people in the
population as a whole have the disorder?
▪ Incidence- Statistics on how many new cases
occur during a given period, such as a year.
▪ Sex ratio—that is, what percentage of males
and females have the disorder
▪ Age of onset- differs from one disorder to
another
▪ Course- individual pattern: 3
Chronic Course- suffer for a lifetime or long
time (schizophrenia)
2. Episodic course- likely to recover within
few months and then suffer a recurrence
(mood disorders)
3. Time-limited course- improve in a short
period of time (adjustment disorder)
1.
▪ Onset: 2
1. Acute onset- begin suddenly
(brief psychotic disorder)
2. Insidious onset- develop
gradually over an extended period
(psychosis)
▪ Prognosis-
anticipated
course of a disorder
▪ Prognosis
is
goodProbably recover
▪ Patient’s age
▪ Psychological disorder may present
differently in childhood or adulthood
or old age
▪ Developmental psychology▪ study of changes in behavior over time
▪ Developmental psychopathology
▪ study of changes in abnormal behavior adults.
▪ Life-span developmental psychopathology▪ Study of abnormal behavior across the entire
age span.
CAUSATION,
TREATMENT
AND ETIOLOGY OUTCOMES
▪ Etiology- study of origins
▪ Why a disorder begins
▪ Biological, psychological, and social
dimensions
▪ Treatment
HISTORICAL CONCEPTIONS
OF ABNORMAL BEHAVIOR
▪ Supernatural model
▪ Agents outside our bodies and environment
influence our behavior, thinking, and
emotions.
▪ These agents—which might be divinities,
demons, spirits, or other phenomena such as
magnetic fields or the moon or stars
▪ Biological model
▪ Psychological model
THE SUPERNATURAL
TRADITION
▪ Battle between good and evil
▪ Great Persian Empire from 900-600
B.C. – work of the devil
▪ Barbara Tuchman- conflicting tides of
opinion on the origins & treatment of
insanity.
▪ Distant Mirror (1978)
DEMONS AND WITCHES
▪ Magic and sorcery to solve their problems
▪ Possessed by evil spirits
▪ Exorcism- religious rituals performed
▪ Shaving the pattern of a cross in the hair of
the victim’s head
▪ Wall near the front of the church- benefit
from hearing Mass,
▪ 15th c.-17th c.
1. Attraction to vs. Aversion to Religion. Demons want nothing to do with Christ.
2. Irrational Speech vs. Rational Speech. In New Testament accounts involving demons, the
demons spoke in a rational manner. Untreated people with schizophrenia will often speak in
nonsense and jump rapidly between unrelated topics.
3. Ordinary Learning vs. Supernatural Knowledge. Demons in the New Testament would
speak through people to convey knowledge that otherwise could not have been known to the
possessed individuals. Those with NBD have no such ability to know facts which they have not
acquired by normal learning.
4. Normal vs. Occultic Phenomena. There is an aspect to demon activity that is just plain
spooky (ex.: poltergeists, levitation’s, trances, telepathy). These have an impact on others in
the room not just the possessed. With schizophrenia, the effect of the disorder is only on the
disordered, not others.
5. The claim to be possessed Authors who have clinical experience both with demon
possession and mental illness, believe those who claim to be possessed are very likely not
possessed. Demons wish to be secretive and do not voluntarily claim to be present.
6. Effects of Therapy. If prayer solves the problem, then it was probably not schizophrenia. If
medicine helps alleviate the problem, it was not demon possession.
Read more at: https://mentalillnesspolicy.org/coping/demonic-possession-mentalillness.html
STRESS AND MELANCHOLY
▪ Insanity- natural phenomenon
▪ Mental or emotional stress
▪ Curable
▪ Mental depression and anxiety- illnesses
▪ Acedia or sloth- despair and lethargy by the Church
▪ Rest, sleep, healthy and happy environment
▪ Baths, ointments and potions
▪ Nicholas Oresme, philosopher and bishop- depression is
a source of some bizarre behavior rather than demons
TREATMENTS FOR
POSSESSION
▪ Hydrotherapy-
patients
were
shocked back to their senses by
application of ice-cold water
Connection between evil deeds and sin and
psychological disorders
Sufferer is largely responsible for the disorder
AIDs-homosexuals
Punishment for immoral behavior
Exorcisms
Faith healing
Hang people over a pit full of poisonous
snakes
Scare the evil spirits
Some come to their senses
Temporarily
Snake pits were built in many institutions
MASS HYSTERIA
▪ Large-scale outbreaks of bizarre behavior
▪ Middle Ages- Possession of the devil in the
Middle Ages
▪ Run out in streets, dance, shout, rave and
jump around
▪ Saint Vitus’s Dance and tarantism
▪ Reaction to insect bites
MODERN MASS HYSTERIA
▪ Phenomenon of emotion contagion
▪ Experience of an emotion seems to spread
to those around us
▪ People are also suggestible when they are
in states of high emotion.
▪ Identifies a cause- other will assume their
reactions have the same source
▪ Popular language- Mob Psychology
THE MOON AND THE STARS
▪ Paracelsus, a Swiss physician who lived from 1493 to
1541, rejected notions of possession by the devil
▪ Movements of the moon and stars had profound effects
on people’s psychological functioning
▪ Gravitational effects of the moon on bodily fluids might
be a possible cause of mental disorders
▪ ―Lunatic‖
▪ No scientific evidence to support it.
▪ Stages of the moon or position of the stars
▪ Position of the planets
COMMENTS
▪ Roman Catholic Church requires that
all
health-care
resources
be
exhausted before spiritual solutions
like exorcism
THE BIOLOGICAL
TRADITION
▪ Physical causes of mental disorders
▪ Hippocrates; a disease, syphilis; and
the early consequences of believing
that psychological disorders are
biologically caused.
HIPPOCRATES AND GALEN
▪ Greek Physician, Hippocrates
▪ Father of Western Medicine
▪ Hippocratic Corpus
▪ Psychological
disorders could
be
treated like any other disease
▪ Brain pathology, head trauma and
heredity.
▪ Roman Physician Galen
▪ Created a powerful and influential
school of thought within the
biological tradition
▪ Hippocratic-Galenic approach is the
humoral theory of disorders
HUMORS OR BODILY FLUIDS
▪ Normal brain functioning was related to four
bodily fluids or humors:
1. Blood
2. Black Bile
3. Yellow Bile
4. Phlegm
▪ Too much black bile- melancholia (depression)
▪Psychological disorders- chemical imbalance
▪ 4 basic qualities:
1. Heat
2. Dryness
3. Moisture
4. Cold
1. Sanguine-
cheerful,
optimistic,
insomnia, delirium (excessive blood
in the brain)
2. Melancholic- depressive (black bile
in the brain)
3. Phlegmatic- apathy and sluggishness,
calm under stress (phlegm)
4. Choleric- hot tempered (yellow bile)
▪ Excesses of one or more humors were treated
by regulating the environment to increase or
decrease heat, dryness, moisture, or cold,
depending on which humor was out of balance.
▪ rest, good nutrition, and exercise
▪ bleeding or bloodletting
▪ Induce vomiting
▪ Eating tobacco and a half-baked cabbage to
induce vomiting
Bloodletting, the extraction
of blood from patients, was
intended to restore the
balance of humors in the
body.
China- movement of air/wind
▪ The
Chinese focused on the
movement of air or wind throughout
the body.
▪ Blockages of wind or the presence of
cold, dark wind (yin) as opposed to
warm, life-sustaining wind (yang)
▪ Acupuncture
Hippocrates coined the term
hysteria
▪ Hysteria
to describe a concept he
learned about from the Egyptians
▪ Somatic symptom disorders
▪ Physical symptoms appear to be the
result of a medical problem for which no
physical cause can be found, such as
paralysis and some kinds of blindness.
Hysteria
▪ Primarily occurred in women
▪ Mistakenly assumed- restricted to women
▪ Cause: empty uterus wandered to various
parts of the body in search of conception
(Greek word for uterus is hysteron)
▪ Cure: marriage/fumigation of the vagina
▪ Disproved
THE
TH
19
CENTURY
▪ Discovery of the nature and cause of
syphilis and
▪ strong support from the wellrespected American psychiatrist
John P. Grey.
SYPHILIS
▪ Sexually transmitted disease caused
by a bacterial microorganism
entering the brain
▪ delusion of persecution- everyone
is plotting against you
▪ delusion of grandeur- you are God
Symptoms are similar to
▪ Psychosis—psychological disorders characterized in part by beliefs
that are not based in reality (delusions), perceptions that are not
based in reality (hallucinations), or both
▪ Subgroup- Paralyzed and dying within 5 years of onset
▪ In 1825- the condition was designated a disease, general paresis,
because it had consistent symptoms (presentation) and a consistent
course that resulted in death.
▪ Louis Pasteur’s germ theory of disease- 1870
▪ Bacterial microorganism causing syphilis
▪ Treponema pallidum
▪ Cure for general paresis- injected
other patients with blood from a
soldier who was ill with malaria
▪ High fever burned out the syphilis
bacteria
▪ Penicillin cures syphilis
John P. Grey
▪ champion of the biological
tradition in the United
States
▪ Most influential American
Psychiatrist
JOHN P. GREY
▪ Causes of insanity- physical
▪ Treated as physically ill
▪ Rest, diet, and proper room temperature and ventilation
▪ Hospitals greatly improved
▪ More humane and livable institutions
▪ Became so large and impersonal
▪ Deinstitutionalized- released into communities
▪ Homeless on streets
THE
DEVELOPMENT
OF
BIOLOGICAL TREATMENTS
▪ 1930s- electric shock and brain surgery
▪ Effects of new drugs
▪ Insulin was given to stimulate appetite in psychotic
patients who were not eating, calm them down
▪ Manfred Sakel- higher dosages until patients
convulsed and became comatose
▪Some recovered
▪ Insulin Shock Therapy
▪ Too dangerous- prolonged coma or death
▪ Benjamin Franklin
▪ mild and modest electric shock to the
head produced a brief convulsion and
memory loss (amnesia) but otherwise
did little harm.
▪ Strangely elated
▪ 1920s
▪ Hungarian
psychiatrist Joseph von
Meduna observed that schizophrenia
was rarely found in individuals with
epilepsy
▪ Brain
seizures
might
cure
schizophrenia
Ugo Cerletti and Lucio Bini
▪ 1938
▪ Surgeon in London
▪ treated a depressed patient by sending
six small shocks directly through his
brain producing convulsions
Little knowledge of how it works.
▪ Opium used as sedatives
▪ Herbs and folk remedies
▪ Rauwolfia serpentine (later renamed reserpine)
▪ neuroleptics (major tranquilizers)
▪ for the first time hallucinatory and delusional thought
processes could be diminished in some patients
▪ Controlled agitation and aggressiveness
▪ Benzodiazepines
(minor
tranquilizers)
▪ Reduce anxiety
▪ Valium and Librium (brand names)
▪ Widely prescribed drugs in the world.
▪ Bromides- sedating drugs
▪ Used to treat anxiety and other
psychological disorders
▪ Side effects
▪ Modest effectiveness
▪ Neurolepticsside effects like
tremors and shaking
CONSEQUENCES
OF
BIOLOGICAL TRADITION
THE
▪ Result of brain pathology
▪ Hospitalize patients
▪ Interest focused on diagnosis,
legal questions
▪ Study of brain pathology
CONSEQUENCES
OF
BIOLOGICAL TRADITION
THE
▪ Emil Kraepelin (1856–1926) was the
dominant figure during this period and
one of the founding fathers of modern
psychiatry
▪ advocating the major ideas of the
biological tradition, but he was little
involved in treatment
EMIL KRAEPLIN
▪ first to distinguish among various psychological
disorders,
▪ Different age of onset and time course,
▪ Different clusters of presenting symptoms,
different cause.
▪ Many of his descriptions of schizophrenic
disorders are still useful today.
▪ End of 1800s- scientific approach to
psychological disorders and their
classification had begun with the
search for biological causes.
▪ Treatment was based on Humane
principles
THE PSYCHOLOGICAL
TRADITION
▪ Plato- two causes of maladaptive behavior
were:
1. Social and cultural influences in one’s life
2. Learning
▪ Treatment: reeducate the individual through
rational discussion
▪ Power of reason.
▪ Precursor to modern psychosocial treatment
▪ Psychosocial
treatmentpsychological factors but also on social
and cultural ones.
▪ Aristotleinfluence
of
social
environment and early learning on
psychopathology
▪ Fantasies, dreams and cognitions
MORAL THERAPY
▪ First half of the 19th century
▪ Moral therapy- strong psychosocial approach
▪ treating institutionalized patients as normally as possible
▪ restraint and seclusion were eliminated.
▪ Greek Asclepiad Temples of the 6th c. B.C. housed the ill. Cared for,
massaged and provided with soothing music.
▪ Originated with French Psychiatrist Philippe Pinel
▪ Jean-Baptiste Pussin
▪ William Tuke of England
▪ Benjamin Rush- founder of US Psychiatry, Pennsylvania Hospital
Patients with psychological disorders were freed from chains
and shackles as a result of the influence of Philippe Pinel
(1745–1826), a pioneer in making mental institutions more
humane.
HORACE MANN
▪ 1833- Horace Mann- chairman of the
board of trustees of the Worcester State
Hospital, reported on 32 patients been
given up as incurable.
▪ Treated with Moral therapy
▪ Cured and released to their families
ASYLUM REFORM AND THE
DECLINE OF MORAL THERAPY
▪ After Mid-19th c.- humane treatment
declined
▪ Factors:
▪ Moral therapy worked best when the
number of patients in an institution
was 200 or fewer- individual attention
DOROTHEA DIX
▪ The great crusader Dorothea Dix (1802–1887)
▪ campaigned endlessly for reform in the treatment of
insanity
▪ Mental hygiene movement
▪ she made it her life’s work to inform the American public
and their leaders of these abuses
▪ Hero of the 19th c.
▪ Everyone who needed care received it
▪ Reformed asylums and construction of new institutions
▪ Final blow to moral therapy
▪ Mental illness was caused by brain
pathology
▪ Incurable
Psychological tradition
emerged
▪ Psychoanalysis-
Sigmund Freudstructure
of
the
mind
and
unconscious processes
▪ Behaviorism- Ivan Pavlov, B.F.
Skinner, John B. Watson- learning
and
adaptation
affect
the
development of psychopathology.
PSYCHOANALYTIC THEORY
▪ Franz Anton Mesmer
▪ Problem was caused by an undetectable fluid found in all living
organisms
▪ Called ―animal magnetism‖ which could become blocked
▪ Identify and tap various areas of their bodies where their animal
magnetism was blocked while suggesting strongly that they were
being cured
▪ Strong suggestion
▪ Father of hypnosis
▪ Hypnosis- state in which extremely suggestible subjects sometimes
appear to be in a trance
Franz
Anton
Mesmer
(1734–
1815) and other
early
therapists
used
strong
suggestions to cure
their patients, who
were
often
hypnotized.
JEAN-MARTIN CHARCOT,
JOSEF BREUER
▪ Jean-Martin Charcot
▪ Head of the Salpétrière Hospital in Paris
▪ 1885- a young man named Sigmund Freud
came to Vienna to study with Charcot.
▪ Josef Breuer- state of hypnosis- describe
their problems, conflicts, and fears in as
much detail as they could
▪ Unconscious mind
Josef Breuer (1842–1925)
worked on the celebrated case
of Anna O. and, with Sigmund
Freud, developed the theory of
psychoanalysis.
Jean Charcot (1825–1893) studied hypnosis and influenced
Sigmund Freud to consider psychosocial approaches to
psychological disorders.
▪ Catharsis- release of emotional material
▪ therapeutic to recall and relive emotional
trauma that has been made unconscious
▪ Insight- understanding of the relationship
between current emotions and earlier events
▪ Psychoanalytic model- most comprehensive
theory yet constructed on the development and
structure of our personalities.
▪ Psychoanalytic theory
▪ 3 Major facets:
1. Structure of the mind and the distinct
functions of personality that sometimes clash
with one another.
2. the defense mechanisms with which the
mind defends itself from these clashes, or
conflict
3. stages of early psychosexual development
STRUCTURE OF THE MIND
▪ 3 major parts/functions:
1. Id
2. Ego
3. Superego
▪ Id- source of strong sexual aggressive
feelings or energies; animal within us
▪ Libido- energy or drive in ID
▪ Thanatos- death instinct
▪ Pleasure Principle
▪ Primary
Processesirrational,
emotional, illogical
INTRAPSYCHIC CONFLICTS
▪ Conflicts that occur in the mind
▪ If ego did not successfully mediate
the Id and Superego – disorders
develop
DEFENSE MECHANISMS
▪ Conflict produce anxiety. Anxiety warns the ego to marshal
defense mechanisms
▪ Denial
▪ Displacement
▪ Reaction-Formation
▪ Projection
▪ Sublimation
▪ Repression
▪ Rationalization
PSYCHOSEXUAL STAGES OF
DEVELOPMENT
1. Oral Stage- birth to 2 years
▪ Mouth, lips, tongue
▪ Need for food
▪ Oral stimulation
▪ Dependency and passivity,
rebelliousness, cynicism- adulthood
▪ Fixation-
2. Phallic stage (3-5 or 6 y.o)
▪ Genital stimulation
▪ Oedipus complex
▪ Castration Anxiety
▪ Electra Complex
▪ Penis envy
▪ Neuroses or neurotic disorders
LATER DEVELOPMENTS IN
PSYCHOANALYTIC THOUGHT
▪ Ego Psychology of Anna Freud
▪ Self-psychology of Heinz Kohut
▪ Self-concept
▪ Object Relations
▪ Object- important person in life
▪ Introjection- incorporation process
▪ Collective unconscious of Carl Gustav Jung
▪ Wisdom accumulated by society and culture stored deep in
individual memories and passed down from generation to
generation
▪ Introversion and Extroversion
▪ Alfred Adler
▪ Feelings of inferiority and striving for
superiority
▪ Self-actualization
▪ Human nature is positive
▪ Karen Horney and Erich Fromm
▪ Erik
Erikson’s
Theory
of
development
▪ Emphasizing development over the
life span and
▪ Influence of culture and society on
personality
PSYCHOANALYTIC
PSYCHOTHERAPY
▪ or psychoanalysis
▪ Are designed to reveal the nature of
unconscious mental processes and
conflicts through
▪ Catharsis and insight
FREE ASSOCIATION
▪ patients are instructed to say whatever comes to
mind without the usual socially required
censoring.
▪ intended to reveal emotionally charged
material that may be repressed because it is
too painful or threatening to bring into
consciousness
▪ Lay on a couch, sat behind them
▪ Couch- the symbol of psychotherapy
DREAM ANALYSIS
▪ therapist interprets the content of dreams,
supposedly reflecting the primary-process
thinking of the id, and systematically relates
the dreams to symbolic aspects of
unconscious conflicts.
▪ Denial of the interpretation
▪ Resist the efforts to uncover repressed and
sensitive conflicts
▪TRANSFERENCE
▪COUNTERTRANSFERENCE
TRANSFERENCE
▪ Phenomenon
▪ Patients come to relate to the therapist much as
they did to important figures in their childhood,
particularly their parents.
▪ Patients who resent the therapist but can verbalize
no good reason for it – may be reenacting childhood
resentment toward a parent
▪ Patient will fall in love with the therapist- reflects
strong positive feelings for a parent
COUNTERTRANSFERENCE
▪ therapists project some of their own
personal issues and feelings, usually
positive, onto the patient
▪ is strictly against all ethical canons of
the mental health professions to accept
overtures from patients that might lead
to relationships outside therapy
CLASSICAL PSYCHOANALYSIS
▪ Requires therapy 4-5 times a week
for
▪ 2-5 years to analyze unconscious
conflicts,
resolve
them
and
restructure the personality to put the
ego back in charge.
PSYCHODYNAMIC
PSYCHOTHERAPY
▪ Many
psychotherapists employ a
loosely related set of approaches
referred to as psychodynamic
psychotherapy
▪ Conflicts and unconscious processes
are still emphasized, and
▪ efforts are made to identify trauma
and active defense mechanisms,
▪ therapists use an eclectic mixture of
tactics, with a social and interpersonal
focus.
COMMENTS
▪ Pure psychoanalysis is of historical
interest
▪ more than current interest, and
▪ classical
psychoanalysis
as
a
treatment has been diminishing in
popularity for years.
MAJOR CRITICISM OF
PSYCHOANALYSIS
▪ Unscientific
▪ relying on reports by the patient of
events that happened years ago
▪ there
has
been
no
careful
measurement of any of these
psychological phenomena and
▪ no obvious way to prove or disprove
the basic hypotheses of psychoanalysis
VALUABLE
▪
Psychoanalytic concepts and observations have been
valuable to the study of psychopathology and
psychodynamic psychotherapy and to the history of
ideas in Western civilization
▪
Careful scientific studies of psychopathology have
supported the observation of unconscious mental
processes
▪
notion that basic emotional responses are often triggered
by hidden or symbolic cues, and the understanding that
memories of events in our lives can be repressed and
otherwise avoided in a variety of ingenious ways.
THERAPEUTIC ALLIANCE
▪ Relationship
of the therapist
and the patient
▪ Important area of study in most
therapeutic strategies
HUMANISTIC THEORY
▪ Jung and Adler broke sharply with Freud.
▪ Fundamental disagreement: nature of humanity.
▪ Freud portrayed life as a battleground
▪ Jung and Adler- emphasized the positive, optimistic side of human
nature
▪ Jung- setting goals, looking toward the future, and realizing one’s
fullest potential
▪ Adler- human nature reaches its fullest potential when we contribute
to the welfare of other individuals and to society.
▪ Human strive to reach superior levels of intellectual and moral devt.
SELF-ACTUALIZING
▪ watchword for this movement
▪ underlying assumption is that all of
us could reach our highest potential,
in all areas of functioning, if only we
had the freedom to grow.
CONDITIONS THAT BLOCK
OUR ACTUALIZATION
▪ A variety of conditions may block our
actualization.
▪ Blocks originate outside the individual.
▪ Difficult living conditions or stressful
life or interpersonal experiences may
move you away from your true self.
ABRAHAM MASLOW (19081970)
▪ He was most systematic- structure
of personality
▪ Hierarchy of needs
CARL ROGERS (1902-1987)
▪
PoV of Therapy
▪
Most influential humanist
▪
Client-centered therapy or Person-centered therapy
▪
therapist takes a passive role, making as few interpretations as
possible.
▪
Unconditional positive regard- complete and almost unqualified
acceptance of client’s feelings and actions
▪
Empathy- sympathetic understanding of the individual’s view of the
world.
▪
Hoped for result: clients will be more straightforward and honest.
Access their innate tendencies toward growth.
HUMAN POTENTIAL
MOVEMENTS
▪ result of humanistic theorizing
▪ Emphasized the importance of the
therapeutic relationship
▪ Relationships
and
Therapeutic
relationship - single most positive
influence in facilitating human growth
HUMANISTIC MODEL
▪ contributed
relatively
little
new
information to the field of psychopathology
▪ stressed
the unique, nonquantifiable
experiences of the individual, emphasizing
that people are more different than alike
▪ found
its greatest application among
individuals
without
psychological
disorders
THE BEHAVIORAL
MODEL th
▪ Beginning of 20 century
▪ Behavioral model
▪ Cognitive-behavioral model or Social
learning model
▪ Systematic development of a more
scientific approach to psychological
aspects of psychopathology.
PAVLOV AND CLASSICAL
CONDITIONING
▪ Ivan Petrovich Pavlov of St. Petersburg,
Russia
▪ Classical conditioning▪ type of learning in which a neutral
stimulus is paired with a response until
it elicits that response.
▪ Chemotherapy-
common
treatment for some forms of
cancer
▪ Side effects- nausea, vomiting
▪ Merely
see
the
medical
personnel who administered
the chemotherapy
STIMULUS GENERALIZATION
▪ Response generalizes to similar
stimuli
▪ Nurse’s uniform/sight of hospital
Food
Salivation
• Unconditioned
Stimulus
• Unconditioned
Response
Food
• Unconditioned
Stimulus
Bell
Salivation
• Unconditioned
Response
Bell
• Conditioned
Stimulus
Salivation
• Conditioned
Response
Chemotherapy
• Unconditioned Stimulus
Vomiting
• Unconditioned
Response
Chemotherapy
• Unconditioned Stimulus
Nurse/Hospital
• Associated to
Chemotherapy
Vomiting
• Unconditioned Response
Nurse
or
Hospital
Vomiting
• Conditioned
Stimulus
• Conditioned
Response
EXTINCTION
▪ extinction
occurs
when
the
conditioned stimulus is applied
repeatedly without being paired
with the unconditioned stimulus
▪ Bell without the food for a long
enough period
▪ Eliminate the conditioned response
▪ Bell no longer meant a meal
INTROSPECTION
▪ Subjects
simply reported on their
inner thoughts and feelings after
experiencing certain stimuli,
▪ Results
were
inconsistent
and
discouraging to many experimental
psychologists.
▪ Edward Titchener
WATSON AND THE RISE OF
BEHAVIORISM
▪ John B. Watson
▪ Early American Psychologist
▪ Considered the founder of behaviorism
▪ Influenced by Pavlov
▪ developing behavioral psychology as a
radical empirical science
LITTLE ALBERT
▪ 1920
▪ Rosalie Rayner
▪ 11-month old boy named Albert
▪ Harmless fluffy white rat
▪ Loud noise
▪ 5 trials- fear
▪ Santa Clause mask with a white fuzzy beard
▪ Unethical
Mary Cover Jones
▪ Student of Watson
▪ Peter- 2 years, 10 months
old- afraid of furry
objects.
▪ White rabbit
Children who did not fear rabbits in
the same room
▪ Peter was touching and playing with the rabbit
THE BEGINNINGS OF
BEHAVIOR THERAPY
▪ Joseph
Wolpepioneering
psychiatrist from South Africa
▪ Dissatisfied
with
prevailing
psychoanalytic interpretations of
psychopathology.
SYSTEMATIC
DESENSITIZATION
▪ individuals were gradually introduced to the objects or
situations they feared
▪ they could test reality and see that nothing bad happened
in the presence of the phobic object or scene.
▪ do something that was incompatible with fear while they
were in the presence of the dreaded object or situation
▪ Wolpe had
his patients carefully and systematically
imagine the phobic scene, and the response he chose was
relaxation because it was convenient
▪ Wolpe
worked with Hans
Eysenck
and
Stanley
Rachman in London
▪ Called Behavior therapy
B.F. SKINNER AND OPERANT
CONDITIONING
▪ Burrhus Frederic Skinner
▪ The Behavior of Organisms (1938)
▪ Operant Conditioning
▪ behavior changes as a function of what
follows the behavior.
▪ Large part of our behavior is not
automatically elicited by an unconditioned
stimulus
LAW OF EFFECT OF EDWARD
L. THORNDIKE
▪ Edward L. Thorndike- Law of Effect
▪ Law of Effect- behavior is either
strengthened (likely to be repeated
more frequently) or weakened
(likely to occur less frequently)
depending on the consequences of
that behavior.
OPERANT CONDITIONING
▪ Behavior operates on the environment and
changes it in some way.
▪ Reinforcement- reward; connotes the effect
on the behavior.
▪ Schedules of reinforcement- arranged in
an endless variety of ways
▪ Punishment- ineffective in the long run
▪ Positively reinforce desired behavior
SHAPING
▪ process
of reinforcing successive
approximations to a final behavior or set
of behaviors
▪ Pigeon to play Ping-Pong
▪ Provide pellet of food every time it
moves its head toward a Ping-Pong ball
▪ Do you think a pigeon can play pingpong?
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vGazyH6fQQ4
▪ Pavlov,
Watson,
and
Skinner
contributed
significantly to behavior
therapy
COMMENTS
▪ Behavioral
model has contributed greatly to
understanding and treatment of psychopathology
the
▪ This model is incomplete and inadequate to account for
what we now know about psychopathology.
▪ This model also fails to account for development of
psychopathology across the life span
▪ Recent advances in our knowledge of how information is
processed, both consciously and subconsciously, have
added a layer of complexity.
THE PRESENT: THE SCIENTIFIC METHOD
AND AN INTEGRATIVE APPROACH
▪ 3 traditions or ways of thinking about
causes of psychopathology:
1. Supernatural
2. Biological
3. Psychological
a) Psychoanalytic
b) Behavioral
EACH TRADITION HAS FAILED
IN IMPORTANT WAYS:
▪ Scientific
methods were not often
applied to the theories and treatments
▪ Health professionals tend to look at
psychological disorders narrowly, from
their own point of view alone
▪ Grey- result of brain disease
▪ Watsonbehaviors
result
of
psychological and social influences
TWO DEVELOPMENTS CAME TOGETHER
AS NEVER BEFORE TO SHED LIGHT ON
THE NATURE OF PSYCHOPATHOLOGY:
(1) the increasing sophistication of
scientific tools and methodology, and
(2) the realization that no one
influence—biological,
behavioral,
cognitive, emotional, or social—ever
occurs in isolation.
ADOLF MEYER (1866-1950)
▪ Dean of American Psychiatry
▪ emphasized the equal contributions
of biological, psychological, and
sociocultural determinism
▪ 2000
▪ A veritable explosion of knowledge
about psychopathology was occurring.
▪ Young fields of cognitive science and
neuroscience
began
to
grow
exponentially
▪ The brain and about how we process,
remember, and use information.
▪ Behavioral
science revealed the
importance of early experience in
determining later development
▪ new model was needed that
would consider biological,
psychological, and
social
influences on behavior.
▪ This
approach
to
psychopathology
would
▪ combine findings from all areas with
our rapidly growing understanding of
how we experience life during different
developmental periods, from infancy to
old age.
Activity
▪
https://app.sli.do/event/1k3jgih5
/embed/polls/cdc52255-f67b4355-93cb-6e7f2c19e8c8
CONCEPT CHECK:
▪ Match the treatment with the corresponding psychological theory of
behavior: (a) behavioral model, (b) moral therapy, (c)
psychoanalytic theory, and (d) humanistic theory.
▪ 1. Treating institutionalized patients as normally as possible and
encouraging social interaction and relationship development.
______________
▪ 2. Hypnosis, psychoanalysis-like free association and dream
analysis, and balance of the id, ego, and superego. ______________
▪ 3. Person-centered therapy with unconditional positive regard.
______________
▪ 4. Classical conditioning, systematic desensitization, and operant
conditioning. ______________
CONCEPT CHECK:
▪ Match the treatment with the corresponding psychological theory of
behavior: (a) behavioral model, (b) moral therapy, (c)
psychoanalytic theory, and (d) humanistic theory.
▪ 1. Treating institutionalized patients as normally as possible and
encouraging social interaction and relationship development.
______________ (b)
▪ 2. Hypnosis, psychoanalysis-like free association and dream
analysis, and balance of the id, ego, and superego. ______________
(c)
▪ 3. Person-centered therapy with unconditional positive regard.
______________ (d)
▪ 4. Classical conditioning, systematic desensitization, and operant
conditioning. ______________ (a)
END.
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