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Developmental Psychology Study Guide 1

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Study guide/class notes for Developmental Psychology

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  • November 10, 2024
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  • 2016/2017
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ABNORMAL PSYCHOLOGY
SPRING 2017

*look out for thinking critically and getting help textbook sections*


Chapter 1: EXAMPLES AND DEFINITIONS OF ABNORMAL BEHAVIOR


Mental Health Professions:

 Psychiatrists are licensed to prescribe medication
 Psychologists are the only ones who can collect and study numerical data
 Social work tends to be more focused on a commitment to action than on a body of
scientific knowledge – schools, hospitals, etc.


Methods for Scientific Study of Mental Disorders:

 Hypothesis: any new prediction
 Null hypothesis: alternative to the experimental hypothesis and predicts that the
hypothesis isn’t true.
 Try to prove null hypothesis wrong – burden of proof


History of Mental Health Treatment:

 Hippocratic tradition – viewed disease and as one unitary concept – did not
distinguish between mental disorders and other types of illness
o Blood-letting, purging, and other “heroic” and painful/extreme treatments
 Asylum was created during the 1600s and 1700s to house the mentally disturbed –
reinforced the idea that the community as a whole should be responsible for their
care.
o Change in economic, social, and demographic conditions – served in heavily
populated cities because of an increase in urbanization


Lessons:

 Our own values and beliefs influence the ways in which we define, think about, and
treat mental disorders
 Scientific research is important!!

Definitions of Abnormal Behavior and Mental Disorder:
- Symptoms: thoughts, feelings, and behaviors that indicate a mental disorder

, o On their own, most symptoms wouldn’t be of concern
o Consider frequency and duration
o Consider maladaptation or disruptive effect these symptoms have on
life/relations
- Syndrome (or disorder): a group of symptoms that appear together and are
assumed to represent a specific type of disorder
- Personal Distress
o But you can also be distressed without having a disorder
- Statistical Norms: consider frequency of specific condition in general population
o But some statistics don’t consider cultural or group norms
o Just because something is frequent doesn’t mean it doesn’t cause impairment
 Binge drinking
o When you are on one end of the bell curve, it could be a good thing (high IQ
for example)
 Olympic athletes
o doesn't specify at what extent does a behavior become problematic, need to
know more context
- Social Norm Violation: behavior that breaks social norms
o But just because something is not mainstream doesn’t mean it is problematic
(Lady Gaga Meat Dress)
o Our norms change over time and place
- Exclude:
o Predictable responses to stresses
o cannot stem from social deviance or the problems that the person has with
society
- Harmful Dysfunction – Wakefield
o A condition is a mental disorder only if:
 Results from the failure of some internal mechanism to perform its
natural function
 Causes harm to the person (distress on an everyday basis) as judged
by the standards of the person’s culture
 Definition causes issues because we don’t necessarily know what is
function and dysfunctional; also creates a binary; how do we know
what makes something tilt the scale over the abnormal
- DSM 5: Classification of Disorders
o Disorders are identified by their symptoms
o Causes of disorders (etiology) often unknown

, o Depend on observations and descriptions rather than ideas about causes
(doesn’t matter what caused the depression; just the fact that there is
depression)
o Evidence based on self-report, peer/family-reports, and observation
o See table 1.1 in textbook Defining Characteristics of Mental Disorders
- Mental Disorder versus Abnormal Behavior
o If a person has a mental disorder, they will automatically display abnormal
behavior
o Some people have abnormal behavior and no mental disorder
o Some people have mental disorders but no observable abnormal behaviors
(phobias)
- Classifications
o Provides common nomenclature
 Informs treatment choice
 Terminology for mental health professionals
 Decides how to treat patient
o Can lead to stigma/stereotypes about disorder

Role of Culture:
- Cultural Relativity
o Etic Perspective (outsider)
 Culture-general or universal orientation
 Assumes universal principals can be applied to all cultures
 Terms or facts that apply to all cultures
o Emic perspective (insider)
 Culture-specific
 Involved understanding from perspectives of those in the culture
 Uses culture-specific criteria
o Consider who gets to decide what is abnormal and normal
o Example: hormones released in teenagers are the same but their behaviors
and responses to the hormones are different across cultures
o Example: American satire story about basic ritual of brushing teeth in the
morning; can be seen as absurd from the outsider
- Zeitgeist
o Drapetomia: disease set by African slaves by running away
o Homosexuality: disorder in 1st and 2nd DSM
o Gambling Disorder: added to substance related disorders in DSM 5
o Culture isn’t static; definitions of abnormal changes over time and place
- Cultural Influence on Prevalence

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