01 Abnormal Psychology
01 Abnormal Psychology
01 Abnormal Psychology
PSYCHOLOGY: AN
INTRODUCTION
PSYCHOPATHOLOGY
The study of psychopathology is
a search for the reasons why
people behave, think, and feel in
unexpected, sometimes odd, and
possibly self-defeating ways
psychopathology. The field concerned with the nature and
development of mental disorders.
STIGMA
Unfortunately, people who have a
mental illness are often
stigmatized
Reducing the stigma associated
with mental illness remains a
great challenge for the field
stigma. The pernicious beliefs and attitudes held by a
society, ascribed to groups considered deviant in some
manner, such as people with mental illness.
STIGMA
PEOPLE WITH
THE LABEL
ARE
DISCRIMINATE
D AGAINST
DEFINITION / EVALUATION OF
MENTAL DISORDERS
In evaluating whether a behavior is
part of a mental disorder,
psychologists consider several
different characteristics:
- personal distress
- disability
- violation of social norms
- dysfunction
PERSONAL DISTRESS
A persons behavior may be
classified as disordered if it causes
him or her great distress
Personal distress also characterizes
many forms of mental disorders
But not all mental disorders cause
distress
- antisocial personality disorder
DISABILITY
impairment in some important area of
life (e.g., work or personal
relationships)
- example: alcohol use disorder (social
and occupational disability)
disability alone cannot be used to
define mental disorder, because some,
but not all, disorders involve disability
- example: bulimia (control of weight
gain by binging and purging, but does
not involve disability)
VIOLATION OF SOCIAL
NORMS
VIOLATION OF SOCIAL
NORMS
Behavior that violates social norms
might be classified as disordered
- example: the repetitive rituals
performed by
people with obsessive-compulsive
disorder
Yet this way of defining mental disorder
is both too broad and too narrow
Issue of social norms of different
cultures
DYSFUNCTION
Mental disorders could be defined as
harmful dysfunction (Wakefield,
1992)
a value judgment (harmful)
an objective, scientific component
the dysfunction
A judgment that a behavior is
harmful requires some standard, and
this standard is likely to depend on
social norms and values
DYSFUNCTION
Dysfunctions are said to occur when an
internal mechanism is unable to
perform its natural functionthat is, the
function that it evolved to perform
Still, the dysfunction component of
Wakefields definition is not so easily
and objectively identifiable in relation to
mental disorders
internal mechanisms involved in mental
disorders are largely unknown; thus, we
cannot say exactly what may not be
A BRIEF HISTORY OF
PSYCHOPATHOLOGY
Since the beginning of scientific
inquiry into mental disorders,
supernatural, biological, and
psychological points of view have
vied for attention
SUPERNATURAL VIEWPOINT
More supernatural viewpoints included
early demonology, which posited that
people with mental illness are
possessed by demons or evil spirits,
leading to treatments such as exorcism
demonology. The doctrine that a persons abnormal
behavior is caused by an autonomous evil spirit.
exorcism. The casting out of evil spirits by ritualistic
chanting or torture
BIOLOGICAL VIEWPOINT
Early biological viewpoints originated
in the writings of Hippocrates
It is believed he described the
symptoms of tertiary syphilis in
Ancient Greece
ASYLUMS
Beginning in the fifteenth century,
people with mental illness were often
confined in asylums, such as
Bethlehem (bedlam corruption of
Bethelem)
ASYLUMS
Treatment in asylums was generally poor
or nonexistent until various
humanitarian reforms were instituted
Philippe Pinel and the (supposed) freeing
of patients at Le Bictre (later, it was found
that a former patient and orderly, Jean-Baptiste Pussin,
initiated this move)
PSYCHOLOGICAL
VIEWPOINTS
Psychological viewpoints emerged in
the nineteenth century from the work
of Charcot and the writings of Breuer
and Freud
PSYCHOLOGICAL
VIEWPOINTS
Freuds theory emphasized stages of
psychosexual development and the
importance of unconscious
processes, such as repression and
defense mechanisms that are
traceable to early-childhood conflicts
PSYCHOSEXUAL
DEVELOPMENT
Oral (incorporative/aggressive)
Anal (retentive/expulsive)
Phallic (Oedipus complex [M];
Electra complex [F])
Latency
Genital
DEFENSE MECHANISMS
Primitive Defense
Mechanisms:
Denial
Regression
Acting Out
Dissociation
Compartmentalization
Projection
Reaction Formation
More Mature Defense
Mechanisms:
Repression
Displacement
Intellectualization
Rationalization
Undoing
BEHAVIORISM
Behaviorism suggested that
behavior develops through classical
conditioning, operant conditioning,
or modeling
B. F. Skinner introduced the ideas of
positive and negative reinforcement
and showed that operant
conditioning can influence behavior