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Chapter 14
Psychological
Disorders

PowerPoint®
Presentation
by Jim Foley
What we’ll seek to understand...
 What does it mean to have a mental
disorder?
 Defining and classifying disorders
 Anxiety disorders, including GAD,
Panic, Phobias, OCD and PTSD
 Mood disorders, including depression
and bipolar disorder
 Schizophrenia
 Sample of other disorders:
 Dissociative disorders
 Eating disorders
 Personality disorders
 Rates of Diagnosis with Disorders
Why Learn about Psychological Disorders?
Reasons for curiosity:
 personal familiarity with
psychological symptoms
 knowing someone else
with the disorder
 hearing about how
prevalent and socially
devastating some
disorders have become in
society
 wanting to learn more
about mental health and
human nature
Perspectives on Psychological Disorders
 Defining psychological
disorders
 Thinking critically about
ADHD
 Understanding
psychological disorders
 Classifying
psychological disorders
 Labeling psychological
disorders
 Insanity and
responsibility

Questions to Keep in Mind
How do we decide when a set of
symptoms are severe enough to be
called a disorder that needs
treatment?
Can we define specific disorders
clearly enough so that we can know
that we’re all referring to the same
behavior/mental state?
Can we use our diagnostic labels to
guide treatment rather than to
stigmatize people?
A Psychological disorder is:
A significant dysfunction in an individual’s
cognitions, emotions, or behaviors.
More
 Disorders are diagnosed when there
Understandings
is dysfunction, behaviors which are
considered maladaptive because
about disorders:
they interfere with one’s daily life
 Disorders are diagnosed when the
symptoms and behaviors are
accompanied by Distress, suffering.
 New definition (DSM 5): “a
disturbance in the psychological,
biological, or developmental
processes underlying mental
functioning.”
Is Attention-Deficit/Hyperactivity
Disorder (ADHD) a real disorder?
ADHD: Impulsivity mixed with Inattention and/or
hyperactivity. Can include distractibility, disorganization,
fidgeting, difficulty suppressing impulses, and impaired
working memory. Is this a disorder?
 Is it deviant? Do some people have a level of
inattentiveness, impulsiveness, or restlessness that goes
beyond laziness or immaturity?
 Is it distressful? Is the person enjoying being energetic, or
are they frustrated that they can’t sustain focus?
 Is there dysfunction? Are the symptoms harmless fun, or
do they negatively impact work and relationships?
Understanding the Nature of
Psychological Disorders
 One reason to diagnose a disorder is to make decisions about
treating the problem.
 Based on older understanding of
psychological disorders, treatments have
included: exorcising evil spirits, beatings,
caging/restraint, and

Pinel’s New Approach
 Philippe Pinel (1745-1826) proposed that
mental disorders were not caused by
demonic possession, but by stress and
inhumane conditions.
 Pinel’s “moral treatment” involved
gentleness, nature, and social interaction.

Pinel’s interventions
improved lives but
often did not
effectively treat mental
illness.
But
then…
The Medical
Model

The discovery that the disease of
syphilis causes mental symptoms
(by infecting the brain) suggested a
medical model for mental illness.

 Psychological disorders can be seen
as psychopathology, an illness of
the mind.
 Disorders can be diagnosed,
labeled as a collection of symptoms
that tend to go together.
 People with disorders can be
treated, attended to, given
therapy, all with a goal of restoring
mental health.
The Biopsychosocial Approach
Cultural Influences on Disorders
Culture-bound syndromes are
disorders which only seem to exist
within certain cultures; they
demonstrate how culture can play
a role in both causing and defining
a disorder.
Examples:
Bulimia Nervosa: binging/purging, in the United States
Running amok: violent outbursts, in Malaysia
Hikikomori: social withdrawal, in Japan
Classifying Psychological Disorders
Why create classifications
of mental illness? What is
the value of talking about
diagnoses instead of just
talking about individuals?
1. Diagnoses create a
verbal shorthand for
referring to a list of
associated symptoms.
2. Diagnoses allow us to
statistically study
many similar cases,
learning to predict
outcomes.
3. Diagnoses can guide
treatment choices.








The Diagnostic and
Statistical Manual
It’s easier to count
cases of autism if we
have a clear
definition.
Versions: DSM-IV-TR,
DSM-V (May 2013)
The DSM is used to
justify payment for
treatment.
It’s consistent with
diagnoses used by
medical doctors
worldwide.
The Five “Axes” of Diagnosis
The DSM suggests describing someone not just with a label
but with a five-part picture.
Axis I:

Axis II:

Axis III:

Axis IV:

Axis V:

Is a clinical Is a personality Is a general
Are
What is the
syndrome
disorder or
medical
psychosocial
global
present?
mental
condition,
or
assessment of
retardation
such as
environmental this person’s
Using
(intellectual
diabetes,
problems, such functioning?
specifically
developmental arthritis, or
as school or
defined
Clinicians
disorder)
hypertension housing issues, assign a code
criteria,
present?
also present? also present?
clinicians
from
may select Clinicians may
0-100.
none, one, or may not also
or more
select one of
syndromes.
these two
conditions.
Categories of
Diagnoses
Categories of
Diagnoses:
The 5 Axes
Critiques of Diagnosing with the DSM
1. The DSM calls too many people
“disordered.”
2. The border between diagnoses, or
between disorder and normal, seems
arbitrary.
3. Decisions about what is a disorder seem
to include value judgments; is depression
necessarily deviant?
4. Diagnostic labels direct how we view and
interpret the world, telling us which
behavior and mental states to see as
disordered.
Stigma and Stereotypes
Many people think a diagnostic
label means being seen as tainted,
weak, and weird.
However:
 these negative views/stigma
come from popular cultural views
of mental illness, and not from
the DSM.
 the DSM may contain the
information to correct inaccurate
perceptions of mental illness.
Insanity and Responsibility
 Jared Loughner shot many
people, including a U.S.
Representative, in 2011.
 Loughner had schizophrenia and
substance abuse problems, a
combination associated with
increased violence.

To what degree, if any,
should he be held
responsible for his actions?
What is the appropriate
consequence?
Anxiety Disorders: Our self-protective,
risk-reduction instincts in overdrive
 Generalized Anxiety
Disorder: Painful
worrying
 Panic Disorder: Fear of
the next attack
 Phobias: Don’t even
show me a picture
 OCD: I know it doesn’t
make sense, but I can’t
help it
 PTSD: Stuck Reexperiencing Trauma

Causes of Anxiety
Disorders:
 Fear Conditioning
 Observational
Learning
 Genetic/Evolutionary
Predispositions
 Brain involvement
GAD: Generalized
Anxiety Disorder
 Emotional-cognitive
symptoms include
worrying, having anxious
feelings and thoughts about
many subjects, and
sometimes “free-floating”
anxiety with no attachment to
any subject. Anxious
anticipation interferes with
concentration.
 Physical symptoms include
autonomic
arousal, trembling, sweating,
fidgeting, agitation, and sleep
disruption.
Panic Disorder:
“I’m Dying”
A panic attack is not just an
“anxiety attack.” It may include:
 many minutes of intense dread
or terror.
 chest pains, choking,
numbness, or other frightening
physical sensations.
 a feeling of a need to escape.
Panic disorder refers to repeated
and unexpected panic attacks, as
well as a fear of the next attack.
Specific Phobia
A specific phobia is more than just
a strong fear or dislike. A specific
phobia is diagnosed when there is
an uncontrollable, irrational,
intense desire to avoid the some
object or situation. Even an image
of the object can trigger a
reaction--“GET IT AWAY FROM
ME!!!”--the uncontrollable,
irrational, intense desire to avoid
the object of the phobia.
Some Fears and Phobias
Which varies
more, fear or
phobias?
What does
this imply?

Some Other Phobias
Agoraphobia is the avoidance
of situations in which one will
fear having a panic attack.

Social phobia: an intense fear of
being watched and judged by others,
often showing as a fear of possibly
embarrassing public appearances.
Obsessive-Compulsive Disorder [OCD]
 Obsessions are intense, unwanted
worries, ideas, and images that
repeatedly pop up in the mind.
 A compulsion is a repeatedly strong
feeling of “needing” to carry out an
action, even though it doesn’t feel like
it makes sense.
 When is it a “disorder”?
 Distress: when you are deeply
frustrated with not being able to
control the behaviors
or
 Dysfunction: when the time and
mental energy spent on these
thoughts and behaviors interfere
with everyday life
Common OCD Behaviors
Percentage of children and adolescents with OCD reporting
these obsessions or compulsions:

Common pattern: RECHECKING
Although you know that you’ve already
made sure the door is locked, you feel
you must check again. And again.
Post-Traumatic Stress
Disorder [PTSD]
About 10 to 35 percent of
people who experience
trauma not only have
burned-in memories, but also
four weeks to a lifetime of:

 repeated intrusive recall of
those memories.
 nightmares and other reexperiencing.
 social withdrawal or phobic
avoidance.
 jumpy anxiety or
hypervigilance.
 insomnia or sleep problems.

Which people develop PTSD?
 Those with sensitive
emotion-processing limbic
systems
 Those who are asked to
relive their trauma as they
report it
 Those previously
traumatized
Understanding Anxiety Disorders:
Explanations from Different Perspectives
Classical
conditioning:
overgeneralizing
a conditioned
response

Genes:
predisposed to
some fears

Operant
conditioning:
rewarding
avoidance

The Brain:
active anxiety
pathways

Cognitive
appraisals:
uncertainty is
danger

Natural
Selection:
surviving by
avoiding danger
Classical Conditioning
and Anxiety

Operant Conditioning
and Anxiety

 In the experiment by
Watson in 1920, Little
Albert learned to feel fear
around a rabbit because he
had been conditioned to
associate the bunny with a
loud scary noise.
 Sometimes, such a
conditioned response
becomes overgeneralized.
We may begin to fear all
animals, everything fluffy,
all experimenters.
 The result is a phobia or
generalized anxiety.

 We may feel anxious in a
situation and make a
decision to leave. This makes
us feel better and our
anxious avoidance was just
reinforced.
 If we know we have locked a
door but feel anxious and
compelled to re-check,
rechecking will help us
temporarily feel better.
 The result is an increase in
anxious thoughts and
behaviors.
Observational
Learning and
Anxiety
 Experiments with humans
and monkeys show that
anxiety can be acquired
through observational
learning. If you see
someone else avoiding or
fearing some object or
creature, you might pick up
that fear and adopt it even
after the original scared
person is not around.
 In this way, fears get passed
down in families.
Cognition and
Anxiety
 Cognition includes worried
thoughts, as well as
interpretations, appraisals,
beliefs, predictions, and
ruminations.
 Cognition includes mental
habits such as hypervigilance
(persistently watching out for
danger). This accompanies
anxiety in PTSD.
 In anxiety disorders, such
cognitions appear repeatedly
and make anxiety worse.
Biology and Anxiety: Genes
 Studies show that
identical twins, even
raised separately,
develop similar phobias
(more similar than two
unrelated people).
 Some people seem to
have an inborn highstrung temperament,
while others are more
easygoing.
 Temperament may be
encoded in our genes.

Genes and
Neurotransmitters

 Genes regulate levels of
neurotransmitters.
 People with anxiety have
problems with a gene
associated with levels of
serotonin, a neurotransmitter
involved in regulating sleep
and mood.
 People with anxiety also have
a gene that triggers high levels
of glutamate, an excitatory
neurotransmitter involved in
the brain’s alarm centers.
Biology and Anxiety: The Brain
 Traumatic
experiences can burn
fear circuits into the
amygdala; these
circuits are later
triggered and
activated.
 Anxiety disorders
include overarousal
of brain areas
involved in impulse
control and habitual
behaviors.

The OCD brain shows extra
activity in the ACC, which
monitors our actions and checks
for errors.
ACC = anterior cingulate gyrus
Biology and Anxiety:
An Evolutionary Perspective
1. Human phobic objects: 2. Similar but non-phobic objects:
Snakes Fish
Heights Low places
Closed spaces Open spaces
Darkness Bright light
3. Dangerous yet non-phobic subjects:
We are likely to become cautious about, but not phobic about:
Guns
Electric wiring
Cars

 Evolutionary psychologists believe that ancestors
prone to fear the items on list #1 were less likely to
die before reproducing.
 There has not been time for the innate fear of list #3
(the gun list) to spread in the population.
Mood Disorders: Not just feeling
“down;” not just sad about something
 Major Depressive Disorder: Stuck in dark withdrawal
 Bipolar Disorder: sometimes fleeing depression into
mania
 Prevalence and Course of depression: Common, but
for many it goes away
 Genetic Influences on Depression
 Suicide and Self-Injury
 Negative Moods and Negative thoughts: Explanatory
style
 The vicious cycle: Interaction of bad experiences 
depressive thoughts  mood changes  behavior
changes  more sad days
Mood Disorders
Major depressive disorder [MDD] is:
 more than just feeling “down.”
 more than just feeling sad
about something.

Bipolar disorder is:
 more than “mood swings.”
 depression plus the problematic
overly “up” mood called “mania.”
Criteria of Major Depressive Disorders
Major depressive disorder is not just one of these symptoms.
It is one or both of the first two, PLUS three or more of the
rest.










Depressed mood most of the day, and/or
Markedly diminished interest or pleasure in activities
Significant increase or decrease in appetite or weight
Insomnia, sleeping too much, or disrupted sleep
Lethargy, or physical agitation
Fatigue or loss of energy nearly every day
Worthlessness, or excessive/inappropriate guilt
Daily problems in thinking, concentrating, and/or
making decisions
 Recurring thoughts of death and suicide
Depression is Everywhere
Depression shows up in people
seeking treatment:
 Phobias are the most
common (frequently
experienced) disorder, but
depression is the #1 reason
people seek mental health
services.
Depression appears worldwide:
 Per year, depressive
episodes happen to about 6
percent of men and about 9
percent of women.
 Over the course of a
lifetime, 12 percent of
Canadians and 17 percent of
USA residents experience
depression.

Depression: The “Common Cold” of
Disorders?
Although both are “common”
(occurring frequently and pervasively),
comparing depression to a cold doesn’t
work.
Depression:
 is more dangerous because of
suicide risk.
 has fewer observable symptoms.
 is more lasting than a cold, and is
less likely to go away just with time.
 is much less contagious.
And…depressive pain is beyond sniffles.
Seasonal Affective Disorder [SAD]
 Seasonal affective disorder is more than simply
disliking winter.
 Seasonal affective disorder involves a recurring
seasonal pattern of depression, usually during
winter’s short, dark, cold days.
 Survey: “Have you cried today”? Result: More
people answer “yes” in winter.
Percentage who cried
Men

Women

August

4

7

December

8

21
Bipolar Disorder
 Bipolar disorder was once
called “manic-depressive
disorder.”
 Bipolar disorder’s two
polar opposite moods are
depression and mania.

Mania refers to a period of
hyper-elevated mood that
is euphoric, giddy, easily
irritated, hyperactive,
impulsive, overly optimistic,
and even grandiose.

Contrasting Symptoms
Depressed mood: stuck feeling
Mania: euphoric, giddy, easily
“down,” with:
irritated, with:
 exaggerated pessimism
 exaggerated optimism
 social withdrawal
 hypersociality and sexuality
 lack of felt pleasure
 delight in everything
 inactivity and no initiative
 impulsivity and overactivity
 difficulty focusing
 racing thoughts; the mind
 fatigue and excessive desire to
won’t settle down
sleep
 little desire for sleep
Bipolar Disorder and Creative Success
Many famous and successful people have lived with the
ups and downs of bipolar disorder. Some speculate that
the depressive periods gave them ideas, and the manic
episodes gave them creative energy. Any evidence of
mood swings here?
Bipolar Disorder in Children and
Adolescents
 Does bipolar disorder
show up before
adulthood, and even
before puberty?
 Many young people have
cycles from depression
to extended rage rather
than mania.
 The DSM-V may have a
new diagnosis for some
of these kids: disruptive
mood dysregulation
disorder.
Understanding Mood Disorders
Why are mood disorders so pervasive,
especially among women?

Women, starting in adolescence, appear to ruminate
more, have deeper sadness then men, encounter more
stressors, and report their depression more readily.
Understanding Mood Disorders
Can we explain…
 Why does depression often go
away on its own?
 the course/development of
reactive depression?
Often, time heals a mood
disorder, especially when the
mood issue is in reaction to a
stressful event. However, a
significant proportion of
people with major depressive
disorder do not automatically
or easily get better with time.
Understanding Mood Disorders
Biological aspects and
explanations

Social-cognitive aspects
and explanations

Evolutionary
Genetic
Brain /Body

Negative thoughts and
negative mood
Explanatory style
The vicious cycle
An Evolutionary Perspective on the
Biology of Depression
 Depression, in its milder, nondisordered form, may have
had survival value.
 Under stress, depression is
social-emotional hibernation.
It allows humans to:
 conserve energy.
 avoid conflicts and other
risks.
 let go of unattainable
goals.
 take time to contemplate.
Biology of Depression: Genetics
Evidence of genetic influence on depression:
1. DNA linkage analysis reveals depressed gene regions
2. twin/adoption heritability studies
Biology of Depression: The Brain
 Brain activity is diminished in depression and increased in mania.
 Brain structure: smaller frontal lobes in depression and fewer
axons in bipolar disorder
 Brain cell communication (neurotransmitters):
 more norepinephrine (arousing) in mania, less in depression
 reduced serotonin in depression
Suicide and Self-Injury
 Every year, 1 million people commit suicide, giving up
on the process of trying to cope and improve their
emotional well-being.
 This can happen when people feel frustrated,
trapped, isolated, ineffective, and see no end to
these feelings.
 Non-suicidal self-injury has other functions such as
sending a message, distracting from emotional pain,
giving oneself permission to feel, or self-punishment.
Understanding Mood Disorders:
The Social-Cognitive Perspective

Low SelfEsteem

Discounting positive
information and assuming the
worst about self, situation,
and the future
Self-defeating
beliefs such as
assuming that
one (self) is
Learned
unable to cope,
Helplessness
improve, achieve,
or be happy

Depression is
associated with:

Depressive
Explanatory
Style

Rumination
Stuck focusing on
what’s bad
Depressive Explanatory Style
How we analyze bad news predicts mood.
Problematic event:
Assumptions about
the problem

The problem is:

The problem is:

The problem is:
Mood/result that
goes along with
these views:
Depression’s Vicious Cycle
A depressed mood may develop when a person with a
negative outlook experiences repeated stress.
The depressed
mood changes
a person’s style
of thinking and
interacting in a
way that makes
stressful
experience
more likely.
Schizophrenia
Split from reality and from self
Schizophrenia symptoms:
 Disorganized thinking,
Delusions
 Disturbed perceptions:
Hallucinations
 Unusual emotions and
actions, including flat
affect, and catatonia
 Subtypes
 Onset and course

Causes of symptoms:
 Brain: Dopamine
overactivity
 Abnormal brain
anatomy and activity
 Maternal virus during
pregnancy
 Associated genes
Schizophrenia:
Psychosis refers
to a mental split
from reality and
rationality.

the mind is split from reality, e.g.
a split from one’s own thoughts
so that they appear as
hallucinations.

Schizophrenia
symptoms include:
 disorganized
and/or
delusional
thinking.
 disturbed
perceptions.
 inappropriate
emotions and
actions.
Positive and Negative Symptoms of
Schizophrenia
Positive +
presence of
problematic
behaviors







Hallucinations (illusory
perceptions), especially
auditory
Delusions (illusory
beliefs), especially
persecutory
Disorganized thought and
nonsensical speech
Bizarre behaviors

Negative absence of
healthy
behaviors








Flat affect (no emotion
showing in the face)
Reduced social interaction
Anhedonia (no feeling of
enjoyment)
Avolition (less motivation,
initiative, focus on tasks)
Alogia (speaking less)
Catatonia (moving less)
Schizophrenia Symptoms:

Problems in Thinking and Speaking
 Disorganized speech,
including the “word salad”
of loosely associated
phrases
 Delusions (illusory beliefs),
often bizarre and not just
mistaken; most common
are delusions of grandeur
and of persecution
 Problems with selective
attention, difficulty
filtering thoughts and
choosing which thoughts to
believe and to say out loud

?!?!
?!?!
Schizophrenia Symptoms:

Disturbed Perceptions
 People with schizophrenia often
experience hallucinations, that
is, perceptual experiences not
shared by others.
 The most common form of
hallucination is hearing voices
that no one else hears, often with
upsetting (e.g. shaming) content.
 Hallucinations can also be
visual, olfactory/smells, tactile/to
uch, or gustatory/taste.

Am I evil?

You’re evil!
Schizophrenia Symptoms:

Inappropriate Emotions and Actions
 Odd and socially inappropriate
responses such as looking bored or
amused while hearing of a death
 Flat affect: facial/body expression is
“flat” with no visible emotional
content
 Impaired perception of emotions,
including not “reading” others’
intentions and feelings
The schizophrenic body exhibits
symptoms such as:
 repetitive behaviors such as rocking
and rubbing.
 catatonia, such as sitting motionless
and unresponsive for hours.
Onset and
Development of
Schizophrenia
 Onset: Typically,
schizophrenic symptoms
appear at the end of
adolescence and in early
adulthood, later for women
than for men.
 Prevalence: Nearly 1 in 100
people develop
schizophrenia, slightly
more men than women.
 Development: The course
of schizophrenia can be
acute/reactive or chronic.

Course of
Schizophrenia
Acute/Reactive Schizophrenia
In reaction to stress, some
people develop positive
symptoms such as
hallucinations.
– Recovery is likely.
Chronic/Process Schizophrenia
develops slowly, with more
negative symptoms .
– With treatment and
support, there may be
periods of a normal life,
but not a cure.
– Without treatment, this
type of schizophrenia
often leads to poverty and
social problems.
Subtypes of Schizophrenia
Paranoid
• Plagued by hallucinations, often with negative
messages, and delusions, both grandiose and
persecutory

Disorganized
• Primary symptoms are flat affect, incoherent speech,
and random behavior
Catatonic
• Rarely initiating or controlling movement; copies
others’ speech and actions

Undifferentiated
• Many varied symptoms
Residual
• Withdrawal continues after positive symptoms have
disappeared
Understanding Schizophrenia
What’s going on in
the brain in
schizophrenia?

Abnormal brain
structure and activity
 Too many dopamine/D4 receptors
help to explain paranoia and
hallucinations; it’s like taking
amphetamine overdoses all the time.
 Poor coordination of neural firing in
the frontal lobes impairs judgment
and self-control.
 The thalamus fires during
hallucinations as if real sensations
were being received.
 There is general shrinking of many
brain areas and connections between
them.
Understanding Schizophrenia
Are there biological risk factors
affecting early development?

Biological Risk Factors
Schizophrenia is somewhat more likely
to develop when one or more of these
factors is present:
 low birth weight
 maternal diabetes
 older paternal age
 famine
 oxygen deprivation during delivery
 maternal virus during mid-pregnancy
impairing brain development

Schizophrenia is more
likely to develop in
babies born:
 during and after flu
epidemics.
 in densely populated
areas.
 a few months after
flu season.
 after mothers had
the flu during the
second trimester, or
had antibodies
showing viral
infection.
 The lesson is to:
get flu shots
with early fall
pregnancies.
Understanding Schizophrenia
Are there genetic risk factors? If
so, we would see more similar
schizophrenia risk shared
between identical twins than
fraternal twins (graph below). Do
we?

Genetic Factors
If one twin has
schizophrenia, the
chance of the other one
also having it are much
greater if the twins are
identical.

Having adoptive siblings
(or parents) with
schizophrenia does not
increase the likelihood
of developing
schizophrenia.
Understanding Schizophrenia
Genetic and Prenatal Causes

 Even in quadruplets, genetics do not
fully predict schizophrenia.
 This could be because of
environmental differences.
 First difference: twins in separate
placentas.

Only one of two twins has the enlarged
ventricles seen in schizophrenia.

 The Genain
quadruplets share
genes and all have
schizophrenia but
at different levels
of severity: genes
may interact with
environment to
produce this
pattern.
Other Disorders, Including
Dissociative, Personality, and Eating
A sample of a few of theDisorders
many other psychological disorders
 Dissociative Disorders:
Separation of
consciousness
 Dissociative Identity
Disorder: Is it real?
How could it happen?
 Personality Disorders:
Severe, enduring
problems relating to
others

Focus on Antisocial
Personality Disorder
 Overlap with criminal
activity
 Brain differences
 Genes and social causes
Eating Disorders
 Anorexia and Bulimia
 Genes and social causes
Dissociative
Disorders

 Dissociation: a separation of
conscious awareness from
thoughts, memory, bodily
sensations, feelings, or even
from identity.
 Dissociative disorder:
dysfunction and distress caused
by chronic and severe
dissociation.

Examples:
Dissociative
Fugue state

Fugue = “Running away”; wandering away from one’s
life, memory, and identity, with no memory of them

Dissociative
Identity
Disorder
(D.I.D.)

Development of separate personalities
Dissociative Identity Disorder (D.I.D.)
formerly “Multiple Personality Disorder”

In the rare actual cases of
D.I.D., the personalities:
 are distinct, and not
present in consciousness
at the same time.
 may or may not appear to
be aware of each other.

Alternative Explanations
for D.I.D.

 Dissociative “identities”
might just be an extreme
form of playing a role.
 D.I.D. in North America
might be a recent cultural
construction, similar to the
idea of being possessed by
evil spirits.
 Cases of D.I.D. might be
created or worsened by
therapists encouraging
people to think of different
parts of themselves.
D.I.D., or DID Not?
Evidence that D.I.D. is Real
Different personalities have
involved:
 different brain wave
patterns.
 different left-right
handedness.
 different visual acuity and
eye muscle balance
patterns.
Patients with D.I.D. also show
heightened activity in areas of
the brain associated with
managing and inhibiting
traumatic memories.

Explaining fragmentation
of personality from
different perspectives
Psychoanalytic perspective:
diverting id
Cognitive perspective:
coping with abuse
Learning perspective:
dissociation pays
Social influence:
therapists encourage
Eating
Disorders
Anorexia nervosa
Bulimia nervosa
Binge-eating disorder

Anorexia
Nervosa
Bulimia
Nervosa
Binge-Eating
Disorder

These may involve:
 unrealistic body image and
extreme body ideal.
 a desire to control food and the
body when one’s situation can’t
be controlled.
 cycles of depression.
 health problems.

Definition
Prevalence
Compulsion to lose weight,
0.6 percent
coupled with certainty about being meet criteria at
fat despite being 15 percent or
some time
more underweight
during lifetime
Compulsion to binge, eating large
amounts fast, then purge by losing
1.0 percent
the food through vomiting,
laxatives, and extreme exercise
Compulsion to binge, followed by
2.8 percent
guilt and depression
Eating Disorders: Associated Factors
Family factors:
 having a mother focused on her
weight, and on child’s appearance
and weight
 negative self-evaluation in the family
 for bulimia, if childhood obesity runs
in the family
 for anorexia, if families are
competitive, high-achieving, and
protective
Cultural factors:
 unrealistic ideals of body appearance
Personality
Disorders

Personality disorders
are enduring patterns of
social and other
behavior that impair
social functioning.

There are three “clusters”/categories of personality
disorders.
 Anxious: e.g., Avoidant P.D., ruled by fear of social
rejection
 Eccentric/Odd: e.g. Schizoid P.D., with flat affect,
no social attachments
 Dramatic: e.g. Histrionic, attention-seeking;
narcissistic, self-centered; antisocial, amoral
Antisocial Personality Disorder [APD]
Antisocial personality
disorder: Persistently
acting without
conscience, without a
sense of guilt for harm
done to others
(strangers and family
alike).
The diagnostic criteria
include a pattern of
violating the rights of
others since age 15,
including three of these:

Deceitfulness
Disregard for safety of self or
others
Aggressiveness
Failure to conform to social
norms
Lack of remorse
Impulsivity and failure to plan
ahead
Irritability
Irresponsibility regarding jobs,
family, and money
Which Kids May Develop APD as Adults?
About half of children with
persistent antisocial
behavior develop lifelong
APD.
Which kids are at risk?
Psychological factors:
 those who in preschool
were impulsive,
uninhibited,
unconcerned with social
rewards, and low in
anxiety.
 those who endured
child abuse, and/or
inconsistent, unavailable
caretaking.








Biological APD Risk Factors
Antisocial or unemotional
biological relatives increases risk.
 Some associated genes have
been identified.
Lower levels of stress hormones
and low physiological arousal in
stressful situations
Fear conditioning is impaired.
Reduced prefrontal cortex tissue
leads to impulsivity.
Substance dependence is more
likely.
Antisocial PD ≠ Criminality

Criminals: people
who repeatedly
commit crimes

People with
antisocial
personality
disorder

Many career criminals do show empathy and
selflessness with family and friends.
Many people with A.P.D. do not commit crimes.
Antisocial Crime: Associated factors
Though antisocial
personality disorder is
not a full picture of most
criminal activity, what
can we say about people
who commit crime,
especially violent crime?

Lower levels of
physiological arousal
(measured here as
adrenaline levels) under
stress may enable taking
violent action without
feeling anxiety or panic.
Biosocial Roots of Crime: The Brain
People who
commit murder
seem to have
less tissue and
activity in the
part of the
brain that
suppresses
impulses.

Other differences include:
 less amygdala response when viewing violence.
 an overactive dopamine reward-seeking system.
How common are
psychological disorders?

Countries vary greatly in the percentage of people reporting
mental health issues in the past year.
Rates of
Psychological
Disorders
This list takes a closer
look at the past-year
prevalence of various
mental health diagnoses
in the United States.
Vulnerable factors and ages for
developing Mental Disorders
Who is vulnerable to
mental disorders?
• Poverty increases the risk
of many mental disorders
including aggression and
anxiety. Disorders decrease
when poverty is lifted.
• “Immigrant paradox”:
Despite the stress of
immigrating, those who
immigrate to the U.S.A.
have a lower risk of
disorders than their
children born in the U.S.A.

Age of vulnerability:
• Many disorders begin to show
symptoms by early
adulthood.
• Developing on average
around age 20: OCD,
Schizophrenia, Bipolar,
Alcohol Dependence.
• Showing some signs earlier:
Phobias (median age 10) and
antisocial personality disorder
(some symptoms by age 8)
• Developing later than 20:
Major Depressive Disorder.
Outcomes for People with Psychological
Disorders
There are risks to be watchful of, obstacles
to be overcome, and improvements to be
made, often with the help of with
treatment.

 Some people with psychological
disorders do not recover.
 Some achieve greatness, even with a
psychological disorder.

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PSY 150 403 Chapter 14 SLIDES

  • 2. What we’ll seek to understand...  What does it mean to have a mental disorder?  Defining and classifying disorders  Anxiety disorders, including GAD, Panic, Phobias, OCD and PTSD  Mood disorders, including depression and bipolar disorder  Schizophrenia  Sample of other disorders:  Dissociative disorders  Eating disorders  Personality disorders  Rates of Diagnosis with Disorders
  • 3. Why Learn about Psychological Disorders? Reasons for curiosity:  personal familiarity with psychological symptoms  knowing someone else with the disorder  hearing about how prevalent and socially devastating some disorders have become in society  wanting to learn more about mental health and human nature
  • 4. Perspectives on Psychological Disorders  Defining psychological disorders  Thinking critically about ADHD  Understanding psychological disorders  Classifying psychological disorders  Labeling psychological disorders  Insanity and responsibility Questions to Keep in Mind How do we decide when a set of symptoms are severe enough to be called a disorder that needs treatment? Can we define specific disorders clearly enough so that we can know that we’re all referring to the same behavior/mental state? Can we use our diagnostic labels to guide treatment rather than to stigmatize people?
  • 5. A Psychological disorder is: A significant dysfunction in an individual’s cognitions, emotions, or behaviors. More  Disorders are diagnosed when there Understandings is dysfunction, behaviors which are considered maladaptive because about disorders: they interfere with one’s daily life  Disorders are diagnosed when the symptoms and behaviors are accompanied by Distress, suffering.  New definition (DSM 5): “a disturbance in the psychological, biological, or developmental processes underlying mental functioning.”
  • 6. Is Attention-Deficit/Hyperactivity Disorder (ADHD) a real disorder? ADHD: Impulsivity mixed with Inattention and/or hyperactivity. Can include distractibility, disorganization, fidgeting, difficulty suppressing impulses, and impaired working memory. Is this a disorder?  Is it deviant? Do some people have a level of inattentiveness, impulsiveness, or restlessness that goes beyond laziness or immaturity?  Is it distressful? Is the person enjoying being energetic, or are they frustrated that they can’t sustain focus?  Is there dysfunction? Are the symptoms harmless fun, or do they negatively impact work and relationships?
  • 7. Understanding the Nature of Psychological Disorders  One reason to diagnose a disorder is to make decisions about treating the problem.  Based on older understanding of psychological disorders, treatments have included: exorcising evil spirits, beatings, caging/restraint, and Pinel’s New Approach  Philippe Pinel (1745-1826) proposed that mental disorders were not caused by demonic possession, but by stress and inhumane conditions.  Pinel’s “moral treatment” involved gentleness, nature, and social interaction. Pinel’s interventions improved lives but often did not effectively treat mental illness. But then…
  • 8. The Medical Model The discovery that the disease of syphilis causes mental symptoms (by infecting the brain) suggested a medical model for mental illness.  Psychological disorders can be seen as psychopathology, an illness of the mind.  Disorders can be diagnosed, labeled as a collection of symptoms that tend to go together.  People with disorders can be treated, attended to, given therapy, all with a goal of restoring mental health.
  • 10. Cultural Influences on Disorders Culture-bound syndromes are disorders which only seem to exist within certain cultures; they demonstrate how culture can play a role in both causing and defining a disorder. Examples: Bulimia Nervosa: binging/purging, in the United States Running amok: violent outbursts, in Malaysia Hikikomori: social withdrawal, in Japan
  • 11. Classifying Psychological Disorders Why create classifications of mental illness? What is the value of talking about diagnoses instead of just talking about individuals? 1. Diagnoses create a verbal shorthand for referring to a list of associated symptoms. 2. Diagnoses allow us to statistically study many similar cases, learning to predict outcomes. 3. Diagnoses can guide treatment choices.     The Diagnostic and Statistical Manual It’s easier to count cases of autism if we have a clear definition. Versions: DSM-IV-TR, DSM-V (May 2013) The DSM is used to justify payment for treatment. It’s consistent with diagnoses used by medical doctors worldwide.
  • 12. The Five “Axes” of Diagnosis The DSM suggests describing someone not just with a label but with a five-part picture. Axis I: Axis II: Axis III: Axis IV: Axis V: Is a clinical Is a personality Is a general Are What is the syndrome disorder or medical psychosocial global present? mental condition, or assessment of retardation such as environmental this person’s Using (intellectual diabetes, problems, such functioning? specifically developmental arthritis, or as school or defined Clinicians disorder) hypertension housing issues, assign a code criteria, present? also present? also present? clinicians from may select Clinicians may 0-100. none, one, or may not also or more select one of syndromes. these two conditions.
  • 15. Critiques of Diagnosing with the DSM 1. The DSM calls too many people “disordered.” 2. The border between diagnoses, or between disorder and normal, seems arbitrary. 3. Decisions about what is a disorder seem to include value judgments; is depression necessarily deviant? 4. Diagnostic labels direct how we view and interpret the world, telling us which behavior and mental states to see as disordered.
  • 16. Stigma and Stereotypes Many people think a diagnostic label means being seen as tainted, weak, and weird. However:  these negative views/stigma come from popular cultural views of mental illness, and not from the DSM.  the DSM may contain the information to correct inaccurate perceptions of mental illness.
  • 17. Insanity and Responsibility  Jared Loughner shot many people, including a U.S. Representative, in 2011.  Loughner had schizophrenia and substance abuse problems, a combination associated with increased violence. To what degree, if any, should he be held responsible for his actions? What is the appropriate consequence?
  • 18. Anxiety Disorders: Our self-protective, risk-reduction instincts in overdrive  Generalized Anxiety Disorder: Painful worrying  Panic Disorder: Fear of the next attack  Phobias: Don’t even show me a picture  OCD: I know it doesn’t make sense, but I can’t help it  PTSD: Stuck Reexperiencing Trauma Causes of Anxiety Disorders:  Fear Conditioning  Observational Learning  Genetic/Evolutionary Predispositions  Brain involvement
  • 19. GAD: Generalized Anxiety Disorder  Emotional-cognitive symptoms include worrying, having anxious feelings and thoughts about many subjects, and sometimes “free-floating” anxiety with no attachment to any subject. Anxious anticipation interferes with concentration.  Physical symptoms include autonomic arousal, trembling, sweating, fidgeting, agitation, and sleep disruption.
  • 20. Panic Disorder: “I’m Dying” A panic attack is not just an “anxiety attack.” It may include:  many minutes of intense dread or terror.  chest pains, choking, numbness, or other frightening physical sensations.  a feeling of a need to escape. Panic disorder refers to repeated and unexpected panic attacks, as well as a fear of the next attack.
  • 21. Specific Phobia A specific phobia is more than just a strong fear or dislike. A specific phobia is diagnosed when there is an uncontrollable, irrational, intense desire to avoid the some object or situation. Even an image of the object can trigger a reaction--“GET IT AWAY FROM ME!!!”--the uncontrollable, irrational, intense desire to avoid the object of the phobia.
  • 22. Some Fears and Phobias Which varies more, fear or phobias? What does this imply? Some Other Phobias Agoraphobia is the avoidance of situations in which one will fear having a panic attack. Social phobia: an intense fear of being watched and judged by others, often showing as a fear of possibly embarrassing public appearances.
  • 23. Obsessive-Compulsive Disorder [OCD]  Obsessions are intense, unwanted worries, ideas, and images that repeatedly pop up in the mind.  A compulsion is a repeatedly strong feeling of “needing” to carry out an action, even though it doesn’t feel like it makes sense.  When is it a “disorder”?  Distress: when you are deeply frustrated with not being able to control the behaviors or  Dysfunction: when the time and mental energy spent on these thoughts and behaviors interfere with everyday life
  • 24. Common OCD Behaviors Percentage of children and adolescents with OCD reporting these obsessions or compulsions: Common pattern: RECHECKING Although you know that you’ve already made sure the door is locked, you feel you must check again. And again.
  • 25. Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder [PTSD] About 10 to 35 percent of people who experience trauma not only have burned-in memories, but also four weeks to a lifetime of:  repeated intrusive recall of those memories.  nightmares and other reexperiencing.  social withdrawal or phobic avoidance.  jumpy anxiety or hypervigilance.  insomnia or sleep problems. Which people develop PTSD?  Those with sensitive emotion-processing limbic systems  Those who are asked to relive their trauma as they report it  Those previously traumatized
  • 26. Understanding Anxiety Disorders: Explanations from Different Perspectives Classical conditioning: overgeneralizing a conditioned response Genes: predisposed to some fears Operant conditioning: rewarding avoidance The Brain: active anxiety pathways Cognitive appraisals: uncertainty is danger Natural Selection: surviving by avoiding danger
  • 27. Classical Conditioning and Anxiety Operant Conditioning and Anxiety  In the experiment by Watson in 1920, Little Albert learned to feel fear around a rabbit because he had been conditioned to associate the bunny with a loud scary noise.  Sometimes, such a conditioned response becomes overgeneralized. We may begin to fear all animals, everything fluffy, all experimenters.  The result is a phobia or generalized anxiety.  We may feel anxious in a situation and make a decision to leave. This makes us feel better and our anxious avoidance was just reinforced.  If we know we have locked a door but feel anxious and compelled to re-check, rechecking will help us temporarily feel better.  The result is an increase in anxious thoughts and behaviors.
  • 28. Observational Learning and Anxiety  Experiments with humans and monkeys show that anxiety can be acquired through observational learning. If you see someone else avoiding or fearing some object or creature, you might pick up that fear and adopt it even after the original scared person is not around.  In this way, fears get passed down in families.
  • 29. Cognition and Anxiety  Cognition includes worried thoughts, as well as interpretations, appraisals, beliefs, predictions, and ruminations.  Cognition includes mental habits such as hypervigilance (persistently watching out for danger). This accompanies anxiety in PTSD.  In anxiety disorders, such cognitions appear repeatedly and make anxiety worse.
  • 30. Biology and Anxiety: Genes  Studies show that identical twins, even raised separately, develop similar phobias (more similar than two unrelated people).  Some people seem to have an inborn highstrung temperament, while others are more easygoing.  Temperament may be encoded in our genes. Genes and Neurotransmitters  Genes regulate levels of neurotransmitters.  People with anxiety have problems with a gene associated with levels of serotonin, a neurotransmitter involved in regulating sleep and mood.  People with anxiety also have a gene that triggers high levels of glutamate, an excitatory neurotransmitter involved in the brain’s alarm centers.
  • 31. Biology and Anxiety: The Brain  Traumatic experiences can burn fear circuits into the amygdala; these circuits are later triggered and activated.  Anxiety disorders include overarousal of brain areas involved in impulse control and habitual behaviors. The OCD brain shows extra activity in the ACC, which monitors our actions and checks for errors. ACC = anterior cingulate gyrus
  • 32. Biology and Anxiety: An Evolutionary Perspective 1. Human phobic objects: 2. Similar but non-phobic objects: Snakes Fish Heights Low places Closed spaces Open spaces Darkness Bright light 3. Dangerous yet non-phobic subjects: We are likely to become cautious about, but not phobic about: Guns Electric wiring Cars  Evolutionary psychologists believe that ancestors prone to fear the items on list #1 were less likely to die before reproducing.  There has not been time for the innate fear of list #3 (the gun list) to spread in the population.
  • 33. Mood Disorders: Not just feeling “down;” not just sad about something  Major Depressive Disorder: Stuck in dark withdrawal  Bipolar Disorder: sometimes fleeing depression into mania  Prevalence and Course of depression: Common, but for many it goes away  Genetic Influences on Depression  Suicide and Self-Injury  Negative Moods and Negative thoughts: Explanatory style  The vicious cycle: Interaction of bad experiences  depressive thoughts  mood changes  behavior changes  more sad days
  • 34. Mood Disorders Major depressive disorder [MDD] is:  more than just feeling “down.”  more than just feeling sad about something. Bipolar disorder is:  more than “mood swings.”  depression plus the problematic overly “up” mood called “mania.”
  • 35. Criteria of Major Depressive Disorders Major depressive disorder is not just one of these symptoms. It is one or both of the first two, PLUS three or more of the rest.         Depressed mood most of the day, and/or Markedly diminished interest or pleasure in activities Significant increase or decrease in appetite or weight Insomnia, sleeping too much, or disrupted sleep Lethargy, or physical agitation Fatigue or loss of energy nearly every day Worthlessness, or excessive/inappropriate guilt Daily problems in thinking, concentrating, and/or making decisions  Recurring thoughts of death and suicide
  • 36. Depression is Everywhere Depression shows up in people seeking treatment:  Phobias are the most common (frequently experienced) disorder, but depression is the #1 reason people seek mental health services. Depression appears worldwide:  Per year, depressive episodes happen to about 6 percent of men and about 9 percent of women.  Over the course of a lifetime, 12 percent of Canadians and 17 percent of USA residents experience depression. Depression: The “Common Cold” of Disorders? Although both are “common” (occurring frequently and pervasively), comparing depression to a cold doesn’t work. Depression:  is more dangerous because of suicide risk.  has fewer observable symptoms.  is more lasting than a cold, and is less likely to go away just with time.  is much less contagious. And…depressive pain is beyond sniffles.
  • 37. Seasonal Affective Disorder [SAD]  Seasonal affective disorder is more than simply disliking winter.  Seasonal affective disorder involves a recurring seasonal pattern of depression, usually during winter’s short, dark, cold days.  Survey: “Have you cried today”? Result: More people answer “yes” in winter. Percentage who cried Men Women August 4 7 December 8 21
  • 38. Bipolar Disorder  Bipolar disorder was once called “manic-depressive disorder.”  Bipolar disorder’s two polar opposite moods are depression and mania. Mania refers to a period of hyper-elevated mood that is euphoric, giddy, easily irritated, hyperactive, impulsive, overly optimistic, and even grandiose. Contrasting Symptoms Depressed mood: stuck feeling Mania: euphoric, giddy, easily “down,” with: irritated, with:  exaggerated pessimism  exaggerated optimism  social withdrawal  hypersociality and sexuality  lack of felt pleasure  delight in everything  inactivity and no initiative  impulsivity and overactivity  difficulty focusing  racing thoughts; the mind  fatigue and excessive desire to won’t settle down sleep  little desire for sleep
  • 39. Bipolar Disorder and Creative Success Many famous and successful people have lived with the ups and downs of bipolar disorder. Some speculate that the depressive periods gave them ideas, and the manic episodes gave them creative energy. Any evidence of mood swings here?
  • 40. Bipolar Disorder in Children and Adolescents  Does bipolar disorder show up before adulthood, and even before puberty?  Many young people have cycles from depression to extended rage rather than mania.  The DSM-V may have a new diagnosis for some of these kids: disruptive mood dysregulation disorder.
  • 41. Understanding Mood Disorders Why are mood disorders so pervasive, especially among women? Women, starting in adolescence, appear to ruminate more, have deeper sadness then men, encounter more stressors, and report their depression more readily.
  • 42. Understanding Mood Disorders Can we explain…  Why does depression often go away on its own?  the course/development of reactive depression? Often, time heals a mood disorder, especially when the mood issue is in reaction to a stressful event. However, a significant proportion of people with major depressive disorder do not automatically or easily get better with time.
  • 43. Understanding Mood Disorders Biological aspects and explanations Social-cognitive aspects and explanations Evolutionary Genetic Brain /Body Negative thoughts and negative mood Explanatory style The vicious cycle
  • 44. An Evolutionary Perspective on the Biology of Depression  Depression, in its milder, nondisordered form, may have had survival value.  Under stress, depression is social-emotional hibernation. It allows humans to:  conserve energy.  avoid conflicts and other risks.  let go of unattainable goals.  take time to contemplate.
  • 45. Biology of Depression: Genetics Evidence of genetic influence on depression: 1. DNA linkage analysis reveals depressed gene regions 2. twin/adoption heritability studies
  • 46. Biology of Depression: The Brain  Brain activity is diminished in depression and increased in mania.  Brain structure: smaller frontal lobes in depression and fewer axons in bipolar disorder  Brain cell communication (neurotransmitters):  more norepinephrine (arousing) in mania, less in depression  reduced serotonin in depression
  • 47. Suicide and Self-Injury  Every year, 1 million people commit suicide, giving up on the process of trying to cope and improve their emotional well-being.  This can happen when people feel frustrated, trapped, isolated, ineffective, and see no end to these feelings.  Non-suicidal self-injury has other functions such as sending a message, distracting from emotional pain, giving oneself permission to feel, or self-punishment.
  • 48. Understanding Mood Disorders: The Social-Cognitive Perspective Low SelfEsteem Discounting positive information and assuming the worst about self, situation, and the future Self-defeating beliefs such as assuming that one (self) is Learned unable to cope, Helplessness improve, achieve, or be happy Depression is associated with: Depressive Explanatory Style Rumination Stuck focusing on what’s bad
  • 49. Depressive Explanatory Style How we analyze bad news predicts mood. Problematic event: Assumptions about the problem The problem is: The problem is: The problem is: Mood/result that goes along with these views:
  • 50. Depression’s Vicious Cycle A depressed mood may develop when a person with a negative outlook experiences repeated stress. The depressed mood changes a person’s style of thinking and interacting in a way that makes stressful experience more likely.
  • 51. Schizophrenia Split from reality and from self Schizophrenia symptoms:  Disorganized thinking, Delusions  Disturbed perceptions: Hallucinations  Unusual emotions and actions, including flat affect, and catatonia  Subtypes  Onset and course Causes of symptoms:  Brain: Dopamine overactivity  Abnormal brain anatomy and activity  Maternal virus during pregnancy  Associated genes
  • 52. Schizophrenia: Psychosis refers to a mental split from reality and rationality. the mind is split from reality, e.g. a split from one’s own thoughts so that they appear as hallucinations. Schizophrenia symptoms include:  disorganized and/or delusional thinking.  disturbed perceptions.  inappropriate emotions and actions.
  • 53. Positive and Negative Symptoms of Schizophrenia Positive + presence of problematic behaviors     Hallucinations (illusory perceptions), especially auditory Delusions (illusory beliefs), especially persecutory Disorganized thought and nonsensical speech Bizarre behaviors Negative absence of healthy behaviors       Flat affect (no emotion showing in the face) Reduced social interaction Anhedonia (no feeling of enjoyment) Avolition (less motivation, initiative, focus on tasks) Alogia (speaking less) Catatonia (moving less)
  • 54. Schizophrenia Symptoms: Problems in Thinking and Speaking  Disorganized speech, including the “word salad” of loosely associated phrases  Delusions (illusory beliefs), often bizarre and not just mistaken; most common are delusions of grandeur and of persecution  Problems with selective attention, difficulty filtering thoughts and choosing which thoughts to believe and to say out loud ?!?! ?!?!
  • 55. Schizophrenia Symptoms: Disturbed Perceptions  People with schizophrenia often experience hallucinations, that is, perceptual experiences not shared by others.  The most common form of hallucination is hearing voices that no one else hears, often with upsetting (e.g. shaming) content.  Hallucinations can also be visual, olfactory/smells, tactile/to uch, or gustatory/taste. Am I evil? You’re evil!
  • 56. Schizophrenia Symptoms: Inappropriate Emotions and Actions  Odd and socially inappropriate responses such as looking bored or amused while hearing of a death  Flat affect: facial/body expression is “flat” with no visible emotional content  Impaired perception of emotions, including not “reading” others’ intentions and feelings The schizophrenic body exhibits symptoms such as:  repetitive behaviors such as rocking and rubbing.  catatonia, such as sitting motionless and unresponsive for hours.
  • 57. Onset and Development of Schizophrenia  Onset: Typically, schizophrenic symptoms appear at the end of adolescence and in early adulthood, later for women than for men.  Prevalence: Nearly 1 in 100 people develop schizophrenia, slightly more men than women.  Development: The course of schizophrenia can be acute/reactive or chronic. Course of Schizophrenia Acute/Reactive Schizophrenia In reaction to stress, some people develop positive symptoms such as hallucinations. – Recovery is likely. Chronic/Process Schizophrenia develops slowly, with more negative symptoms . – With treatment and support, there may be periods of a normal life, but not a cure. – Without treatment, this type of schizophrenia often leads to poverty and social problems.
  • 58. Subtypes of Schizophrenia Paranoid • Plagued by hallucinations, often with negative messages, and delusions, both grandiose and persecutory Disorganized • Primary symptoms are flat affect, incoherent speech, and random behavior Catatonic • Rarely initiating or controlling movement; copies others’ speech and actions Undifferentiated • Many varied symptoms Residual • Withdrawal continues after positive symptoms have disappeared
  • 59. Understanding Schizophrenia What’s going on in the brain in schizophrenia? Abnormal brain structure and activity  Too many dopamine/D4 receptors help to explain paranoia and hallucinations; it’s like taking amphetamine overdoses all the time.  Poor coordination of neural firing in the frontal lobes impairs judgment and self-control.  The thalamus fires during hallucinations as if real sensations were being received.  There is general shrinking of many brain areas and connections between them.
  • 60. Understanding Schizophrenia Are there biological risk factors affecting early development? Biological Risk Factors Schizophrenia is somewhat more likely to develop when one or more of these factors is present:  low birth weight  maternal diabetes  older paternal age  famine  oxygen deprivation during delivery  maternal virus during mid-pregnancy impairing brain development Schizophrenia is more likely to develop in babies born:  during and after flu epidemics.  in densely populated areas.  a few months after flu season.  after mothers had the flu during the second trimester, or had antibodies showing viral infection.  The lesson is to: get flu shots with early fall pregnancies.
  • 61. Understanding Schizophrenia Are there genetic risk factors? If so, we would see more similar schizophrenia risk shared between identical twins than fraternal twins (graph below). Do we? Genetic Factors If one twin has schizophrenia, the chance of the other one also having it are much greater if the twins are identical. Having adoptive siblings (or parents) with schizophrenia does not increase the likelihood of developing schizophrenia.
  • 62. Understanding Schizophrenia Genetic and Prenatal Causes  Even in quadruplets, genetics do not fully predict schizophrenia.  This could be because of environmental differences.  First difference: twins in separate placentas. Only one of two twins has the enlarged ventricles seen in schizophrenia.  The Genain quadruplets share genes and all have schizophrenia but at different levels of severity: genes may interact with environment to produce this pattern.
  • 63. Other Disorders, Including Dissociative, Personality, and Eating A sample of a few of theDisorders many other psychological disorders  Dissociative Disorders: Separation of consciousness  Dissociative Identity Disorder: Is it real? How could it happen?  Personality Disorders: Severe, enduring problems relating to others Focus on Antisocial Personality Disorder  Overlap with criminal activity  Brain differences  Genes and social causes Eating Disorders  Anorexia and Bulimia  Genes and social causes
  • 64. Dissociative Disorders  Dissociation: a separation of conscious awareness from thoughts, memory, bodily sensations, feelings, or even from identity.  Dissociative disorder: dysfunction and distress caused by chronic and severe dissociation. Examples: Dissociative Fugue state Fugue = “Running away”; wandering away from one’s life, memory, and identity, with no memory of them Dissociative Identity Disorder (D.I.D.) Development of separate personalities
  • 65. Dissociative Identity Disorder (D.I.D.) formerly “Multiple Personality Disorder” In the rare actual cases of D.I.D., the personalities:  are distinct, and not present in consciousness at the same time.  may or may not appear to be aware of each other. Alternative Explanations for D.I.D.  Dissociative “identities” might just be an extreme form of playing a role.  D.I.D. in North America might be a recent cultural construction, similar to the idea of being possessed by evil spirits.  Cases of D.I.D. might be created or worsened by therapists encouraging people to think of different parts of themselves.
  • 66. D.I.D., or DID Not? Evidence that D.I.D. is Real Different personalities have involved:  different brain wave patterns.  different left-right handedness.  different visual acuity and eye muscle balance patterns. Patients with D.I.D. also show heightened activity in areas of the brain associated with managing and inhibiting traumatic memories. Explaining fragmentation of personality from different perspectives Psychoanalytic perspective: diverting id Cognitive perspective: coping with abuse Learning perspective: dissociation pays Social influence: therapists encourage
  • 67. Eating Disorders Anorexia nervosa Bulimia nervosa Binge-eating disorder Anorexia Nervosa Bulimia Nervosa Binge-Eating Disorder These may involve:  unrealistic body image and extreme body ideal.  a desire to control food and the body when one’s situation can’t be controlled.  cycles of depression.  health problems. Definition Prevalence Compulsion to lose weight, 0.6 percent coupled with certainty about being meet criteria at fat despite being 15 percent or some time more underweight during lifetime Compulsion to binge, eating large amounts fast, then purge by losing 1.0 percent the food through vomiting, laxatives, and extreme exercise Compulsion to binge, followed by 2.8 percent guilt and depression
  • 68. Eating Disorders: Associated Factors Family factors:  having a mother focused on her weight, and on child’s appearance and weight  negative self-evaluation in the family  for bulimia, if childhood obesity runs in the family  for anorexia, if families are competitive, high-achieving, and protective Cultural factors:  unrealistic ideals of body appearance
  • 69. Personality Disorders Personality disorders are enduring patterns of social and other behavior that impair social functioning. There are three “clusters”/categories of personality disorders.  Anxious: e.g., Avoidant P.D., ruled by fear of social rejection  Eccentric/Odd: e.g. Schizoid P.D., with flat affect, no social attachments  Dramatic: e.g. Histrionic, attention-seeking; narcissistic, self-centered; antisocial, amoral
  • 70. Antisocial Personality Disorder [APD] Antisocial personality disorder: Persistently acting without conscience, without a sense of guilt for harm done to others (strangers and family alike). The diagnostic criteria include a pattern of violating the rights of others since age 15, including three of these: Deceitfulness Disregard for safety of self or others Aggressiveness Failure to conform to social norms Lack of remorse Impulsivity and failure to plan ahead Irritability Irresponsibility regarding jobs, family, and money
  • 71. Which Kids May Develop APD as Adults? About half of children with persistent antisocial behavior develop lifelong APD. Which kids are at risk? Psychological factors:  those who in preschool were impulsive, uninhibited, unconcerned with social rewards, and low in anxiety.  those who endured child abuse, and/or inconsistent, unavailable caretaking.      Biological APD Risk Factors Antisocial or unemotional biological relatives increases risk.  Some associated genes have been identified. Lower levels of stress hormones and low physiological arousal in stressful situations Fear conditioning is impaired. Reduced prefrontal cortex tissue leads to impulsivity. Substance dependence is more likely.
  • 72. Antisocial PD ≠ Criminality Criminals: people who repeatedly commit crimes People with antisocial personality disorder Many career criminals do show empathy and selflessness with family and friends. Many people with A.P.D. do not commit crimes.
  • 73. Antisocial Crime: Associated factors Though antisocial personality disorder is not a full picture of most criminal activity, what can we say about people who commit crime, especially violent crime? Lower levels of physiological arousal (measured here as adrenaline levels) under stress may enable taking violent action without feeling anxiety or panic.
  • 74. Biosocial Roots of Crime: The Brain People who commit murder seem to have less tissue and activity in the part of the brain that suppresses impulses. Other differences include:  less amygdala response when viewing violence.  an overactive dopamine reward-seeking system.
  • 75. How common are psychological disorders? Countries vary greatly in the percentage of people reporting mental health issues in the past year.
  • 76. Rates of Psychological Disorders This list takes a closer look at the past-year prevalence of various mental health diagnoses in the United States.
  • 77. Vulnerable factors and ages for developing Mental Disorders Who is vulnerable to mental disorders? • Poverty increases the risk of many mental disorders including aggression and anxiety. Disorders decrease when poverty is lifted. • “Immigrant paradox”: Despite the stress of immigrating, those who immigrate to the U.S.A. have a lower risk of disorders than their children born in the U.S.A. Age of vulnerability: • Many disorders begin to show symptoms by early adulthood. • Developing on average around age 20: OCD, Schizophrenia, Bipolar, Alcohol Dependence. • Showing some signs earlier: Phobias (median age 10) and antisocial personality disorder (some symptoms by age 8) • Developing later than 20: Major Depressive Disorder.
  • 78. Outcomes for People with Psychological Disorders There are risks to be watchful of, obstacles to be overcome, and improvements to be made, often with the help of with treatment.  Some people with psychological disorders do not recover.  Some achieve greatness, even with a psychological disorder.

Notes de l'éditeur

  1. Click to reveal bullets.
  2. Click to reveal bullets. Optional slide, material not in the book.Instructor: you might add to the last point, “Just as our understanding of the brain has been increased by studies of damage to the brain, our understanding of the mind may be improved by studying problems in psychological functioning. As William James said, ‘To study the abnormal is the best way of understanding the normal.’”
  3. Click to reveal bullets and questions. Questions are optional, not in the book.
  4. Click to reveal bullets.The term“disorder” is used instead of “disease” because the latter term typically implies a known cause of the symptoms. In naming a disorder, you’re not naming a cause such as a virus. Instead, you are naming the collection of symptoms that tend to go together. More on the issue of pattern vs. single symptom: one of the symptoms of brain cancer is a headache. If you have a headache, though, it would be a mistake to assume that you have brain cancer. Similarly, one of the symptoms of major depression may be that you feel sad. If you feel sad, though, this is not enough to qualify for diagnosis of major depressive disorder. Keep this in mind when we discuss ADHD. More about deviance coming up. Another common term is “ abnormal,” which more literally means varying from the norm. Both of these terms have acquired an unnecessarily negative connotation outside the field of psychology. Image from the text.
  5. Click to reveal bullets.The answer to all three questions is, “yes.” For some people, ADHD is a disorder, deviating greatly from the norm, and causing significant distress and dysfunction.ADHD is overdiagnosed when the label is applied to children whose behavior may be a function of immaturity, culture, sleep deprivation, or other learning problems. ADHD is underdiagnosed, most frequently in girls with the primarily inattentive type of ADHD, when children are quietly trying to sustain focus but can’t do it.
  6. Click to reveal bullets.The term for drilling holes in the skull to release evil spirits is “trephination.” When you click the drill will bounce and to demonstrate the old medical technique, although the equipment may be anachronistic.
  7. Click to reveal bullets.The medical model also implies ideas about etiology, the cause of mental disorders. It is not always possible to determine the cause of a specific mental disorder, but in general, the assumption here is that the cause is physical and mental, and not spiritual.
  8. No animation.
  9. Automatic animation.Some disorders, such as depression and schizophrenia, appear to be found in the same form across all cultures.
  10. Click to reveal bullets and sidebar.In order to make the definitions clear, each diagnosis in the DSM includes lists of symptoms, often in groups. The DSM includes criteria about how many symptoms must be present in each category to justify a label.
  11. No animation.Usually Axis V is in two parts: the highest GAF in the past year, and the current GAF.
  12. No animation.The text describes this table as a list of syndromes. However, this is a table of contents of the DSM, a list of the categories under which other diagnoses fall.
  13. No animation. This slide can be used in place of the previous two slides. The text describes this table as a list of syndromes. However, this is a table of contents of the DSM, a list of the categories under which other diagnoses fall.
  14. No animation.More comments about each of these points:The first critique has been raised about the DSM 5 in particular, including the possibility that some depression that is part of a grieving process may be more likely to be called a disorder (implying that it needs to be treated).Valid, reliable criteria might address this concern.In an older DSM, homosexuality was considered a disorder. In the current and future versions, there are more adult labels for symptoms more likely to be evident in females, such as anxiety and depression, and fewer “male” diagnoses (such as diagnoses that relate to the emotion of anger). See if students can connect the impact of diagnoses to the general impact of having schema, concepts and categories that organize and influence our perceptions.
  15. Click to reveal bullets.Some of the stigma of labels is not the DSM’s fault; notice how “deviant” and “retarded” and other once-neutral terms have acquired a negative connotation.Having schizophrenia is not about having a “split personality” (that’s D.I.D.) and does not mean you are not dangerous or “crazy.” Having mood swings does not mean you have bipolar disorder or a split personality.
  16. Click to reveal bullets and questions.Note: schizophrenia alone is not associate with increased risk of violence. However, schizophrenia plus substance abuse increases the risk of violent behavior.Both people who see him as NOT responsible for his actions and those who see his mental illness as part of who he is, and thus making him responsible, might agree that the appropriate consequence might be confinement with mandatory treatment rather than simply imprisonment.
  17. No animation.
  18. Click to reveal bullets.GAD tends to occur along with mild but persistent depression. GAD becomes more rare after age 50. Why might that be? Perhaps experience shows that things usually don’t turn out as badly as those with Generalized Anxiety Disorder think they will.
  19. Click to reveal bullets.Panic disorder includes the fight or flight system, and easy triggering of the autonomic nervous system.In a panic attack, the mind fills in an explanation: “If I’m feeling terror and a physical response to a threat, there must be some danger here.” People sometimes attribute the panic to whatever situation was present when the attack occurred.Extreme avoidance of possible panic triggers agoraphobia, an anxiety disorder characterized by anxiety in situations where the sufferer perceives the environment to be difficult or embarrassing to escape, such as wide-open spaces.
  20. Automatic animation.“Irrational” means the fear and the avoidance compulsion are out of proportion to the actual threat (e.g. triggered by even a photograph) and the phobia occurs even when the person knows that the fear doesn’t make sense.Some phobias may make evolutionary sense. More on this later, but in case you decide to delete the biological perspective slide, there are some fears more likely to form phobias. These seem to be part of our biological heritage to avoid (for example, clowns may trigger a fear of baboons and mandrills bred into our ancestors). People reasonably fear handguns, but are not likely to panic and run away from a mere photograph of a gun unless they had a personal traumatic experience with one. However, people fear heights, snakes and spiders with no previous bad experience with these, because those that didn’t fear these 100,000 years ago might have not lived to reproduce.I suggest asking students, before viewing the next slide with its list of phobias and fears, about their own fears. You might ask, “is anyone getting an irrational fear reaction triggered by this slide?” and “do any of you have a fear that meets the criteria to be called a phobia?”This diagnosis is known in the DSM as “specific phobia,” although agoraphobia is in a separate category because it is so closely and frequently associated with panic disorder. Social phobia is also a separate diagnosis.
  21. Click to reveal two additional phobias.The number of people with the specific FEAR varies more widely than the number of people with that specific PHOBIA. This implies that what we are really seeing in the lighter color is the number of people prone to a phobic-level fear. Not clear why clowns were not part of the survey, since this is a phobia mentioned often in the popular culture and by Intro Psych students.
  22. Click to reveal bullets.Why is OCD considered an anxiety disorder? Because obsessions can be a distraction from underlying anxiety, and compulsions worsen through a cycle of negative reinforcement related to anxiety. The OCD sufferer resists carrying out a compulsion, feels anxious, and ultimately relieves the anxiety by giving in to the compulsion.
  23. Click to show bottom text box and start animation.Emphasize the concept of “again.” Doing one of these behaviors does not mean that you have OCD. You are more likely to get a higher level of distress or dysfunction when you keep having these thoughts or behaviors, even when it makes no sense to you and you want to stop, but feel too much anxiety when you try to stop the compulsions and feel that the obsessions are outside of your control.
  24. Click to reveal six explanations.
  25. Click to show bullets under each heading.If you want to remind students of operant conditioning ideas, you can point out that the anxious, avoidant behavior was negatively reinforced (rewarded by the removal of aversive feelings).See if students can connect the second bullet point to OCD. “Compelled” = compulsion; see if they can see pattern of reinforcement (once again, negative). One more example to insert before the last bullet, though this type of example is not in the text. You can ask, “what happens if we reassure a friend who is worrying?” If we verbalize a worry and a friend reassures us, worrying just got positively reinforced.
  26. Click to reveal bullets.Could this method of developing anxiety help explain the acquisition of prejudices? Subtle behaviors like avoiding certain types of people on a dark street might be acquired through watching the behavior of parents and friends even when we espouse believing in equal treatment and worth of all groups.
  27. Click to reveal bullets.
  28. Click to reveal bullets and sidebar.Even if natural selection explains some things about humans as a whole, why are some people more prone to anxiety than others? Part of the answer is in a person’s experience, but part is in the genes.This association with a serotonin-related gene may be why some people with worrying-style anxiety respond to the SSRIs which increase serotonin at the synapse.A third major type of neurotransmitter involvement related to anxiety is GABA (gamma-aminobutyric acid), the inhibitory and “calming” neurotransmitter. GABA is not mentioned in this section of the text, probably because there is not a related gene that has been identified as being different in people with anxiety.
  29. Click to reveal bullets and illustration.
  30. Evolutionary psychology question: why is anxiety part of our biological repertoire? Perhaps panic, when functioning as fight, flight, or freeze, helped our ancestors stay safe when encountering danger. Perhaps worrying helps us plan how to face future danger.The book suggests that compulsions are exaggerations of natural survival strategies, e.g. hair pulling stems from grooming, rechecking stems from territory management, compulsive washing stems from a healthy practice. Click to reveal answer.
  31. No animation.
  32. Click to reveal text.
  33. Click to reveal bullets.Diagnosing major depressive disorder, as with making other diagnoses, requires seeing the whole pattern rather than just one or two symptoms. Depression crosses the line into a disorder when it impairs daily functioning and/or causes significant distress.With this list, the pattern is one or both of the first two symptoms and three to four of the rest of the symptoms, lasting more than two weeks.The criteria related to weight loss does not include weight loss caused by deliberate dieting.
  34. Click to reveal bullets and sidebar.Instructor: the information in the sidebar is included for your optional use. Although it is a minor issue in the text, this analogy was a major complaint for a few of my students each semester. They reacted to the connotation of the word “common” as “no big deal,” and did not notice Myers’ sympathetic disclaimer that comparing depression to the common cold “effectively describes its pervasiveness but not its seriousness.” If you do some form of pre-class feedback, hopefully you’ll know in advance if you need this slide.This analogy will come up again soon when discussing schizophrenia, so we may as well clarify it now.
  35. Click to reveal bullets.
  36. Click to reveal bullets and table of contrasting symptoms.A typical pattern is three to seven weeks of depression, followed by three to seven DAYS of mania. People enjoying their mania often forget or deny that the manic phase leads back into depression.Like depression, this euphoria is self-sustaining; in mania, it’s not that you’re happy about something.
  37. Animation: after a click from the instructor, the pictures will move up and down at different rates to simulate up and down swings of mood.
  38. Click to reveal bullets.Many have questioned whether children and adolescents who have swings in mood have bipolar disorder or something else. The 2013 edition of the diagnostic manual, the DSM-V, may have a new diagnosis which is designed to describe many of these kids: “Disruptive mood dysregulation disorder.” This awkward diagnoses has gone through a few name changes between 2010 and 2012, and in earlier versions including the inclusion of the word “dysphoric” (depressed mood) and “temper” (as in, temper tantrum).
  39. No animation.You might remind students that the evolutionary perspective has difficulty with mood disorders; it is unlikely that they helped our ancestors survive in any way.Instructor: warn students that we may not answer this question in this section.
  40. Click to reveal bullets.Depression in reaction to life events often results in a temporary period of withdrawal, worrying, and feeling down.
  41. Click to reveal text boxes and examples.
  42. Click to reveal bullets.This information is presented in the book earlier in the chapter, but it also fits here.However, students might consider that from an evolutionary perspective, it seems just as likely that depression serves no survival purpose, as evidenced by suicide, and is in the process of being eliminated by natural selection.
  43. No animation.DNA linkage analysis shows that regions of chromosomes are similar across generations of people in depressed families Another genetic factor to mention here, though it doesn’t come up in the text until the discussion of neurotransmitters (p. 629): people with depression had a variation of a serotonin-controlling gene, although the text notes that this result may not be reliable.Regarding the chart, see if students can recall the definition of heritability from the chapter on intelligence. Remind them that 80 percent heritability does NOT mean that genes are 80 percent of the cause of schizophrenia, as we shall soon see; it means that 80 percent of the variation among people is caused by genes.
  44. Click to reveal bullets.Fewer axons, less white matter, and larger ventricles (fluid filled areas in the center of the brain) point to a problem in having different parts of the brain work together smoothly.
  45. Click to reveal bullets.Beyond the 1 million who succeed, many more attempt suicide or make suicidal gestures, acts that look like suicide attempts, without clear intent to succeed. The numbers get much larger if we consider those who have had thoughtsabout suicide or wanting to be dead.Other purposes of NSSI besides the ones above mentioned in the text: distracting from emotional pain, giving themselves an excuse to cry when emotional pain doesn’t feel justified, or eventually to get the endorphin response which can come especially with repeated self-cutting. I mention these because students might speak up to comment that the reasons given in the text are inadequate.
  46. Click to reveal bubbles.Discounting the positive: “You’re only spending time with me because you feel sorry for me.”Depression is also associated with cognitive errors, such as assuming one can know the future or the thoughts of others.
  47. Click through to animate the chart.This chart implies that the negative explanatory style leads to depression. However, as the next chart will show, depression makes it more likely to make cognitive problems such as this negative attributional style. As Martin Seligman has suggested (quote in the text), depression can be caused by “preexisting pessimism encountering failure.”
  48. Click to reveal second text box and chart.
  49. No animation.
  50. Click to reveal two more text boxes.Literally, schizophrenia means “split mind,” but NOT split personality. The person who invented the term, Eugen Bleuler (1857-1939), spoke of a splintering of the functions governing thinking, perception, personality, and memory, although I would add emotion to that list. Most noticeable are the perceptual problems such as a split from REALITY.
  51. The column headings appear on click.You can ask first, “which of these are negative symptoms?” Students have experienced this sense of the words “positive” and “negative” when talking about reinforcement, but it’s a difficult shift in word usage so it’s worth testing them on it here. Some of the symptoms, such as disorganized thought and catatonia, could arguably be placed in either column.
  52. Click to reveal bullets.
  53. Click to reveal bullets.There is recent evidence that hallucinations in schizophrenia are caused in part because there is dysfunction in the parts of the brain that identify what is self vs. what is external. Thus, the fleeting ideas in the thought balloon might trigger, not just follow, the “heard” words about being evil.
  54. Click to reveal bullets.
  55. Click to reveal bullets.“Course” means the development of symptoms over time. Treatment can include not only medication but psychosocial rehabilitation, exercise, psychotherapy, supervised group homes, case management, daily living skills support, and vocational programs. Without real treatment, institutionalization was once the norm, then homelessness and incarceration, now outpatient treatment and “partial hospitalization” (day treatment).
  56. No animation.The previous slide showed two types of course: acute/reactive and chronic/process. This slide differentiates types of schizophrenia by the pattern of symptoms. Paranoid schizophrenia is the most common and the most likely to be known to students. The symptoms go together as the individual experiences brain-generated perceptions that seem as real as sensory experiences. Often the delusions are an attempt to explain these hallucinations; “thoughts are being broadcast into my head so I must have a special power or role in the world.”
  57. Click to reveal bullets.Students may need reminding that the thalamus was referred to earlier in the course as the sensory switchboard.There is also abnormal amygdala functioning in schizophrenia, which could be a result of schizophrenia or could explain the hyper-sensitivity to threat that could feed into paranoid ideas and aggressive reactive behavior.In addition to the shrinkage of the brain tissue, enlargement of the ventricles (fluid-filled areas within and between areas of tissue) can be seen.
  58. Click to reveal bullets.Lesson: even if we do not know how the virus in the mother derails the fetus’s brain development, the statistical results here are enough of a warning. Get a flu inoculation (in the shot form, if you want to avoid nasal mist exposure to live-deactivated virus) if pregnancy will include flu season.
  59. Click to reveal bullets.Questions to raise here: what does this tell us about the role of genes in schizophrenia? They must play some role, because having more genes in common means more similar likelihood of developing schizophrenia.Preview of the next slide, or in place of it: why is the risk not identical for identical twins? It could be environmental factors. Or, it could be a difference beginning even sooner (not sharing a placenta).
  60. Click to reveal bullets.Identical twins who developed in separate placentas in the womb, which happens about a third of the time for identical twins, were less similar in their risk of developing schizophrenia than twins who developed in a shared placenta (60 percent chance of also having the diagnosis with shared placenta, 10 percent risk in separate placentas).
  61. No animation.
  62. Click to reveal bullets.Dissociation is related to “spacing out” but well beyond it. During a physical assault, people might try to separate themselves from bodily experience, which is functional at the time but can lead to problems in relating to one’s bodily memory and experience later.Click to reveal examples.Question for class: using this definition of dissociation, describe the process of dissociation going on in each of these disorders. Answer: the person is dissociating 1) from memory, 2) from situation and identity, or 3) having dissociations within identity (or among parts of identity). Another question you might ask before the next slide: “what is another, former name for Dissociative Identity Disorder?”
  63. Click to reveal bullets and sidebar.“Identity” is another movie to explore on this topic; it portrays schizophrenia from the inside rather than from the outside. A different way of looking at the cultural issue: could it be that cases of D.I.D. and demonic possession might be two different names for the same phenomenon?
  64. Click to reveal bullets and sidebar.In apparently genuine cases of Dissociative Identity Disorder, the different personalities show differences that are hard to fake.In the sidebar, you can prompt students with the hints to do the work guessing at what different perspectives might say.
  65. Click to reveal bullets, then table.Health problems include malnutrition, shutdown of bodily functions and structures, and death.“Nervosa” is a leftover term related to neurosis or what we would now call anxiety.“Underweight,” like “overweight,” is determined by medical standards, and obviously not by the felt standards of those with anorexia.
  66. Click to reveal bullets.
  67. Click to reveal bullets.A full list of the disorders in each category of the DSM, although the list is changing with the DSM-V: Anxious Cluster: Avoidant, Dependent, and Obsessive-Compulsive Personality DisorderEccentric/Odd/Detached cluster: Schizoid, Schizotypal, and Paranoid Personality DisordersDramatic/Erratic/Impulsive cluster: Histrionic, Narcissistic, Antisocial, and Borderline Personality Disorders
  68. Click to reveal all text.
  69. Click to reveal bullets and sidebar.These attributes and experiences increase risk for developing APD, especially in combination with biological factors, discussed on the next slide.
  70. No animation.This chart is not based on any statistics but is an illustrative estimate.
  71. No animation.
  72. No animation.For a review, you can ask, “what part of the brain are we referring to here?” Hint: These are top-down views of the brain, with people facing up toward the top of the slide. Review challenge: What type of scan is this? (PET Scan).
  73. No animation.Depression and schizophrenia are found all over the world. Bulimia, however appears mostly in the United States and pockets of Americanized culture elsewhere.
  74. No animation.“Mood disorder” includes depressive disorders and bipolar disorders.
  75. No animation.
  76. Click to reveal bullets.