Chapter Five: Anxiety, Obsessive-Compulsive, and Related Disorders

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53 Terms

1
fear
state of immediate alarm
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2
anxiety
vague sense of being in danger
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3
anxiety disorders
when people have discomfort from fear and anxiety is too severe, too frequent, lasts too long, or is triggered too easily
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4
generalized anxiety disorder
experience general and persistent feelings of worry and anxiety
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5
specific phobias
persistent and irrational fear of a particular object, activity, or situation
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6
agoraphobia
fear traveling to public places
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7
social anxiety disorder
intense fear of social or performance situations in which they may become embarrassed
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8
panic disorder
recurrent attacks of terror
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9
sociocultural perspective
gad is most likely to develop in people who are faced with ongoing societal conditions that are dangerous
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10
Freud
early developmental experiences may produce an unusually high level of anxiety in certain children
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11
psychodynamic methods
free association and therapists interpretations of transference, resistance, and dreams
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12
freudian psychodynamic therapists
help clients with gad become less afraid of their id impulses and more successful in controlling them
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13
object relations therapists
help anxious patients identify and settle the childhood relationship problems that continue to produce anxiety in adulthood
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14
humanistic perspective
gad arises when people stop looking at themselves honestly and acceptingly
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15
Albert Ellis
many people are guided by irrational beliefs that lead them to act and react in inappropriate ways (basic irrational assumptions)
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16
Aaron Beck
ppl with gad constantly hold silent assumptions that imply theyre in imminent danger
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17
Adrian Wells metacognitive theory
ppl with gad implicitly hold positive and negative beliefs about worrying
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18
positive beliefs about worrying
believe worrying is a useful way of appraising and coping with threats in life, so they worry constantly
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19
negative beliefs about worrying
believe their repeated worrying is harmful and uncontrollable, so they meta-worry
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20
intolerance of uncertainty theory
certain individuals cant tolerate the knowledge that negative events can occur, even if the possibility is small
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21
Ellis rational-emotive therapy
therapists point out the irrational assumptions held by clients, and suggest more appropriate assumptions
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22
breaking down worrying
therapists guide clients to recognize and change their dysfunctional worrying
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23
sedative-hypnotic drugs
drugs that calm people at lower doses and help them to fall asleep at higher doses
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24
phobias
persistent and unreasonable fears
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25
agoraphobia
fear of being in public places or situations where escape might be difficult or help unavailable
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26
support-group approach
a small number of ppl with agoraphobia go out together for exposure sessions
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27
home-based self-help programs
clinicians give clients and their families detailed instructions for carrying out exposure treatments themselves
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28
exposure treatments
people are exposed to the objects / situations they dread
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29
systematic desensitization
an exposure treatment that uses relaxation training and a fear hierarchy to help clients with phobias react calmly to their fear
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30
relaxation training
teaching clients how to bring on a state of deep muscle relaxation at will
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31
fear hierarchy
a list of feared objects / situations
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32
in vivo desensitization
actual confrontation
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33
covert desensitization
confrontation may be imagined
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34
flooding
clients are exposed repeatedly and intensively to a feared object and made to see that it is actually harmless
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35
modeling
the therapist confronts the feared object / situation while the fearful person observes
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36
social anxiety disorder
a severe and persistent fear of social or performance situations in which embarrassment may occur
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37
exposure therapy
expose themselves to their dreaded social situations, re-examine and challenge maladaptive beliefs
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38
social skills training
modeling, role-playing, rehearsing, feedback, reinforcement
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39
assertiveness training groups
members try out and rehearse new social behaviors with other group members
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40
panic disorder
an anxiety disorder marked by recurrent and unpredictable panic attacks
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41
panic attacks
periodic, short bouts of panic that occur suddenly, reach a peak within minutes, and gradually pass
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42
locus coeruleus
a small area of the brain that seems to be active in the regulation of emotions
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43
biological challenge tests
researchers produce hyperventilation / other biological sensations by administering drugs / instructing clinical research participants to breathe, exercise, or think in certain ways
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44
high degree of anxiety sensitivity
a tendency to focus on ones bodily sensations, assess them illogically, and interpret them as harmful
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45
obsessive-compulsive disorder
a disorder in which a person has recurrent obsessions, compulsions, or both
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46
obsessions
persistent thoughts, ideas, impulses, or images that seem to invade a persons consciousness
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47
compulsions
repetitive and rigid behaviors / mental acts that people feel they must perform in order to prevent or reduce anxiety
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48
neutralizing
a persons attempt to eliminate unwanted thoughts by thinking or behaving in ways that put matters right internally, making up for the unacceptable thoughts
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49
exposure and response prevention
clients are repeatedly exposed to objects or situations that produce anxiety and obsessive fears but they are told to resist performing their compulsive behaviors
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50
hoarding disorder
people feel compelled to save items and become very distressed if they try to discard them
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51
trichotillomania
hair pulling disorder
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52
excoriation disorder
skin picking disorder
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53
body dysmorphic disorder
people become preoccupied with the belief that they have a particular defect / flaw in their physical appearance
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