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221 Terms

1
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Cognitive triad

Beck's theory that depression results from negative ideas about ourselves, our world and our future.

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Preventative efforts

Treatment of psychological problems proactively (eg - counseling following a traumatic event).

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Neologisms

Disorganized schizophrenics that make up their own words.

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Clang associations

Disorganized schizophrenics that string together a series of nonsense words that rhyme.

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Paraphilias

Person who has a sexual attraction to an object, person or activity.

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Thorazine

Drug treatment for schizophrenics that blocks dopamine receptor sites.

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Somatoform disorders

Disorder occurring when a person manifests a psychological problem through a physiological symptom.

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Flat affect

Disorganized schizophrenics who consistently have no emotional response at all.

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Benzodiazepines

A main type of antianxiety drug that includes Xanax and Valium.

10
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Galen

A Roman who believed psychological illnesses were influenced by biological factors and could be treated.

11
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Extinguished

The thought of a former anxiety arousing stimulus without any current anxiety.

12
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Trephination

A treatment where holes are drilled in a living person's skull to let harmful spirits escape.

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Hypochondriasis

Type of somatoform disorder where people seek medical attention for physical ailments with no apparent causes

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In vivo desensitization

The confrontation of actual items on the anxiety hierarchy.

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Tricyclic antidepressants

A common type of drug used to treat unipolar depression that was largely replaced by SSRIs.

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Waxy flexibility

Catatonic schizophrenics that allow their body to be moved then hold the new pose.

17
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Psychogenic amnesia

People who cannot remember things and have no physiological basis for the disruption of their memories.

18
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Labels, influence of,

Rosenhan study where healthy people posed as schizophrenics in a hospital and were never discovered.

19
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Voyeur

Person who is sexually aroused by watching others engage in sexual behavior.

20
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Monoamine oxidase inhibitors

A classic antidepressant that prevents the breakdown of monoamines.

21
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Lithium

A light metal (salt) used to treat the manic phase of bipolar disorder.

22
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Tardive dyskinesia

A side effect of antipsychotic drugs characterized by muscle tremors and stiffness.

23
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Insane

A legal term, not a medical term, describing people with psychological disorders.

24
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Masochist

Person who is aroused by having pain inflicted on themselves.

25
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Sadist

Person who is aroused by having pain inflicted on someone else.

26
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Miltown

A commercial name for an antianxiety barbiturate.

27
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Today's psychologists contend that all behavior, whether normal or disordered, arises from the interaction of what?

All answers are correct

28
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According to researchers Robins and Regier, over 75% of their sample had experienced the first symptoms of a disorder by what age?

24

29
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It is estimated that 1 in 6 Americans suffer from significant mental disorders and according to the Centers for Disease Control, the incidence of serious psychological disorders is doubly high among what group of people?

People below the poverty line

30
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No known culture is free from depression or schizophrenia, and according to the World Health Organization, how many people worldwide suffer from psychological disorders?

450 million

31
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What term describes a widely used system to classify the symptoms (not causes) of psychological disorders, guides physicians and mental health workers in medical diagnoses (not treatments), and defines who is eligible for treatments?

Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders - Fifth Edition

32
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What term describes a contemporary perspective that assumes that psychological, biological, and sociocultural factors combine and interact to produce psychological disorders?

Biopsychosocial perspective

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What can create stereotypes and preconceptions that unfairly stigmatize people and bias our perceptions of their past and present behavior but also can enable better communication and comprehension about the underlying causes of mental disorders?

Labels

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What heritable psychological disorder is diagnosed three times more often in boys by age 7, has associations with abnormal brain activity, and involves extreme inattention, hyperactivity, and impulsivity?

Attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD)

35
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What term describes a clinically significant disturbance in an individual's cognition, emotion regulation, or behavior?

Psychological disorder

36
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What term describes the concept that diseases have physical causes that can be diagnosed, treated, and in most cases, cured?

Medical model

37
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What term describes a psychological disorder characterized by distressing, persistent anxiety or maladaptive behaviors that reduce anxiety?

Anxiety disorders

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A person who believes the philosophy of the following quote to an extreme level may have what disorder: "I want to live longer than my parents, so I avoid germs because everybody carries germs around with them."

Obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD)

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Respectively, what psychological disorder causes people to be troubled by repetitive thoughts or actions and what disorder causes a person to be unexplainably and continually tense, apprehensive, agitated, and sleep deprived?

Obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD), generalized anxiety disorder

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Respectively, what psychological disorder causes people to feel irrationally afraid of a specific situation or object and what disorder causes people to experience sudden episodes of intense dread?

Phobia, panic disorder

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Under which perspective do psychologists now see anxiety disorders by considering possible evolutionary, genetic, and physiological influences?

Biological perspective

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Respectively, what disorder was once called "shellshock" and is characterized by severe and persistent haunting memories for four weeks or more after a traumatic experience and what term describes the struggle with a challenging crisis that often leads people later to report an increased appreciation for life and increased personal strength?

Posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD), posttraumatic growth

43
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What term describes a person who fears or avoids situations in which escape might be difficult or help unavoidable when panic strikes?

Agoraphobia

44
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The psychoanalytic perspective views anxiety disorders as the discharging of what?

Repressed impulses

45
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What type of phobia describes a person who has an intense fear of being scrutinized by others and is shy to the most extreme level?

Social anxiety disorder

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Under which perspective do psychologists now see anxiety disorders as a product of fear conditioning, stimulus generalization, reinforcement, and observational learning?

Learning perspective

47
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What current research perspective on depression is exploring the influence on genetic predispositions and neurotransmitter abnormalities?

Biological perspective

48
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Which disorder is characterized by a hyperactive, wildly optimistic state and may lead to reckless investments, spending sprees, and unsafe sex?

Manic episode

49
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What term describes compulsive overthinking and focusing on our problems and their causes?

Rumination

50
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What emotional extreme might we have if we experienced prolonged hopelessness and lethargy for two weeks or more and then rebounded to normality?

Major depressive disorder

51
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For some people, during what part of the year are you more likely to experience a few of the symptoms of depression?

Dark months of winter

52
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Although phobias are more common, what is often a response to past and current loss (not future loss) and is the number one reason why people seek mental health services?

Depression

53
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What current research perspective on depression views the cycle of depression via self-defeating beliefs, learned helplessness, negative attributions, and adverse experiences?

Social-cognitive perspective

54
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Which term describes a mood disorder in which a person alternates between the hopelessness and lethargy of depression and the overexcited state of mania?

Bipolar disorder

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According to researcher Lewinsohn, what accompanies behavioral and cognitive changes, is widespread, mostly self-terminates, and affects women twice as much as men?

1/1

Depression

56
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Mood disorders, which are psychological disorders characterized by emotional extremes, come in what two principle forms?

Major depressive disorder, bipolar disorder

57
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Schizophrenic symptoms are to some degree linked to increased receptors for what neurotransmitter, which may intensify brain signals and create positive symptoms such as hallucinations and paranoia?

Dopamine

58
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What symptom of schizophrenia describes sensory experiences without sensory stimulation which are usually auditory?

Hallucinations

59
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The lifetime risk of developing schizophrenia varies with one's genetic relatedness to someone having the disorder, but respectively, who has a 1 in 10 chance of sharing a schizophrenic diagnosis and who has a 6 in 10 chance?

Fraternal twins, identical twins

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The disorganized thoughts of schizophrenia may result from a breakdown in what term which describes our ability to give our undivided awareness to one set of sensory stimuli while filtering out others?

Selective attention

61
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Which disorder is literally translated as "split mind," affects approximately 24 million people, and is characterized by a split from reality that shows itself in disorganized thinking, disturbed perceptions, and inappropriate emotions and actions?

Schizophrenia

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Respectively, what type of schizophrenia develops gradually and recovery is doubtful and what type of schizophrenia appears suddenly (likely a reaction to stress) and recovery is more likely?

Chronic (process), acute (reactive)

63
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What term describes false beliefs, often of persecution or conspiracies, and may accompany psychotic disorders?

Delusions

64
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Respectively, schizophrenic patients with positive symptoms experience the presence of what and patients with negative symptoms experience the absence of what?

Inappropriate behavior, appropriate behavior

65
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Nicol and Gottesman noted that what type of cause has not been discovered that will invariably, or even with moderate probability, produce schizophrenia in people who are not related to a person with schizophrenia?

Environmental

66
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Schizophrenia is the most researched psychological disorder and most new research studies link its cause with what?

Brain abnormalities and genetic predisposition

67
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What term describes an eating disorder in which a normal weight person (usually an adolescent female) diets and becomes significantly underweight, yet still feels fat and continues to starve?

Anorexia nervosa

68
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What term describes a common disorder in which a person interprets normal sensations (a cramp and/or a headache) as symptoms of a dreaded disease?

Illness anxiety disorder (hypochondriasis)

69
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What term describes rare disorders in which conscious awareness becomes separated from previous memories, thoughts, and feelings often in response to an overwhelmingly stressful situation?

Dissociative disorders

70
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According to weight obsessed western societies, what is bad and has significantly contributed to the sickness of today's eating disorders?

Poverty

Fat*

Dieting

Semistarvation

71
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What term describes an eating disorder in which a normal weight person (usually an adolescent female) overeats high-calorie foods, then vomits, uses laxatives, or exercises excessively?

Bulimia nervosa

72
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What type of psychological disorder is characterized by inflexible and enduring patterns of behavior that impair social functioning?

Personality disorders

73
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What term describes a common medically unexplained illness where a patient's distressing symptoms take a bodily form without apparent physical causes?

Somatic symptom disorder

74
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What term describes a rare and possibly manufactured disorder in which two or more distinct identities are said to alternately control a person's behavior?

Dissociative identity disorder (DID)

75
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Respectively, what personality disorder displays shallow attention-getting emotions and goes to great lengths to gain others' praise and which disorder exaggerates one's own importance aided by success fantasies?

Histrionic personality disorder, narcissistic personality disorder

76
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What term describes a personality disorder in which the person exhibits a lack of a conscious for wrongdoing, may be aggressive, ruthless, or even a clever con artist?

Antisocial personality disorder

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What variation of psychodynamic therapy aims to help people gain insight into the roots of their difficulties by focusing on current relationships and assisting people in improving their relationship skill?

Interpersonal psychotherapy

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What term describes empathetic listening in which the listener echoes, restates, and clarifies?

Active listening

79
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Respectively, what psychoanalytic term describes the blocking from consciousness of anxiety-laden material and what psychoanalytic term describes the patient's transmission to the analyst of emotions linked with other relationships, such as love or hatred for a parent?

Resistance, transference

80
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Who originated and practiced the first psychotherapy (psychoanalysis) and interpreted a patient's free associations, resistances, dreams, and transferences and therefore released repressed feelings that allowed a patient to gain self-insight?

Sigmund Freud

81
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What type of therapy acts directly on the patient's nervous system?

Biomedical therapy

82
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What term describes researcher Rogers' belief that the therapist's most important contribution is to be nonjudgmental, caring, and have an accepting attitude so that people may accept even their worst traits and feel valued and whole?

Unconditional positive regard

83
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What term describes an approach to psychotherapy that, depending on the client's problem, uses techniques from various forms of therapy?

Eclectic approach

84
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What type of therapy employs structured interactions between a trained professional and a client with a problem?

Psychotherapy

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What type of therapist would use listening techniques with an accepting, genuine, and empathetic environment to facilitate clients' growth?

Client-centered therapist, person-centered therapist

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What type of insight therapy emphasizes people's inherent potential for self-fulfillment by attempting to reduce growth-impeding inner conflicts and by helping people grow in self-awareness and self-acceptance?

Humanistic therapy

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Respectively, what confrontational therapy vigorously challenges people's illogical, self-defeating attitudes and assumptions and what popular integrated therapy combines therapies that change self-defeating thinking with therapies that are designed to change behavior?

Rational-emotive behavior therapy (REBT), cognitive-behavioral therapy (CBT)

88
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What type of counterconditioning therapy associates a pleasant relaxed state with gradually increasing anxiety-triggering stimuli that is commonly used to treat phobias?

Systematic desensitization

89
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What type of therapy views a family as a system and helps members resolve conflicts, heal relationships, and communicate better?

Family therapy

90
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What type of counterconditioning therapy associates an unpleasant state, such as nausea, with an unwanted behavior, such as drinking alcohol?

Aversive conditioning

91
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Insight therapies (psychodynamic and humanistic) assume that many psychological problems diminish as what grows?

Self-awareness

92
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What therapy applies learning principles to the elimination of unwanted behaviors?

Behavior therapy

93
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What term describes an operant conditioning procedure where a patient exchanges a ticket of some sort, earned by exhibiting a desired behavior, for various privileges or treats?

Token economy

94
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What type of therapy teaches people new, more adaptive ways of thinking?

Cognitive therapy

95
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Respectively, what behavior therapy is based on classically conditioning new responses to stimuli that trigger unwanted behaviors and what therapy treats anxieties by repeatedly subjecting people to the things they fear and avoid?

Counterconditioning, exposure therapy

96
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What type of group therapy offers support groups, has more than 2 million members, and is said to be "the largest organization on earth that nobody wants to join?"

Alcoholics Anonymous

97
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What respective phenomena describe the perception that therapy's effectiveness is vulnerable to inflation - (1) the power of belief in a treatment (2) the tendency for unusual emotions to return to their average state.

Placebo effect, regression toward the mean

98
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What term describes clinical decision making that integrates the best available research with clinical expertise and patient preferences?

Evidence-based practice

99
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What term describes a procedure for statistically combining the results of multiple research studies and gives us the bottom-line results of these different studies?

Meta-analysis

100
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Studies by health insurers show that mental health treatment can more than pay for itself with reduced medical costs, but in general, when is therapy most effective?

When the problem is clear-cut or specific