Beh Sci 110 - GR #3

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129 Terms

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Stress

the process by which we perceive and respond to certain events, called stressors, that we appraise as threatening or challenging

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Stressors

events or situations that we have a stress reaction to

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Primary Appraisal

initial decision regarding whether an event is harmful

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Secondary Appraisal

assess our ability to respond

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3 ways Stress can have a positive impact on us

can strengthen immune system
motivate us
builds resilience

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3 main types of stressors

catastrophes, significant life changes, daily hassles

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Catastrophes

unpredictable large scale events (EX: natural disasters)

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Acculturative Stress

strain experiences when adapting to a new culture while trying to maintain their original identity

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Significant Life Changes

leaving home, losing a job

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Daily Hassles

overflowing to-do lists, burnout

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Approach and Avoidance Motives

the drive to move toward (approach) or away from (avoid) a stimulus or conflict

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What two neurotransmitters are released when we have a stress response?

norepinephrine and epinephrine

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What nervous system is responsible for fight or flight response?

sympathetic

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General Adaptation Syndrome (GAS)

body responds to stress with alarm, resistance and exhaustion

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GAS: Alarm

sympathetic NS is activated; heart rate is elevated and blood diverted to the muscles

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Resistance

temperature, BP, respiration are high for extended periods of time; over time the body cannot sustain this state so it slows down

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Exhaustion

a state of extreme physical or mental fatigue; vulnerable to illness or death

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Tend-and-Befriend Response

mostly women; when under stress, people tend to support others and bond

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Health Psychology

study of how stress, healthy/unhealthy behaviors influence health and illness

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Your body can inhibit these 4 types of bacteria from being released when in stress:

B lymphocytes
T lymphocytes
Macrophage cells
Natural Killer cells

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B lymphocytes

fight bacterial infections

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T lymphocytes

attack cancer, viruses, and foreign substances

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Macrophage Cells

attack harmful invaders and worn-out cells

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Natural Killer Cells

attack diseased cells (such as those infected by viruses or cancer)

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Biological factors that influence immune system

age, nutrition, genetics

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Coronary Heart Disease

clogging of the vessels that nourish the heart muscle

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Type A personality

prone to the consequences of stress; aggressive, ambitious, and controlling

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Type B Personality

copes well with stress; easygoing

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How does appraisal of an event affect our stress reaction?

if we see an event as challenging, we will see it as an opportunity for success or see it as a threat

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4 ways we adapt/respond to stress?

fight-or-flight
GAS: Alarm, Resistance, Exhaustion
Withdrawing
Tend-and-Befriend

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How does stress make us vulnerable to disease?

diverts energy from our immune system; inhibits activities of helpful bacteria

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Does stress directly cause illness?

NO; it just makes you more vulnerable

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2 ways we can approach stressors

confront directly or avoid; problem focused or emotion focused

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Problem Focused Coping

Attempting to alleviate stress directly by changing the stressor or the way we interact with that stressor (EX: you feel stressed, so you create a schedule; here the student is attending to the problem directly to reduce stress)

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Emotion Focused Coping

attempting to alleviate stress by avoiding or ignoring a stressor and attending to emotional needs related to one's stress reaction (EX: you feel stressed, so you practice mindfulness; here the student is ignoring the problem to reduce stress)

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External Locus of Control

the perception that outside forces beyond our personal control determine our fate (PTSD patients experience this)

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Internal Locus of Control

the perception that you control your own fate (free-will)

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How does a perceived lack of control affect health?

rise in stress hormones

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Belief in free-will is linked to helpful behavior

True

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Can self-control be depleted?

weaken after use, recovers after rest, grows stronger when exercised

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Psychological Disorder

a syndrome marked by a clinically significant disturbance in an individual's cognition, emotion regulation, or behavior

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3 ways to find out if someone has a psychological disorder

disturbance, dysfunction, distress

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Medical Model

the concept that diseases have physical causes that can be diagnosed, treated, and cured through treatment in hospital

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How can disorders be influenced biologically?

evolution, genes, brain structure and chemistry

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How can disorders be influenced psychologically?

stress, trauma, learned helplessness, mood-related perceptions and memories

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How can disorders be influenced socially?

roles, expectations, definitions of normality and disorder

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Are psychological disorders universal or culture-specific?

some appear in culture specific (EX: anorexia in Japan); some, like depression or schizophrenia, appear in all cultures

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What do classifications of disorders do?

aim to predict a disorder's future course, suggest treatment, and prompt research

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What is the problem with the DSM-5?

it may classify even normal behavior as abnormal

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What is the value of labeling individuals with disorders?

allows to communicate in a common language during research

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What are the dangers of labeling individuals with disorders?

labels can trigger assumptions (EX: a depressed person does not have depression)

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6 causes of suicide

nationality
race
gender
traits
age
time (EX: COVID-19)

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Nonsuicidal Self-Injury

cutting, burning, or purposely injuring one's body to cope with stress

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Biopsychosocial Approach to Disorders

assumes that disorders come from the interaction of biological characteristics, psychological dynamics, and social-cultural circumstances

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Vulnerability Stress Model

individual characteristics combine with environmental stressors to increase or decrease the likelihood of developing a psychological disorder

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Do psychological disorders predict violence?

NO

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Anxiety Disorders

marked by distressing, persistent anxiety or maladaptive behaviors that reduce anxiety

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3 Anxiety Disorders

generalized anxiety disorder, panic disorder, phobias

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Generalized Anxiety Disorder

a person is, for no obvious reason, continually tense and uneasy

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Panic Disorder

experiences panic attacks; sudden episodes of intense dread and fears the next attack

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Specific Phobias

a person is intensely and irrationally afraid of something

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Obsessive Compulsive Disorder

obsessive thoughts are unwanted and seemingly unending that are followed by a compulsive behaviors

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Hoarding Disorder

cluttering their space with things they don't need

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Body Dysmorphic Disorder

preoccupation with perceived body defects

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Trichotillomania

pulling hair

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Exorciation

skin picking

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PTSD

haunting memories of traumatic events

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Somatic Symptom Disorder

symptoms take a bodily form without apparant cause

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Illness Anxiety Disorder

a person interprets normal physical sensations as symptoms of a disease

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How can classical conditioning be used to help with fear responses?

we can link the fear with something good (EX: you're scared of the 10m - so you go to the edge without actually jumping off; here, you're taking away the unconditioned response of jumping off so you aren't scared of the 10m anymore)

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Stimulus Generalization

when a person experiences a fear-producing event and develops a fear of similar events (EX: being scared of cadre so now you're scared of all people in uniform)

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How do genes influence anxiety disorders?

regulating brain levels of neurotransmitters

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What two neurotransmitters are released during fear/anxiety?

serotonin and glutamate

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Serotonin

sleep, mood, and attending to threats

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Glutamate

alarm centers

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Anterior Cingulate Cortex

brain region that monitors our actions and checks for errors

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How does classical conditioning help with managing anxiety?

associating the anxiety-provoking stimulus with something positive (EX: exposure therapy; if someone has a fear of flying, they show pictures of airplanes and eventually the person associates flying with calmness versus fear)

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How does operant conditioning help with managing anxiety?

assumes behaviors are influenced by their consequences (EX: if a person uses deep breathing techniques during stressful situations and feels calmer as a result, this positive outcome reinforces the behavior, making them more likely to use it in the future)

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How might cognition influence anxiety?

observational learning

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Observational Learning

seeing bad things happen to people, so you start thinking bad things may happen to you

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How can biology influence anxiety?

lack of sleep
genetics

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Psychotherapy

treatment involving psychological techniques to overcome difficulties or achieve personal growth

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Biomedical Treatment

medications for disorders

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Who created the first major psychological therapy?

Freud

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Psychoanalysis

much of our behavior is caused by unconscious feelings, thoughts, and motives

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Resistance (therapy)

the blocking from consciousness of anxiety-related material

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Active Listening

Empathic listening in which the listener echoes, restates, and clarifies. A feature of Rogers' client-centered therapy.

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What does Psychological Well-Being go hand in hand with?

Self-Awareness

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Psychodynamic/psychoanalytic therapists expect people's problems to diminish when?

they gain insight into their unresolved and unconscious tension (you don't know how you actually feel, so gain insight)

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Humanistic therapists think people's problems diminish when?

people get in touch with their feelings (listen to your feelings)

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Behavior Therapists say that problems diminish when?

you modify your behavior (change your feelings)

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Behavior Therapists

assume that behaviors are the problem

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Counterconditioning

behavior therapy procedures that use classical conditioning to evoke new responses to stimuli that are triggering unwanted behaviors (EX: A child is afraid of dogs - therapist gradually exposes the child to dogs while providing positive reinforcement whenever the child remains calm)

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How is counterconditioning different from classical conditioning in therapy?

counterconditioning involves a positive reinforcer (prize) given to the person when he/she encounters their fear
classical conditioning is when the therapist exposes the person to his/her fear without the unconditioned stimulus (EX: person is afraid of dogs, so he is exposed to dogs that don't bite him)

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Exposure Therapy

treat anxieties by exposing people to the things they fear and avoid (Classical Conditioning)

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Systematic Desensitization

combines relaxation techniques with gradual exposure to feared stimuli, aiming to replace the fear response with a relaxation response.

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VR Therapy

treats anxiety through simulations

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Aversive Conditioning

learn what you shouldn't do (EX: painting nails with bad-tasting nail polish) (Classical Conditioning)

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Cognitive Therapies

therapy that teaches people new, more adaptive ways of thinking and acting; assumes that our thinking affects the way we feel

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Stress Inoculation

restructure their thinking in stress (EX: soldiers learn coping strategies, such as relaxation techniques to help with PTSD)