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Child Psychological Disorders Vocabulary Flashcards
Child Psychological Disorders Vocabulary Flashcards
Conduct Problems
Overview
Conduct problems are disruptive behaviors exhibited by children and adolescents.
Understanding their etiology is critical for effective treatment.
Etiology
Genetic Predisposition
Conduct problems have a heritable component, with genetics accounting for 30-40% of the variance in disruptive behaviors.
Specific genes remain unidentified, but children may inherit:
Difficult temperament
Physiological under-arousal
Difficult Temperament
Affects various relationships and skills:
Parent-Child Relationship
: Difficult temperament can interfere with bonding.
Coping Skills
: Issues with self-regulation.
Social Problem-Solving
: Hindered ability to navigate social situations.
Physiological Under-Arousal
Children may show:
Reduced sensitivity to punishment.
A decreased capacity to experience pleasure.
Interpersonal Factors
Hostile Parenting
Characteristics:
Models aggressive behavior rather than prosocial behavior.
Inconsistent discipline can lead to avoidance and escalation to abuse.
Treatment
: Emphasizes parent training for better behavioral modeling.
Coercive Family Process (Patterson et al., 1992)
Dynamics:
Parent issues a command.
Child ignores the command.
Parent escalates the command.
Child reacts negatively, leading to withdrawal of command by the parent.
Treatment
: Focuses on improving parenting strategies.
Parent Cognition
Important factors include:
Internal, stable attributions for the child's behavior can foster feelings of incompetence leading to hostility.
Low parental monitoring correlates with adolescent-onset conduct disorder (CD).
Insufficient supervision and lack of consequences for rule violations.
Treatment
: Involves increased parental engagement and monitoring.
Intrapersonal Factors
Encoding Social Cues
Limited and superficial search for social cues leading to:
Inability to encode sufficient social information.
Tendency to focus excessively on negative cues.
Interpretation Bias
Hostile Attribution Bias
:
Children misinterpret social cues as hostile, escalating conflict.
Response Generation
Searching for Responses
:
Limited options considered for actions.
Often results in negative responses due to poor decision-making.
Enactment
:
Responses often delivered clumsily and awkwardly.
Longitudinal Research Findings
Key outcomes associated with conduct problems include:
Increased likelihood of violent crimes, drug and property convictions.
Higher rates of antisocial personality disorder (ASPD).
Correlation with experiences of child maltreatment and partner violence.
Associated with academic challenges such as high school dropouts, and mental health issues including depression/anxiety leading to unemployment.
Problem-Solving Skills Training (PSST)
Attention
: Teach children to focus on all relevant cues.
Response Consideration
: Encourage generating multiple responses and considering their consequences.
Role Play
: Use rehearsals and feedback to build competency in social interactions.
STOPLIGHT Metaphor
: Promote stopping to think before reacting, improving decision-making.
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Explore Top Notes
Internal Energy and Changes of State
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Studied by 6 people
5.0
(1)
Unit 11: The Industrial Revolution and Imperialism. The division of the world - Point 6
Note
Studied by 7 people
5.0
(1)
Unit 1: Thinking Geographically
Note
Studied by 30859 people
4.7
(251)
Untitled
Note
Studied by 1 person
5.0
(1)
Module 3
Note
Studied by 11 people
5.0
(1)
SAT 1-12 (master list)
Note
Studied by 26 people
5.0
(1)