Psychology - Chapter 15 - Key Words
The demonic model is an early view of mental illness in which unusual behavior, hallucinations, or talking to oneself was believed to result from evil spirits or demonic possession. Treatments under this model often involved exorcism, rituals, or other supernatural interventions.
view of mental illness in which odd behaviour, hearing voices, or talking to oneself was attributed to evil spirits infesting the body.
demonic model
Key Terms
view of mental illness in which odd behaviour, hearing voices, or talking to oneself was attributed to evil spirits infesting the body.
demonic model
view of mental illness as due to a physical disorder requiring medical treatment
medical model
institution for people with mental illness created in the fifteenth century
asylum
approach to mental illness calling for dignity, kindness, and respect for those with mental illness
moral treatment
governmental policy in the 1960s and 1970s that focused on releasing hospitalized psychiatric patients into the community and closing mental hospitals
deinstitutionalization
scholars who argue that psychiatric diagnoses exert powerful negative effects on people’s perceptions and behaviours
labelling theorists
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| Term | Definition |
|---|---|
view of mental illness in which odd behaviour, hearing voices, or talking to oneself was attributed to evil spirits infesting the body. | demonic model |
view of mental illness as due to a physical disorder requiring medical treatment | medical model |
institution for people with mental illness created in the fifteenth century | asylum |
approach to mental illness calling for dignity, kindness, and respect for those with mental illness | moral treatment |
governmental policy in the 1960s and 1970s that focused on releasing hospitalized psychiatric patients into the community and closing mental hospitals | deinstitutionalization |
scholars who argue that psychiatric diagnoses exert powerful negative effects on people’s perceptions and behaviours | labelling theorists |
diagnostic system containing the American Psychiatric Association (APA) criteria for mental disorders | DSM - diagnostic and statistical manual of mental disorders |
Percentage of people within a population who have a specific mental disorder | prevalence |
co-occurence of two or more diagnoses within the same person | comorbidity |
model in which a mental disorder differs from normal functioning in kind rather than degree | categorical model |
model in wihch a mental disorder differs from normal functioning in degree rather than kind | dimensional model |
legal defence proposing that people shouldn’t be held legally accountable for their actions if they weren’t of sound mind when committing them | insanity defence |
procedure of placing some people with mental illness in a psychiatric hospital or other facility based on their potential danger to themselves or others, or their inability to care for themselves | involuntary commitment |
Condition marked by physical symptoms that suggest an underlying medical illness, but that are actually psychological in origin | somatic symptom disorder |
an individual’s continual preoccupation with the notion that he or she has a serious physical disease | illness anxiety disorder |
continual feelings of worry, anxiety, physical tension, and irritability across many areas of life functioning | GAD |
brief, intense episode of extreme fear, characterized by sweating, dizziness, light-headedness, racing heartbeat, and feelings or impending death or going crazy | panic attack |
repeated and unexpected panic attacks, along with either persistent concerns about future attacks or a change in personal behaviour in an attempt to avoid them | panic disorder |
Intense fear of an object or situation that’s greatly out of proportion to its actual threat | phobia |
fear of being in a place or situation from which escape is difficult or embarassing, or in which help is unavailable in the event of a panic attack | agoraphobia |
intense fear of objects, places, or situations that is greatly out of proportion to their actual threat | specific phobia |
intense fear of negative evaluation in social situations | social anxiety disorder |
marked emotional disturbance after experiencing or witnessing a severely stressful event | PTSD |
condition marked by repeated and lengthy (at least one hour per day) immersion in obsessions, compulsions, or both | OCD |
persistent idea, thought, or impulse that is unwanted and inappropriate, causing marked distress | obsession |
repetitive behaviour or mental act performed to reduce or prevent stress | compulsion |
fear of anxiety-related situations | anxiety-sensitivity |
state in which a person experiences a lingering depressed mood or diminished interest in pleasurable activities, along with symptoms that include weight loss and sleep difficulties | major depressive episode |
Theory that depression is caused by negative beliefs and expectations | Cognitive model of depression |
tendency to feel helpless in the face of events we cannot control | learned helplessness |
Experience marked by dramatically elevated mood, decreased need for sleep, increased energy, inflated self-esteem, increased talkativeness, and irresponsible behaviour | manic episode |
condition marked by a history of at least one manic episode | bipolar disorder |
condition in which personality traits, appearing first in adolescence, are inflexible, stable, expressed in a wide variety of situations, and lead to distress or impairment | personality disorder |
condition marked by extreme instability in mood, identity, and impulse control | borderline personality disorder |
condition marked by superficial charm, dishonesty, manipulativeness, self-centredness, and risk taking | psychopathic personality |
Condition marked by a lengthy history of irresponsible and/or illegal actions | antisocial personality disorder |
condition involving disruptions in consciousness, memory, identity, or perception | dissociative disorder |
condition marked by multiple episodes of depersonalization | depersonalizatoin/derealization disorder |
inability to recall important personal information - most often related to a stressful experience - that can't be explained by ordinary forgetfulness | dissociative amnesia |
sudden, unexpected travel away from home or the workplace, accompanied by amnesia for significant life events | dissociative fugue |
condition characterized by the presence of two or more distinct personality states that recurrently take control of the person's behaviour | DID |
severe disorder of thought and emotion associated with a loss of contact with reality | schizophrenia |
strongly held, fixed belief that has no basis in reality | delusion |
psychological problem reflecting serious distortions in reality | psychotic symptoms |
sensory perception that occurs in the absence of an external stimulus | hallucination |
motor problem, including extreme resistance to complying with simple suggestions, holding the body in bizarre or rigid postures, or curling up in a fetal position | catatonic symptom |
perspective proposing that mental disorders area a joint product of a genetic vulnerability, called a diathesis, and stressors that trigger this vulnerability | diathesis-stress model |
DSM-5 category that includes autistic disorder and Asperger's syndrome. | autism spectrum disorder |
childhood condition marked by excessive inattention, impulsivity, and activity | ADHD |