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33 Cards in this Set

  • Front
  • Back
What is "birth trauma"?
Leaving the world to a cold, demanding world. Beginning of stress/anxiety in all forms.
What are the 7 major psychological disorders categorized by the DSM?
Mood, anxiety, childhood, stress, somatoform, psychosis, personality.
What are the two types of somatoform disorders?
Dissociative and factitious.
Who determines abnormal tendencies?
Society.
What are the three main assessment tools?
Clinical interview, clinical testing, and clinical observation.
What is a clinical observation used for?
To find idiographic information.
What are the four types of clinical testing?
Intelligence/IQ tests, personality tests, projective tests, response inventories.
What do response inventories measure?
Only one thing: depression or aggression, for example.
What are the three main characteristics of a personality inventory test?
Tests for multiple things, over 500 questions, and gives clinicians a cross-profile of a person.
What are the three types of observations?
Naturalistic, analog, and self-monitoring.
What is a naturalistic observation?
It is in a natural setting.
What is an analog observation?
In an artificial, created setting. Ex: clinician's office.
What is a self-monitoring observation?
The person tracks/reports themselves.
What is an example of a factitious disorder?
Munchausen's/Munchausen's by proxy.
What are the two types of somatoform disorders?
Hysterical and preoccupation.
What are the three types of hysterical disorders?
Conversion, pain, and somatization.
What are the two types of preoccupation disorders?
Hypercondriasis and body dimorphic.
What are the three types of dissociative disorders?
Dissociative amnesia, dissociative fugue, and dissociative identity disorder.
What are the three types of childhood disorders?
Behavior, life-long, and elimination.
What are three examples of childhood behavior disorders?
ADHD, conduct disorders, and oppositional defiant disorders.
What are two examples of childhood life-long disorders?
Mental retardation and pervasive development.
What are two examples of pervasive development in children?
Autism and asperger's.
What is enuresis?
Childhood life-long elimination disorder that causes urination.
What is encopresis?
Childhood life-long elimination disorder that causes defecation.
What are the two primary characteristics of personality disorders?
Pervasiveness and jitteriness.
What are the three categories of personality disorders?
Odd, dramatic, and anxious.
What are examples of the odd personality disorder?
Paranoid, schizoid, and schizoid typal.
What are examples of the dramatic personality disorder?
Borderline, histrionic, antisocial, and narcissist.
What are examples of the anxious personality disorder?
OCD, dependent and avoidance.
What is the key feature of psychosis?
The departure from reality.
What are the eight types of psychosis?
Schizophrenia, brief psychotic episode, schizophreniform, schizoaffective, delusional, shared psychotic, medically induced psychosis, and drug induced psychosis.
What are the three types of schizophrenia?
Positive, negative, and psychomotor.
What are the three schizophrenic stages?
Prodromal, active/acute, and residual.