Use LEFT and RIGHT arrow keys to navigate between flashcards;
Use UP and DOWN arrow keys to flip the card;
H to show hint;
A reads text to speech;
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.
|