Ap Psych Ch 12/13 Word Scramble
|
Embed Code - If you would like this activity on your web page, copy the script below and paste it into your web page.
Normal Size Small Size show me how
Normal Size Small Size show me how
| Question | Answer |
| Psychopathology | Any patterns of emotions, behaviors, or thoughts inappropriate to the situation and leading to personal distress or the inability to achieve important goals |
| Delusions | False thoughts or beliefs |
| Hallucinations | Vivid sensory perceptions such as voices or visions |
| Medical model | Diseases of the mind; objective causes and require specific treatments |
| Social- Cognitive- Behavioral | A psychological alternative to the medical model that views psychological disorder through a combo of social, cognitive, and behavioral processes |
| DSM- IV | Diagnostic and statistical manual of mental disorders; the most widely accepted classification system in the US. |
| Neurosis | Anxiety is core |
| Psychosis | Severe, loss of touch with reality |
| Mood Disorders | Person experiences extreme moods or disturbances in mood |
| Major Depression | Form of depression that does not alternate with mania |
| Seasonal Affective Disorder | Believed to be caused by a lack of sunlight (melatonin0 |
| Bipolar Disorder | Mental abnormality involving swings of mood from mania to depression |
| Anxiety Disorder | Intensive feelings of apprehension are long-standing and disruptive |
| GAD | Characterized by persistant and pervasive feelings of anxiety, without any external cause |
| Panic | Marked by panic attacks that have no connection to events in a persons present experience |
| Phobic | A group of anxiety disorders involving a pathological fear of a specific object or situation |
| Agoraphobia | Fear of being in a place where it may be difficult or embarrassing to get out of |
| Preparedness Hypothesis | An innate tendancy to respond quickly and automatically to stimuli that posed a survival threat to our ancestors |
| Somatoform Disorders | Symptoms of a physical disorder without a physical cause |
| Hypochondriasis | Preoccupation with the fear of having, or the idea that one has, a serious disease based on a misinterpretation of the body |
| Dissociative Disorders | Involves a sudden loss of memory or change in identity or consciousness |
| Dissociative Amnesia | A psychologically induced loss of memory |
| Dissociative Fugue | Dissociative amnesia with the addition of "flight" from one'shome, family, and job |
| Depersonalization Disorder | An abnormality involving the sensation that mind and body have separated- an "out of body" experience |
| Dissociative Identity Disorders | Condition in which the individual has 2+ distinct personalities along with disruption in memory |
| Anorexia | An eating disorder that involves persistent loss of appitite that endangers health and stems from emotional or psychological reasons rather than organic causes |
| Bulimia | An eating disorder characterized by eating binges followed by "purges" |
| Schizophrenia | Psychotic disorder involving distortions in perceptions, thoughts, and/or emotions |
| Diathesis- Stress Model | In reference to schizophrenia, the proposal that says that genetic factors place the individual at risk while environmental stress factors transform this potential into an actual schizophrenic disorder |
| Autism | A developmental disorder marked by disabilities in language, social interaction, and the ability to understand another persons state of mind |
| Dyslexia | A reading disability, thought by some experts to involve a brain disorder |
| ADHD | A developmental disability involving short attention span, distractability, and extreme difficulty in remaining inactive for any period |
| Insanity | A legal term, not a psychological or psychiatric one, referring to a person who is unable, because of a mental disorder or defect to conform his or her behavior to the law |
| Therapy | A general term for any treatment process |
| Psychological therapy | Therapies based on psychological principals (rather than on the biomedical approach) often called "psychotherapy" |
| Biomedical Therapy | Treatments that focus on altering the brain, especially with drugs, psychosurgery, or electroconvulsive therapy |
| Insight therapies | Psychotherapies in which the therapist helps others understand (gain insight) to their problems |
| Psychoanalysis | The form of psychodynamic therapy developed by Sigmund Freud. Goal is to release conflicts and memories from the unconscious |
| Analysis of Transference | The Freudian technique of analyzing and interpreting the patients relationship with the therapist based on the assumption that this relationship mirrors unresolved conflicts in the patients past |
| Neo- Freudian Psychodynamic Therapies | Therapies for mental disorders based on Freud's ideas |
| Humanistic Therapies | Focus on positive growth and self-actualization |
| Client- centered therapies | Emphasizes healthy psychological growth through self- actualization (Rogers) |
| Reflection of Feeling | Carl Rogers technique of paraphrasing the client's words, attempting to capture the emotional tone expressed |
Created by:
Uhniqua
Popular Psychology sets