Anxiety Disorders
Mood Disorders
Schizophrenia
Naming Disorders
Models and Miscellaneous
100

True or False: some cultures report more physical symptoms of anxiety

True

100

The most common mood disorder in the United States is:

Major Depressive Disorder (MDD)

100

What percentage of the population is Schizophrenic

About 1%

100

A disorder characterized by a strong semantic memory of a particular traumatic event, hypervigilance, and disturbances in sleep, social relationships, and daily life

What is Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD)

100

True or false: Examining psychological disorders is always based on psychological theories

False: some disorders are best explained by biological or sociological phenomena

200

What is anxiety?

An appraisal of threat and your ability to deal with it

200

A drastically decreased mood, with lower energy, ruminations, deep sadness, and abnormal eating and sleeping patterns

What is a depressive episode?

200

A break from reality. Inability to separate imagination from reality.

What is psychosis?

200

Characterized by sensitivity to stimulus, specific interests, sometimes academic difficulties. Symptoms appear before the age of 2. 

What is Autism Spectrum Disorder (ASD)

200

The three "psychological" theories of disorders are:

What are Cognitive, Behavioral, and Psychodynamic Theories?

300

An anxiety disorder classified by a fear of one specific object, animal, or situation (snakes, planes, etc.)

What is Specific Phobia?

300

A drastically increased mood, with increased energy, excitability, irritability, and irrationality. 

What is a manic episode?

300

(Double points) A false, irrational belief is called a ________ while a false stimulus (often a sound) is called a ________.

What are delusions and hallucinations?

300

Characterized by several identities or "alters" within the same body. Triggered by extreme trauma. Often involves severe memory impairment

What is Dissociative Identity Disorder (DID)

300

Eating Disorders have a strong connection to which psychological theory (biological, cognitive, behavioral, psychodynamic, or sociocultural)

Sociocultural

400

(Double Points) What is an obsession? What is a compulsion?

An obsession is a repetitive thought that causes anxiety. A compulsion is an action that is taken to reduce to the obsessive drive.

400
Long lasting, mild depression is often called:

Persistent Depressive Disorder or Dysthymia

400

True or False: Schizophrenia is best explained by looking at society, culture, economic distress, and social hierarchies

False. Schizophrenia is best explained through a biological lens by examining genetics and neuroscience

400

Characterized by slow, long lasting mood episodes that cycle between manic and depressive. Like a low intensity, long lasting bipolar disorder.

What is Cyclothymia?

400

These two disorders are best explained by the biological theory

Schizophrenia and Bipolar Disorder

500

What is Agoraphobia in the context of Panic Disorder?

Anticipatory anxiety: the fear that a person could have a panic attack, often in a public setting where they have no safe place. A fear of panic inducing situations.

500

(Double Points) Depressive Disorders are often treated with antidepressants such as ______. Bipolar Disorders are usually treated with the mood stabilizer ________.

What are SSRI's and Lithium?

500

The broad category of symptoms that includes but is not limited to: Flat Affect, Alogia, Anhedonia, and Avolition

What are negative symptoms of schizophrenia?

500

Characterized by unstable emotions and attitudes towards other people. 75% of people with this disorder attempt suicide, and they can have extreme difficulties trusting others.

What is Borderline Personality Disorder (BPD)

500

A theory in anxiety disorders where the threat of anxiety is based on biological factors, general psychological factors, and specific psychological factors

What is Triple Vulnerability Theory?

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