CHAP 1
CHAP 2
CHAP 3
BONUS
100

The definition of etiology

The study of origins

(For psychopathology, it's the possible causation of a disorder)

100

The psychological type of learning that results from a lack of control over external stimuli

Learned helplessness

100

Most well-established personality test

MMPI 

100

The result of the Willbrook Documentary

Deinstitutionalization

200

The core aspect of humanistic therapy

Relationships/positive regard 

200

Chemical messengers released into the synaptic cleft between neurons in the brain (especially in the cerebral cortex)

Neurotransmitters

200

The core of clinical assessment and diagnosis, upon which all other assessments should support 

The clinical interview

200

The side of the brain that is more connected to visual images and perception

Right

300

The biological treatment option that is still used today that stems from original diabetes management 

Electroconvulsive shock therapy

300

The autonomic nervous system includes this dual response system

The sympathetic and parasympathetic nervous systems

300

The therapeutic theory from which projective testing assessments were developed

Psychoanalytic theory

300

The specific labels used in a classification system

Nomenclature

400

The three components of psychopathology 

1. Dysfunction

2. Abnormal/atypical behavior

3. Distress/impairment

400

The concept that multiple paths may lead to the same diagnosis or psychopathologic conclusion

Equinfinality

400

Assessment that is typically completed via observation during the clinical interview

Mental status exam
400

Type of testing that assesses for deficits in cognition first

Neuropsychological

500

The therapeutic approach in behaviorism that involves gradually progressing a client through their hierarchy of fears to reduce conditioning. 

Systematic desensitization

500

Percentage that genetics contribute to the development of psychopathology

50%

500

The difference between reliability and validity

Reliable: is the test consistent?

Valid: is the test assessing what it is supposed to measure?

500

The difference between the diathesis stress model and reciprocal gene-environment model 

Diathesis stress: inherited vulnerabilities that emerge with stress

Reciprocal gene-environment model: genes predispose individuals to put themselves into situations where they might be influenced to experience stress

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