Chapter 13
Treatment
Social Psychology
Vocabulary
Random
100

A way of understanding what makes people healthy by recognizing that biology, psychology, and social context all combine to shape health outcomes

What is the biopsychosocial model?

100

What profession prescribes medication in the mental health field?

Who is a psychiatrist? 

100

A sense of conflict between people’s attitudes and actions that motivates efforts to restore cognitive consistency

What is cognitive dissonance?

100

This is the scientific study of psychological disorders.

What is psychopathology?

100

The patterns of behavior, traditions, and preferences that are approved by a given culture or subculture

What are social norms?

200

An anxiety disorder characterized by extreme fear of being watched, evaluated or judged by others coupled with extreme avoidance of the situation.

What is social anxiety disorder?

200

This woman was a passionate advocate for appropriate treatment for those suffering with a psychological disorder. 

Who is Dorthea Dix?

200

Ideas, feelings, or opinions about something or someone especially one formed without conscious thought or on the basis of little evidence.

What is an impression?

200

A biological treatment, mostly used for cases of severe depression, in which a brief electric current is passed through the brain to produce a convulsive seizure

What is Electroconvulsive Therapy (ECT)?

200

This diagnosis is characterized by a wide range of developmental problems including persistent deficits in social communication/interaction and restricted or repetitive patterns of interest or behavior.

What is Autism Spectrum Disorder?

300

Clinically significant disturbances in an individual’s cognition, emotional regulation, or behavior that is usually associated with significant distress or disability in social, occupational, and other important activities.

What is a psychological disorder?

300

What was Sigmund Freud's talk therapy named?

What is Classical Psychoanalysis

300

This tactic is used when an individual is given a small amount of guilt for declining a large request so that they will be more likely to follow through with a smaller one.

What is the door in the face technique?

300

Medications that control, or at least moderate, the symptoms of some psychological disorders.

What are psychotropic medications?

300

A standardized clinical assessment tool that consists of a fixed set of questions that a patient answers.

What is a self-report measure?

400

This disorder is characterized by sadness, emptiness, anhedonia (loss of interest or pleasure), reduced motivation, increased tiredness.

What is Major Depressive Disorder?

400

In early treatment this procedure was done by cutting a hole in the skill so that the “demons” could leave the brain.

What is trephination?

400

The tendency to assume that people’s actions are more the result of their internal disposition that of the situational context

What is the fundamental attribution error?

400

A method in psychoanalytic therapy in which a patient says anything that comes to mind, no matter how apparently trivial, embarrassing or disagreeable

What is Free Association?

400

A conception of a psychopathology that distinguishes the factors that create a risk of illness (diathesis) from the factors that turn the risk into a problem (stress).

What is the diathesis stress model?

500

This diagnosis is characterized by a loss of contact with reality and a breakdown of the normal functions of the mind, leading to bizarre perceptions

What is Schizophrenia?

500

A family of therapeutic approaches based on the idea that maladaptive behaviors arise due to errors in thinking.

What is the cognitive approach? 

500

A tendency for people in a group to assume that someone else is in a better position to act or has already acted

What is the Diffusion of Responsibility?

500

The tendency to treat one person as if they possess the traits or characteristics of another more familiar person.

What is transference?

500

This disorder is typically diagnosed in young children that involves a wide range of symptoms, including blurting out answers in class, fidgeting, difficulty switching task, difficulty with attentional focus

What is ADHD?