Term for feeling detached from one’s own body or mental processes
What is Depersonalization?
Personality disorder characterized by grandiosity + need for admiration + lack of empathy.
What is Narcissistic PD?
Age by which ADHD symptoms must onset (DSM-5).
What is 12?
This term refers to the causal factors which contribute to the development of mental health disorders.
What is etiology?
An abrupt and overwhelming episode of intense fear is known as this.
Panic attack
This disorder features one or more neurological symptoms (e.g., paralysis, blindness) that cannot be explained by medical disease.
What is Conversion Disorder (Functional Neurological Symptom Disorder)?
Biosocial theory says borderline PD develops from _____ + invalidating environment.
What is emotion dysregulation (or high emotional sensitivity)
Individuals with Autism Spectrum Disorder often display difficulties in this area, which involves understanding and interpreting others' thoughts, feelings, and intentions.
What is social communication or social interaction?
The Rorschach and Thematic Apperception Test are examples of this type of psychological test.
What is a projective test?
Only anxiety disorder that requires 6+ months of worry.
What is Generalized Anxiety Disorder?
In this somatic disorder, the patient is actually preoccupied with having more than one serious illness but has minimal or no somatic symptoms.
What is Illness Anxiety Disorder? (vs Somatic Symptom Disorder)
The Cluster B disorder that includes “lack of remorse” as a formal DSM-5 criterion
What is antisocial?
The three DSM-5 presentations of ADHD
What are Predominantly Inattentive, Predominantly Hyperactive-Impulsive, and Combined?
In some eating disorders, individuals engage in this type of compensatory behavior.
What is purging?
Diagnosis when a patient has hypomania + major depression but never full mania
What is Bipolar II?
This disorder involves sudden, unexpected travel away from home with inability to recall the past and confusion about identity (or assumption of a new identity).
What is Dissociative Fugue or Dissociative Amnesia?
Marsha Linehan’s therapy for borderline PD that teaches patients to hold two seemingly opposite truths at once (acceptance and change) while building mindfulness, distress tolerance, emotion regulation, and interpersonal skills.
What is Dialectical Behavior Therapy (DBT)
Number of symptoms needed in one category for Predominantly Inattentive presentation (adults).
What is 5 or more?
Positive symptom of schizophrenia that involves believing your thoughts are being transmitted to others.
What is thought broadcasting?
In treating OCD, this evidence-based method involves preventing ritual responses while exposing individuals to their obsessions.
What is exposure and response prevention (ERP)?
The key difference between Factitious Disorder Imposed on Self and Malingering.
What is internal (psychological) vs external incentives?
The four Cluster B personality disorders (name any three)
What are antisocial, borderline, histrionic, and narcissistic?
The two major DSM-5 criterion domains for Autism Spectrum Disorder (name both)
What are (1) persistent deficits in social communication/interaction or (2) restricted, repetitive patterns of behavior, interests, or activities?
Enlarged brain structure most consistently found in chronic schizophrenia.
What are the lateral ventricles?
Mood disorder with numerous periods of hypomanic and depressive symptoms (but no episodes) for ≥2 years
What is Cyclothymic Disorder?