Psychological Disorders
Memory and Thought
Thinking and Lanugage
MISC
100

Used for by medical professionals, academia, and insurance companies to classify and diagnose psychological disorders.

DSM-5

100

What is short-term memory? 

Memory that is limited in capacity. Everything you experience starts in short term memory. 

Anywhere from 15 seconds to a minute. Varies from person to person. 

100

What is a symbol?

A thing that represents something else 


Could be an image, a character ($), a word, etc.

100

What is a norm?

Behavior that most humans exhibit. 

200

A generalized feeling of danger. 

Anxiety

200

What is long-term memory?

Any thoughts that you can retain beyond short term memory. Almost every memory you have is stored in long-term memory. 

200

A category of symbols that represent and classify a certain idea is called a ______. 

i.e. there are many different types of trees but the category of tree fits them all. 

Concept

200

Intense and persistent fear of any/all social situations is called _____. 

Social Anxiety Disorder

300

Lower mood and feelings like worthlessness/helplessness and sadness.

Depression

300

What are the 3 processes of memory

Encoding, Storage, and Retrieval

300

Explain the difference between conscious and unconscious thought. 

Conscious thought - internal stimuli. (i.e. thinking about what you will do this weekend)

Unconscious thought - triggered by external stimuli.

i.e. you hear a loud bang sound, you think "that's really loud, what happened?"

300

Disorder where individuals alternate between feelings of Euphoria and depression.

Bipolar Disorder

400

Give 3 examples of Anxiety Disorders

Social Anxiety Disorder, Generalized Anxiety Disorder, Phobias, Panic Disorders, PTSD, Obsessive Compulsive Disorder

400

Explain "encoding" memory in as much detail as possible. Provide examples for different methods to encode information.

Transforming information so that it can be processed and stored in your memory. 

The more effort put into encoding information the more likely you are able to actively retrieve it. 

- writing things down, flash-cards, reciting information, word-association

400

What are the two types of reasoning?

Deductive and Inductive

Deductive - top down (general rules to specific details)

Inductive - bottom up (using specific details to create a general rule)

400

What are the risks of using recreational drugs like alcohol and marijuana for individuals with psych disorders?

They can often exacerbate or heighten the symptoms because they are not designed for treatment of many disorders. 

500

Explain in detail why diagnosing psychological disorders is so challenging.

- They are based on norms and deviant behavior

- What is normal in one culture might be abnormal in another. What is considered deviant now might not be later.

- Doctors/psychiatrists must rely on reported symptoms in many cases

- Misdiagnosis could lead to further problems down the road, especially when involving medication.

500

What is the primacy-recency effect with short-term and long-term memory?

If you see a list of items you are more likely to remember the first thing you say (primacy) and the last thing you saw (recency) than items in the middle. 

This can be applied to stories like books or movies or just recalling the events of your day. 

500

What is metacognition? How can you use it to help you with a problem or decision you have been struggling with. 

Observe and analyze our own thinking. 

-Re-evaluate existing beliefs

- analyzing decision making over an outcome you did not like

- develop long-term strategies to help you solve a problem or accomplish a goal

500

Why is conscious thought believed to be explicitly tied to language? 

The basic building blocks of thinking are images and symbols. Language is a system that puts those things together.