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Norms:
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Rules that tell us what is "right" and what is "wrong" to do and when, where, and with whom.
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Categories of behavior indicative of mental disorder:
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(1) Behavior that is harmful to the self or harmful to others without serving the interests of the self; (2) Poor reality contact; (3) Emotional reactions inappropriate to the person's situation; (4) Erratic behavior.
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Epidemiology:
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The study of the distribution of disorders within populations.
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Abnormal behavior in groups can be categorized in three different ways:
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(1) Various groups are at greater or lesser risk for specific disorders; (2) Groups differ in how they experience and express psychological disorders; (3) Groups vary in thier norms, making diagnosis difficult.
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Medical model or disease model:
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Says abnormal behavior is comparable to disease; it has specific causes and a specific set of symptoms.
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Biogenic:
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Resulting from a malfunction of the human body.
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Thomas Szaz:
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Author of "The Myth of Mental Illness"; claimed that most of what the medical model called mental illness were not illnesses at all, but rather, "problems in living," expressed as violations of moral, legal, and social norms.
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Neuroscience Perspective:
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Analyzes abnormal behavior in terms of its neurochemical, neuroanatomical, and neurohormaonal components.
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Psychodynamic Perspective:
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Assumes that abnormal behavior issues from imcomscious psychological conflicts originating in childhood.
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Behavioral Perspective:
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Holds that a primary cause of abnormal behavior is inappropriate learning, whereby maladaptive behaviors are rewarded and adaptive behaviors are not rewarded.
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Cognitive Perspective:
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Maintains that abnormal behavior is an outgrowth of maladaptive ways of perceiving and thinking about oneself and the environment.
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Interpersonal Perspective:
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Views abnormal behavior as the product of disordered realtionships.
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Sociocultural Perspective:
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Views abnormal behavior as the product of broad social and cultural forces. It also examines the biases that can influence diagnoses.
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Humanisitc-Existential Perspective:
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Not a single perspective, but a collection of the belief systems of well-known thinkers.
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Influences in ways of treating deviants:
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(1) The nature of the society; (2) Its explanation of such bahviors
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