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Aberrant salience hypothesis
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Ascribes psychosis to overactivity of the mesolimbic dopamine pathway; this results in excess dopamine, which leads to over-attributing meaning (i.e., salience) to extraneous and irrelevant events.
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Abnormal motor behavior
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A symptom of psychosis in which the person seems physically agitated/restless or catatonic (unresponsive to surroundings).
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Acute and transient psychotic disorder (ATPD)
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ICD-10 and ICD-11 equivalent diagnosis to the DSM-5’s brief psychotic disorder.
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Adoption studies
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Look at rates of schizophrenia among siblings adopted early in life and reared in separate environments.
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Algoia
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Negative symptom of psychosis that involves a reduction in speech; the person doesn’t say much.
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Amphetamine psychosis
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Psychosis induced by taking large doses of amphetamines.
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Anhedonia
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Negative symptom of psychosis in which the person gets little pleasure from previously enjoyed activities.
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Antipsychotics
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Drugs used to alleviate psychotic symptoms; they work by affecting neurotransmitters in the brain—typically dopamine; also called neuroleptics and major tranquilizers.
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Asociality
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Negative symptom of psychosis in which a person lacks interest in social contact.
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Assertive community treatment (ACT)
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A way to organize services for those diagnosed with schizophrenia and other severe psychological disorders in which team members from a variety of professions work together to coordinate services for outpatients with schizophrenia and other chronic mental disorder diagnoses.
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Attenuated psychosis syndrome (APS)
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A proposed but unofficial DSM diagnosis for people whose behavior is odd or eccentric and might eventually develop into full-blown psychosis—but doesn’t yet technically qualify.
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Atypical antipsychotics
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Antipsychotic drugs that are often thought to have fewer side effects than first-generation antipsychotics; also called second-generation antipsychotics (see separate entry).
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Avolition
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Negative symptom of psychosis characterized by decreased motivation.
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Behavioral experiments
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CBT technique used for psychosis in which patients test the reality of their delusional beliefs.
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Behavioral rehearsal
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Behavioral technique in which the client role-plays how to act in specific social situations.
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