PSYC412 Notes1
PSYC412 Notes1
PSYC412 Notes1
Determining abnormality
1. Norm violations: an action that breaks or acts against something, especially a law,
agreement, principle, or something that should be treated. Norms depend on
reference groups.
2. Statistical rarity: How frequently do we see this behaviour in the population? Where
does it fall on the normal distribution (ie: poles)? Something may be a statistical
rarity, but may not cause impairment and vice-versa (ie: anxiety).
○ Notes about prevalence rates
■ Prevalence rates may not be consistent across different samples and
sources
■ Different sampling procedures
■ Different sample sizes and variability
■ Different reference groups/populations
■ Changes in population over time
3. Personal discomfort
4. Maladaptive behavior
5. Deviation from an ideal
Broad prevalence
● Ontario Child Health Study
○ Children (ages 4- to 11-years): 18%
○ Adolescents (ages 12- to 17-years): 22%
● Great Smokey Mountains Study: Cumulative prevalence of any DSM diagnosis by
age 21 was 61.1%
● Dunedin Birth Cohort Study: 35% with any disorder by age 15, 59% by age 18
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Inadequate services
● Lack of accessibility to mental health service
● Doctors are often first point of contact, not mental health specialists
● Racial/ethnic disparities in mental health service access and lower levels of use (ie:
geography, cultural sensitivity, adapted treatments)
Diathesis-Stress Model: Some children are more susceptible (diathesis) to the negative
effects of a problematic environment (stress). Can be applied across disorders in different
fields (ie: diathesis for tooth decay or depression)
● Diathesis: underlying vulnerability or tendency
toward disorder could be biological, contextual,
or experience-based
● Stress: situation or challenge that calls on
resources typically thought of as external,
negative events
● Differential susceptibility: Some children are
more susceptible to the effects of their
environments, both good and bad
Example: Jason is a 6-year-old boy who has difficulty controlling his anger. He often lashes
out and becomes physically and verbally aggressive. At this school, some of the older kids
often pick on the younger ones. Jason is harassed several times one month, and responds
with physical aggression each time. As a result, he is picked on even more. Eventually,
Jason becomes very anxious about going to school.
- Diathesis: Difficulty controlling anger
- Stress: Getting picked on
- Outcome: School anxiety
Developmental pathways: The sequence and timing of particular behaviors as well as the
relationships between behaviors over time.
● Equifinality: Multiple stressors that produce a similar outcome/disorder
● Multifinality: One stressor that produces multiple outcomes/disorders
Neurobiological perspective: All psychological disorders are rooted in the brain. The fetal
brain develops from all-purpose cells into a complex organ, dysfunction in any of the
systems or their structure causes disorder.
● Neural plasticity: The brain’s anatomical differentiation is use-dependent (ie: use it
or lose it). Nature and nurture both contribute and experience plays a critical role in
brain development.
● Gene-environment interaction (GxE): The expression of genetic influences are
malleable and responsive to the social environment (ie: stress). Genetic influences
are probabilistic, not deterministic and most forms of abnormal behavior are
polygenic.
● Behavioral genetics: Connections
between genetic predisposition and
observed behavior.
● Molecular genetics: Used to identify
specific genes for childhood disorders
● Neurobiological contributors:
Neurotransmitters make biochemical
connections. Neurons more sensitive to
a particular neurotransmitter then cluster
together and form brain circuits.
Neurotransmitters involved in
psychopathology include serotonin,
benzodiazepine-GABA, norepinephrine,
and dopamine.