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Psychology Notes
My notes for A Level psychology. Unit 4, AQA A
Tuesday, 7 April 2015
Saturday, 23 March 2013
Phobic Disorders - Biological Therapies for Phobic Disorders
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Chemotherapy
Anti-anxiety drugs (Benzodiazepines - BZs) - commonly used to reduce
anxiety. They slow down the activity of the central nervous system by
enhancing the activity of GABA, which is a neurotransmitter that has a
quieting effect on many of the neurones in the brain.
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Effectiveness of anti-anxiety drugs - Kahn et al (1986) - found that BZs
were more effective than a placebo in reducing anxiety.
Hildalgo et al (2001) - Found that BZs were more effective than
antidepressants.
Research has shown that beta blockers can also provide an effective
means of anxiety control.
However, some studies have found no difference between the results of
beta blockers and a placebo in terms of heart rate and feelings of nervousness.
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Effectiveness of antidepressants - Aouizerate et al (2004) – Concluded
that SSRIs provide relief for social phobics in 50-80% of cases, a level
fairly similar to BZs.
However, SSRIs are often considered preferable because they have less
side effects.
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Beta blockers - are also used to reduce anxiety. They work by
reducing the activity of adrenaline and noradrenaline which are part of the
sympathomedullary response to stress. This results in a fall in blood
pressure, and so less stress on the heart. The person taking the medication
will feel calmer and less anxious.
Anti-depressants (SSRIs) - Increase levels of serotonin which is a
neurotransmitter that regulates mood and anxiety.
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Appropriateness of chemotherapy - Not a cure - Generally drugs are
not the primary treatment for specific phobias. However they are appropriate
for those phobias which are accompanied by panic attacks, although drugs
cannot provide a complete treatment as they simply focus on symptoms.
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Appropriateness of chemotherapy - Side effects - Possible side
effects of BZs include increased aggressiveness and long-term impairment of
memory.
Beta blockers have few, if any side effects, whereas there are many problems
associated with the use of anti-depressants. SSRIs have been linked to
increased suicides.
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Psychosurgery
Capsulotomy and Cingulotomy - Functionally remove the connection
either above or below the organ. They are part of the limbic system which is
the region of the brain associated with emotion. Such operations are irreversible
and only performed at a last resort.
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Appropriateness of chemotherapy - Addiction - Can be a problem with
BZs, even when only low doses are given, for this reason the recommendation is
that they should be used for a maximum of four weeks.
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Effectiveness of psychosurgery - Ruck et al (2003) - Study of
capsulotomy - Reduced anxiety, but there were negative consequences. E.g. 7
tried to commit suicide and there were 2 cases of epileptic seizures.
This gives some indication of the success of psychosurgery for
treating a range of anxiety disorders. However, any benefits are weighed
against the potential for negative.
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Deep brain stimulation - Involves placing wires in target areas of
the brain. When the current is on, this interrupts target circuits in the
brain resulting in a reduction of symptoms.
Transcranial Magnetic Stimulation - A large electromagnetic coil is
placed above the scalp near the forehead. This creates painless electric
currents that stimulate the frontal cortex. This is a reversible,
non-invasive method.
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Appropriateness of psychosurgery - Psychosurgery is rarely suitable
for phobias and then only for extreme cases that have proved otherwise
untreatable and that interfere with normal day-to-day functioning.
Szasz (1978) - Criticised psychosurgery generally because a person’s
psychological self is not something physical and therefore it is illogical to
suggest that it can be operated on.
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Ethics with testing effectiveness of drugs - If effective treatments
exist, then they should be used as controls when new treatments are tested.
Substituting a placebo for an effective treatment does not satisfy this duty,
as it exposes individuals to a treatment known to be inferior.
Informed consent – Most patients are not informed about the
comparative success of drugs versus placebos. They expose themselves to
unpleasant side effects even though the pharmacological effects of the drug
may be slim.
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Friday, 22 March 2013
Phobic Disorders - Cognitive Explanations of Phobic Disorders
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Phobias may develop as a consequence of irrational thinking. Such thoughts
create extreme anxiety and may trigger a phobia.
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Dysfunctional Assumptions - There is support for the view that
phobics have dysfunctional assumptions.
Gournay (1989) - found that phobics were more likely than normal
people to overestimate risks, which might mean that they are generally more
fearful and this results in them being more predisposed to developing
phobias.
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A further issue lies with determinism, the cognitive approach states
that if you have dysfunctional assumptions, you will become a phobic.
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Beck et al (1985) - proposed that phobias arise because people become
afraid of situations where fears may occur. Beck also argued that phobics
tend to overestimate their fears, increasing the likelihood of phobias.
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This explanation suggests that phobias can be reduced to a simple set
of principles such as faulty thinking, this is reductionist. It is more
important to recognise that the ‘real’ explanations are likely to be a
combination of a number of different explanations.
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CBT - the success of CBT as a treatment for phobias can be seen as
support for the explanation - it can be argued that, if a therapy changes the
dysfunctional assumptions a person has and this leads to a reduction in their
phobia, then the dysfunctional assumptions may originally have caused the
disorder.
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Phobic Disorders - Behavioural Explanations of Phobic Disorders
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The behavioural approach proposes that phobias are acquired through
learning.
Social Learning Theory – Phobias may be acquired thought modelling
the behaviour of other. This theory is based on vicarious learning, which is
learning by watching others.
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Determinist - Behavioural view suggests that traumatic experiences
lead to phobias. The evidence suggests, however that phobias are not
inevitable.
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Social Learning Support - An experiment by Bandura and Rosenthal
(1966) supported the social learning explanation. In the experiment, a model
apparently experienced pain every time a buzzer sounded. Later on,
participants who observed this showed an emotional reaction to the buzzer,
demonstrating an acquired ‘fear’ response.
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Classical Conditioning - Fears are acquired when an individual
associates a neutral stimulus with a fear response. The case study of Little
Albert can support this approach. Little Albert associated a loud noise with
fluffy white objects, resulting in a fear of fluffy white objects such as a
white rat.
Operant Conditioning – Mowrer (1947) – proposed that learning phobias
was a two stage process. The first stage is classical conditioning, then in a
second stage, operant conditioning occurs. The avoidance of the phobic
stimulus reduces fear and is thus reinforcing.
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Little Albert - A case study, so not generalisable to the wider
population. Furthermore it was an unethical study, as Little Albert was not
protected from physical or psychological harm.
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People with phobias often recall a specific incident when their
phobia appeared. This supports the behavioural explanation of phobias,
however not everyone who has a phobia can recall such an incident. It is
possible that such incidents have occurred, but have been forgotten.
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Tuesday, 26 February 2013
Phobic Disorders - Psychodynamic Explanations of Phobic Disorders
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Freud was the first to offer a psychological explanation for the
origins of phobias. He proposed that a phobia was the conscious expression of
repressed conflicts.
The ego deals with conflict by protecting itself and
repressing the emotions into the unconscious. Freud demonstrated his
explanation with the case study of Little Hans who had become terrified of
horses pulling a laden cart.
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Research support – therapies that simply target the symptoms of
phobia, are not 100% successful, this is perhaps because they fail to deal
with the underlying causes of the phobias.
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There is a tendency in this approach to suggest that phobias can be
reduced to a simple set of principles such as repressed anxieties.
Therefore it
is reductionist, but this means that other possibilities will not be looked
at. It is likely that the ‘real’ explanations are likely to be a combination
of a number of different explanations.
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Hans had become terrified of horses pulling a laden cart. Freud
suggested that Hans' phobia had developed for several reasons:
Firstly: Hans once heard a mad saying to a child "Don't put your
finger to the white horse or it'll bite you". Hans once asked his mother
if she would like to put her finger on his penis. His mother told him this
would not be proper, leading Hans to worry that his mother might leave him. Hans projected once source of anxiety onto another - he became afraid
of being bitten by a white horse, when in fact he was scared that his mother
would leave him.
Secondly: Hans saw a horse with a laden cart fall down and thought it
was dead. The horse symbolised his wish that his father would die and the
laden cart symbolised his mother pregnant with his sister, and when it fell
over this was like giving birth. Therefore, the laden cart symbolised his
father dying and his mother giving birth - both events that filled him with
anxiety.
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Little Hans - Only one piece of evidence to support the explanation.
This case study could just as easily be explained using classical
conditioning.
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Little Hans - Concerns one individual, so cannot be generalised to
the wider population. Also, there is a lack of objectivity as both Hans’
father and Freud interpreted the evidence according to their expectations of the
origins of phobias.
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Sunday, 10 February 2013
Phobic Disorders - Biological Explanations of Phobic Disorders
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Genetic Factors
Family studies - Research shows that having a family member with a
phobia increases the risk that an individual develops a similar disorder.
(The family member who already has the disorder is called the proband)
Fyer et al (1995) - probands had three times as many relatives who
also experienced phobias as the normal controls.
Solyom et al (1974) - 45% of phobic patients had at least one
relative with the disorder, compared to a rate of 17% of non-phobic controls.
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Family and twin studies - There is a considerable variability between
disorders.
One of the problems with family and twin studies is that they fail to
control for shared environmental experiences.
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Behavioural inhibition - Kagan (1994) - identified an infant
temperamental type that he described as 'behavioural inhibition' - infants
who tend to withdraw from unfamiliar people, objects and situations. He
suggested that this behaviour had a genetic basis.
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Twin studies - There is a closer concordance between MZ twins than DZ
twins, this is because they are genetically identical. This provides support
for a genetic basis for phobic disorders.
Torgersen (1983) - compared MZ and same-sex DZ twin pairs where one
twin had an anxiety disorder with panic attacks. Such disorders were five
times more frequent in MZ twin pairs.
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Behavioural inhibition - Longitudinal studies have followed children
who showed signs of behavioural instability at birth. At primary school age
such children were found to have higher ANS activity and also the largest
number of specific fears. Similar results were found when looking at children
whose parents suffered from panic disorder. Further follow-up studies found
that both these groups of children developed significantly more anxiety
disorders, supporting the hypothesis that behavioural inhibition to
unfamiliar things or situations is genetically based and a risk factor for
anxiety disorders.
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The diathesis-stress model - Even at the highest rates it is clear that
phobic disorders are not solely genetic and have other factors. This
combination can be explained by the diathesis-stress model. This proposes
that genetic factors predispose an individual to develop phobias but life
experiences play an important role in triggering such responses.
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An Evolutionary Approach
Ancient fears - Some stimuli are more likely to be feared than
others, these could be referred to as ancient fears, in that these stimuli
reflected very real fears to our ancestors.
Many other stimuli were also part of our ancestral environment, but
because they posed no significant danger, are rarely feared. For the same
reason, things that are dangers today rarely develop into phobias because
they have not been around enough to have influenced our adaptive selection.
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Clinical phobias - A lot of the research into prepotency and preparedness that we have
looked at is concerned with avoidance responses rather than clinical
disorders.
Studies of patients suffering from disabling disorders do not support
the preparedness explanation.
In addition, research has found that clinical phobias do not display
the suddenness of onset and resistance to treatment predicted by
preparedness.
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Cultural differences - There are significant differences in the kind
of phobias reported by different cultural groups.
Brown et al (1990) - found that phobic disorders were more common
among African American than white American participants even when
socioeconomic factors were controlled. This shows that environmental/social
factors are important in determining aspects of phobias.
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Prepotency - Animals have evolved to respond to potential threats.
Those ancestors who were able to respond appropriately to ancient threats
were more likely to survive and pass on their genes to subsequent
generations.
Preparedness - Seligman (1970) - argued that animals, including
humans, are biologically prepared to rapidly learn an association between
particular (potentially life-threatening) stimuli and fear. Once learned,
this fear is difficult to get rid of.
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Prepotency - Öhman and Soares (1994) - provided supporting evidence
for prepotency effects. 'Masked' pictures were constructed of feared objects
in such a way that the animals in the pictures were not immediately
recognisable. Participants who were fearful of snakes or spiders showed
greater GSR which indicates arousal of the ANS, when briefly shown 'masked'
pictures compared to viewing neutral pictures or compared to normal
participants. This shows that important components of phobic responses are
set in motion before the phobic stimulus is presented in awareness, and these
could be prepotent signs.
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Preparedness - The two important predictions arising from the concept
of preparedness are:
McNally (1987) - concluded that although there was firm evidence for
enhanced resistance to extinction of fear responses conditioned by 'prepared'
stimuli, evidence for rapid acquisition of 'modern' phobias.
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Tuesday, 5 February 2013
Phobic Disorders - Issues of Reliability and Validity
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Reliability refers to the consistency of a measuring instrument.
Reliability can be measured in terms of:
Skyre et al (1991) - assessed inter-rater reliability for diagnosing
social phobia by asking three clinicians to assess 54 patient interviews.
There was high inter-rater agreement showing that the diagnosis of phobia is
reliable.
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Research evidence - Reliability has not always been found to be high.
Kendler et al (1999) - used face-to-face and telephone interviews to
assess individuals with phobias. Over a one month interval, they found a mean
agreement of +.46. Reliability over the long term was even lower at +.30.
Picon et al (2005) - however, found good test-retest reliability
(better than +.80) with a Portuguese version of the SPAI over a 14 day
interval. This indicates that reliability can be good at least in the short
term.
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Reasons for low reliability - Kendler et al (1999) - suggest that the
low reliability found in their study might be due to several factors:
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Test-retest - Whether the test items are consistent. Scales such as
SCID take 1-2 hours to complete. The alternative is to use shorter,
structured, self-administered scales. These are popular for specific phobias.
Hiller et al (1990) - reported satisfactory to excellent diagnostic
agreement in a test-retest study using the MDC.
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Cultural differences in diagnosis - Cultural norms about 'normal
functioning' and 'normal' fears are likely to affect any diagnosis rendering
the diagnosis 'invalid'.
Judgements may also vary with respect to culturally-relative
disorders. A good example of this is provided by taijin-kyofusho (TKS), a
culturally distinctive phobia recognised in Japan. This is a social phobia
where an individual has a fear of embarrassing others in social
situations. An individual with such a
condition would not be diagnosed in this country as having a social phobia,
indicating the effect of cultural experiences on the diagnosis of a disorder.
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Diagnosis by computer - Reliability may be improved through the use
of computerised scales for assessing phobic and other disorders.
Kobak et al (1993) - suggest that increased reliability occurs
because there is less opportunity for the administrator to affect th
responses that are given. In addition people with social phobias may prefer
to answer without the presence of another person because of their fears of
negative evaluation.
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Validity refers to the extent that a diagnosis represents something
that is real and distinct from other disorders and the extent that a
classification system measures what it claims to measure.
Comorbidity - Is an important issue for the validity of diagnosis. It
refers to the extent that two or more conditions co-occur.
Research has found high levels of comorbidity between social phobias,
animal phobias, generalised anxiety disorder and depression. Such comorbidity
suggests that these conditions are not separate entities and therefore the
diagnostic category is not very useful.
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Comorbidity - The findings on comorbidity have been supported in many
other studies.
Eysenck (1997) - reported that up to 66% of patients with one anxiety
disorder are also diagnosed with another anxiety disorder. The implication is
that a diagnosis should simply be 'anxiety disorder' rather than a phobia or
OCD.
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The implications of low reliability and/or validity - In order to
conduct research on the effectiveness of treatments for phobic disorders
researchers require a reliable and valid means of assessing the disorders in
the first place.
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Concurrent validity - Establishes the value of a new measure of
phobic symptoms by correlating it with an existing one.
Herbert et al (1991) - tested concurrent validity of the Social
Phobia Anxiety Inventory by giving the test and various other standard
measures to 23 social phobics. The SPAI correlated well with the other
measures.
Construct validity - Assesses the diagnostic questionnaires and
interviews. This measures the extent that a test for phobic disorders really
does measure a target construct of phobias.
To do this, clinicians identify possible target behaviours that we
would expect in someone with a phobic disorder and see if people who score
high on the test for phobic disorders also exhibit the target behaviour.
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Support for concurrent validity - Mattick and Clarke (1998) - showed
that their Social Phobia Scale (SPS) correlated well with other standard
measures. This indicates that there are methods of diagnosis that agree and
therefore appear to be measuring something real.
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Support for construct validity - The SPAI correlates well with
behavioural measures of social phobia. It also doesn't correlate with
behaviours related to other anxiety disorders.
However, perhaps this is not surprising because the inventory
includes questions about cognitions and behaviours across a range of
fear-producing situations. This means that it is likely to correlate with
behaviours associated with social phobias.
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