Additional Unit 3 Stuff Flashcards
subcortical vs neocortical
subcortical is “hot”, heuristic, automatic. Neocortical is controlled, analytical
species expected vs dependent development
expected has to occur during a specific period in order for normal development (vision), dependent is specific skills that can be learned at any time (driving)
progression of attachment
- asocial (0-6 weeks) don’t really care about anyone
- indiscriminate (6 weeks-6 months) very social with anyone, no separation anxiety
- specific attachment (7-9 months) just to primary caregivers
- multiple attachment (9+ months)
attachment theory
it evolved as an evolutionary adaptation because it is good for children to have a secure base so they can explore their environment
4 types of child attachment
- securely attached
- anxious/avoidant AKA insecure/avoidant (aloof, don’t care)
- anxious resistant AKA insecure/ambivalent (doesn’t explore, upset, not soothed and resists contact when mom comes back)
- disorganized (confused approach, sometimes approaches and sometimes doesn’t, often occurs in abused children)
4 types of adult attachment
- secure: comfortable depending on others
- fearful-avoidant: difficult to trust others, nervous when anyone gets too close
- dismissive-avoidant: comfortable without close emotional relationships, likes to feel independent
- anxious-preoccupied: worries that partner doesn’t love them, would like to merge completely with a person
how do the child styles of attachment line up to the adult styles
secure as kids–> secure as adults
anxious resistant–> anxious/preoccupied
anxious avoidant–> either dismissive avoidant or fearful avoidant
problem of circular reasoning in personality traits
the traits and the behavior are circular, traits don’t really tell us anything new
dopamine hypothesis
schizophrenia is caused by too much dopamine. antipsychotic medications BLOCK dopamine receptors and help with positive symptoms
glutamate hypothesis
reduced function of glutamate receptors are the true cause. of schizophrenia.
challenges in studying therapy
ethics, probably low external validity, can’t be double blind, hard to measure DV’s, hard to measure long-term effects
best treatments for certain disorders (panic, depression, specific phobias, agoraphobia, and anxiety)
panic/depression: cognitive behavioral
phobias: systematic desensitization
agoraphobia: flooding plus medication
anxiety: transcendental meditation
when does most personality change occur
early adulthood (ages 20-40)
what causes most personality changes
significant life events
why are personality disorders so difficult to treat
they are difficult to engage in therapy because they believe their problems are caused by their environments, not their actions