Classification Part 2 Flashcards

1
Q

reliability

A
  • consistency of measurement
    • inter-rater: degree to which 2 independent observers agree
    • test-retest: whether the same person re-taking the same test score similarly
    • alternate-form: whether one person’s scores on 2 forms of the same test are consistent
    • internal consistency: whether items on a test are related to another
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2
Q

validity

A
  • extent to which a measure fills its intended purpose (accuracy) -> unreliable measures don’t have good validity
    • content validity: whether a measure accurately samples domain of interest (ie. does anxiety questionnaire cover all aspects of anxiety?)
    • criterion validity: whether a measure is associated in an expected way with some other measure (the criterion) (ie. are scores on an anxiety test associated with anxiety?)
    • construct validity: whether scores on an assessment relate to other variables/behaviours (ie. do people score high on an anxiety test because they truly have high anxiety?) -> most important for diagnosis
    • Case validity: extent to which the formulation of a case encompasses influences that contribute to distress/dysfunction for a particular individual
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3
Q

Psychological assessment techniques

A
  • clinical interviews: conversation between client and psychologist to determine diagnosis, history, cause of problems, and treatment options
  • structured interviews: interviewer uses a set of questions (ex. SCID -> branching interview)
  • Evidence-based assessment: selecting assessment measures based on reliability/validity
  • psychological tests: standardized tests using test norms to score people (ie. Personality inventories like MMPI, Projective tests like Rorschach or Thematic Apperception, Intelligence tests like Wechsler and Stanford-Binet – but doesn’t always apply to certain groups ie. Inuit)
  • cognition tests (self-report questionnaires focusing on a single cognitive characteristic, like fear of negative evaluation)
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4
Q

Cognitive Behavioural Case Formulation

A
  • CB Case Formulation (individualized theory about cases of particular people -> problem list, diagnosis, working hypothesis, strengths and assets, and treatment plan)
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5
Q

Types of Biological Assessment

A

Brain Imaging (ex. CT, MRI, fMRI, PET)

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6
Q

neuropsychological assessment

A
  • based on idea that different psychological functions exist in different areas of brain
  • ex. Halstead-Reitan Battery (Tactile Performance Tests, Category Test, Speech Sounds Perception Test), Luria-Nebraska battery
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7
Q

neurologist vs. neuropsychologist

A
  • neurologist: physician specializing in medical diseases that affect the nervous system
  • neuropsychologist: studies how dyfunctions of brain affect ways we think, feel, and behave
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8
Q

Goals of neuropsychological assessment

A
  • measuring brain function
  • identifying profile associated with syndrome
  • establish location
  • determine whether deficits are present
  • describe neuropsychological strengths/weaknesses
  • assess patient’s feelings about syndrome
  • provide treatment recommendations
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9
Q

Psychophysiological Assessment

A
  • concerned with bodily changes that accompany psychological events; not sensitive enough to be used for diagnosis
  • ex. electrocardiogram (heart rate), electrodermal responding (skin conductance/sweat), EEG (brain activity)
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10
Q

5 constituencies of the DSM-5

A
  • research
  • clinical practice
  • pharmaceutical industry
  • legal system
  • general public
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11
Q

history of classification

A
  • early on, very inconsistent
  • WHO and APA then published lists of mental disorders (ICD and DSM, respectively)
  • revisions of both ICD and DSM, including use of multiaxial classification (each individual rated on 5 separate dimensions/axes) and more cultural sensitivity (Cultural Formulation Outline/Interview); some revisions controversial (too hypothetical, driven by financial gain, doesn’t include all disorders -> ex. internet addiction disorder, etc.)
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12
Q

5 axes of DSM

A
  • all categories except personality disorders and mental retardation
  • personality disorders and mental retardation
  • general medical conditions
  • psychosocial and environmental problems
  • current level of functioning
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13
Q

2 components of reliability when it comes to classification

A
  • sensitivity: agreement regarding the presence of a diagnosis
  • specificity: agreement concerning the absence of a diagnosis
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14
Q

DSM Diagnostic Categories

A
  • Neurodevelopmental
  • Psychotic
  • Bipolar
  • Depressive
  • Anxiety
  • OCD
  • Trauma/stressor-related
  • dissociative
  • somatic
  • feeding/eating
  • elimination
  • sleep-wake
  • sexual dysfunctions
  • disruptive, impulse control, conduct
  • substance
  • neurocognitive
  • personality
  • paraphiliac
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15
Q

DSM-5 V Codes

A

conditions or significant factors that are not disorders but can have strong influence on treatment

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16
Q

New additions to DSM-5

A
  • new disorders
  • new criteria for disorders
  • new categories combining previous ones
  • new conceptualizations of disorders
  • new names for disorders
  • new dimensional ratings for disorders
  • new emphasis on suicidality
  • new format
17
Q

Controversial changes to DSM

A
  • adding ASD as overarching category
  • Creating disruptive mood dysregulation disorder
  • excluding bereavement for criteria for depression
  • personality disorders are now categories, not dimensions
  • some disorders were omitted