Psychopathology - Phobias Flashcards
What are the behavioural characteristics of phobias?
Avoidance when faced with the object or situation their response is to avoid the object, this can interfere with the persons normal daily life, such as social/occupational activities. People might avoid places where they might see the phobic object.
endurance: freeze/faint when a person is stressed, the bodily response is fight or flight. When faced with the object, the person might freeze or faint instead.
Disruption of functioning: anxiety and avoidance created by the phobia might be so extreme, that it interferes with the persons ability to function socially, or at work
Panic: the person with the phobia might panic in the presence of the stimulus they may show behavioural characteristics, such as crying, screaming, vomiting, running away
What are the cognitive characteristics of phobias?
irrational: the person will think in an irrational man about the phobia, and they will resist rational arguments that counter it
Insight: the person will know that they fear is excessive or unreasonable, but they still find it difficult not to fear the object
Cognitive distortion: the person will have a distorted perception of the stimulus. For example, they might view snakes as alien and aggressive.
Selective attention: when the person in count as a phobic stimulus, they cannot look away, and they will ignore everything around them, and just focus on the phobic situation
Define phobia
Phobia is a mental disorder, characterised by high levels of anxiety in response to a stimulus. It is an irrational fear. They may avoid the phobic object, or any situations where the phobic object is likely to be.
Define the behavioural approach to explaining phobias (classical and operant conditioning and the two process model)
The behavioural model suggests that all behaviour, including phobias can be learnt and people who have an abnormality can learn negative behaviours
What are the two steps in the two process model?
The first step is that the phobia is learnt via classical conditioning or social learning
The second step is that the phobia is maintained by operant conditioning
Describe the process of classical conditioning (little albert)
This method of learning involves building up an association between two different stimuli is that learning takes place
- First, a neutral stimulus with no interaction is presented to a person in this case, a white rat
- Then an unconditioned stimulus is presented, which makes a person have an emotional response. A loud banging noise which make someone cry.
- Then we repeatedly pair the two stimuli it together many times until classical conditioning and learning takes place. This is repeated six times in Little Albert.
- We can then present the unconditioned stimulus which would be the white rat alone, and a person will have an emotional response which would be the conditioned response. learning has taken place via classical conditioning and an association has been established
What was the study done on classical conditioning?
The study was “Little Albert” (1920) by Watson and Rayner
- They used an 11-month-old child
Define generalisation
In classical conditioning, the tendency to transfer response from one stimulus to another that is quite similar
Define recondition
To eliminate the conditioned response
Evaluate classical conditioning
The study was only conducted once and cannot be repeated nowadays due to ethical concerns. Therefore the findings are not very reliable as they have not been repeated. Therefore it could be questioned whether the same results could be reproduced
King (1998) supports. The idea is proposed by classical conditioning from review in case studies. He has found that children acquire phobias by encountering traumatic experiences, e.g. getting bitten by a dog.
A disadvantage of classical conditioning is that some people do have traumatic experiences, but then do not go on to develop phobias, so classical conditioning does not explain how all phobias develop
The psychologist Menzies criticises the behavioural model because he studied people that had hydrophobia and only 2% of his sample had encountered a negative experience with water, therefore 98% had never had a negative experience involving water, meaning they had not learnt to become frightened of it by classical conditioning
Define the social learning theory
This is based on observational learning where young children might observe a reaction from parents or family and copy these reactions.
The psychologist Minneka found that when one monkey in a cage showed a fear response to snakes the other monkeys, copying this behaviour. This example can be applied to humans.
Define operant conditioning
This method involves learning a new response that can result in reinforcement
- negative reinforcement would be when if the person is scared of snakes, they will avoid snakes to reduce the risk that they will feel fair
- Positive reinforcement would be by avoiding snakes are not feeling fear they feel rewarded. Therefore avoidance continues.
Evaluate the two process model
One limitation is it ignores other factors that could cause phobias, for example, biological or evolutionary factors, such as being predisposed genetically to develop a phobia
One strength of this theory is that it can be successful when explaining how it phobia can occur in animals and young children. However, social learning is therefore not very strong and explaining how adults can learn to have these phobias. The behavioural model is limited to young children and animals.
One strength of this theory is that Bandura supports the idea of social learning theory because a piece of research was conducted where if one person acted as if they were in pain when I was a sounded and participants watch this reaction the participants would then show the same response when given a chance to hear the sound of the buzzer (they would act as if they were in pain)
Another advantage would be the fact that it involves to clear steps that highlight how phobias are learned and then maintained. They are learned by powerful classical conditioning or social learning and then I’ll maintained by operant conditioning. This is very accurate.
What is the behavioural approach to explaining phobias?
Classical and operant conditioning and the two process model
What is the behavioural approach to treating phobias?
Systematic, desensitisation and flooding