Psychopathology - The Cognitive Approach to explaining and treating depression Flashcards
Key definitions
- Depression - a mood disorder where an individual feels sad and or lacks interest in their usual activities; further characteristics include irrational negative thoughts, raised or lowered activity levels and difficulties with concentration, sleep and eating
- Cognitive approach - studies internal mental processes such as attention, perception, memory and decision-making and assumes that the mind actively processes information from our senses and learning comes from internal mental processes
- Negative triad - a cognitive approach to understanding depression, focusing on how negative expectations (schema) about the self, world and future lead to depression
- ABC model - refers to the three components of experience that can be used to judge whether an individuals belief system is distorted; A (Activating event), B (Belief) and ultimately C (consequences)
Emotional characteristics of depression
- Depressive mood
- Anger directed at themselves or others (can lead to self-harming behaviours)
- Feelings of worthlessness
- Lack of interest and pleasure in daily activity
Cognitive characteristics of depression
- Low concentration and difficulty or slowness responding to decisions
- Focus on the negative / negative self-esteem / absolutist thinking
- Recurring thoughts of self-harm from imbalanced neurotransmitters
Behavioural characteristics of depression
- Reduction of energy / constantly feeling fatigued
- Issues with sleeping / disturbed sleep / insomnia
- Changes in appetite (over or under eating)
- Self-harm / low self-hygiene
What is depression? + the cognitive approach to it
Depression is a mood disorder, characterised by low mood and low energy levels.
- The cognitive approach generally explains depression in terms of faulty and irrational thought processes and perceptions - where behaviourist explanations would generally focus on maladaptive behaviours, the cognitive approach generally focuses on maladaptive cognitions that underpin these behaviours
Cognitive approaches to treating depression - Ellis’ ABC Model 1962
- Albert Ellis proposed that the key to mental disorders such as depression lay in irrational thoughts; for Ellis, irrational thoughts that interfere with us being happy and free of pain
To explain depression, he developed the ABC Model: - A = Activating event; Ellis focused on situations in which irrational thoughts are triggered by external events, and we get depressed when we experience negative events and these trigger irrational beliefs. The activating event is therefore the negative event, such as getting fired at work
- B = Belief; you hold a belief about the event or situation, which could be rational (e.g. the company was overstaffed), or irrational (e.g. I was sacked because they didn’t like me) - there are a range of irrational beliefs
- C = Consequence; you have an emotional response to your belief, and rational beliefs lead to healthy emotions (e.g. happiness) whereas irrational beliefs lead to unhealthy emotions (e.g. depression)
The activating event triggers an emotion that is seen as true and the consequence is that the individual becomes depressed because they have a negative view of themselves and no confidence in their ability. Other people who do not tend towards depression may react completely differently, with the difference between depressed and non-depressed people being how they perceive themselves following an event or in general.
ABC Model - types of irrational beliefs
1) Mustabatory thinking - the belief we must always succeed or achieve perfection
2) Utopianism - the belief life is always meant to be fair
3) I-can’t-stand-its - the belief that it is a major disaster when something doesn’t go smoothly
An example of the ABC Model in action:
- A = your teacher tells you that she’s unhappy with your work
- B = you see yourself as a failure (irrational belief)
- C = a feeling of worthlessness (unhealthy emotion)
Beck’s Negative Triad - 1967 (Beck’s Cognitive Theory)
- Beck suggested a cognitive approach to explaining why some people are more vulnerable to depression than others, and it is a person’s cognitions that create this vulnerability i.e. the way they think
Beck suggested three parts to this cognitive vulnerability:
1) Faulty information processing - when depressed, we tend to focus on the negative aspects of a situation and ignore the positives, and we also tend to blow small problems out of proportion and think in ‘black and white’ terms
2) Negative self-schemas - a schema is a package of ideas and information developed through experience, and they act as a mental framework for the interpretation of sensory information; a self-schema is a package of information we have about ourselves, and we use these to interpret the world, so if we have negative self-schema we interpret all information about ourselves in a negative way
3) The negative triad - a person develops a dysfunctional view of themselves because of the three types of negative types of thinking that occur automatically, regardless of the reality of what is happening at the time. These three elements are called the negative triad; when we are depressed, negative thoughts about ourselves, the world and the future often come at us
Beck’s Negative Triad 1967 - elements of the negative triad vulnerability
- Negative view of the self - where individuals see themselves as being helpless, worthless and inadequate e.g. ‘I am just plain and undesirable, what is there to like?’ and these thoughts enhance existing depressive feelings because they confirm the existing emotions or low self-esteem
- Negative view of the world (life experiences) - where obstacles are perceived within one’s environment that cannot be dealt with e.g. ‘I can understand why people don’t like me. They would prefer someone else’s company’ and this creates the impression that there is no hope anywhere
- Negative view of the future - where personal worthlessness is seen as blocking improvements e.g. ‘i am always going to be on my own, there is nothing that will change that’ and these thoughts reduce hopelessness and enhance depression
Practical applications of the ABC Model and the Negative Triad theory to CBT
- Beck – Beck’s theory forms the basis of CBT. All cognitive elements of depression (including the negative triad) can be identified and challenged in CBT. This means that a therapist can challenge them and encourage the patient to test whether they are true.
- Ellis – Ellis’ theory has led to a successful CBT. His idea that by challenging the negative, irrational beliefs a person can reduce their depression is supported by research evidence.
These are strengths of the theories because they translate well into successful therapies and suggest that negative/irrational cognitions play some role in depression.
Evaluation of the cognitive explanations for depression - Strengths and Weaknesses
1) Weakness - Cognitive explanations of depression share the idea that cognitions cause depression, which is linked to the idea of cognitive primacy, suggesting that emotions are influenced by your cognitions. This is certainly the case sometimes, but not always, and other theories of depression see emotions as influencing cognitions.
- This suggests that the theories can give a good understanding of the interaction of cognitions and emotions (holistic) - but are not entirely internally valid as they do not accommodate for extraneous variables, and ignores how although cognitions have a big influence, it is not the only influence in causing depression
- Beck’s criteria is also subjective, and the approach ignores the effect of behaviour and context on depression being caused
1) Strength - Some cases of depression follow activating events. Psychologists call this reactive depression and see it as different from the kind of depression that arises without an obvious cause.
- Therefore, they are a good explanation of different types of depression and they are applicable to understanding different forms and manifestations of depression, allowing better insight into individual types and treating and understanding depression
- Provides detailed explanations of the range of way it is caused, which can help with treatment
Evaluation of the cognitive explanations for depression - Strengths pt 2
2) Practical applications - provides real-world applications for the theories and have been beneficial to helping treat depression
3) A range of evidence supports the idea that depression is associated with faulty information processing, negative self-schemas and the cognitive triad of negative automatic thinking. For example, research has found that women judged to have been high in cognitive vulnerability were more likely to develop post natal-depression. Additionally, a review study concluded that there was solid support for each cognitive vulnerability factor and the cognitions could be seen before depression develops.
- This provides external validity for the theories, which give good support to the theories by evidencing the explanations for depression, particularly Beck’s triad, for how depression develops
Evaluation of the cognitive explanations for depression - Weakness
1) Both explanations cannot explain all symptoms of depression. For instance, some patients are deeply angry, some suffer hallucinations, and very occasionally suffer from Cotard syndrome, the delusion that they are zombies. The explanations cannot easily explain these cases.
- This means that the explanations are not entirely generalisable to all instances of depression and are too deterministic / not applicable to individual cases of depression. They therefore lack some generalisability / applicability
The cognitive approach to treating depression - CBT
- Cognitive behavioural therapy - CBT assists patients to identify irrational thoughts and change them.
- As behaviour is seen as being generated by thinking, the most logical and effective way of changing maladaptive behaviour is to change the irrational thinking underlying it.
Therefore, CBT involves cognitive and behavioural elements:
1) Cognitive – identifying and challenging irrational thoughts
2) Behavioural – once irrational thoughts have been identified, coping strategies are developed (behavioural change)
Key elements of CBT:
- Identifying irrational thoughts.
- Assessment - client and therapist identify the problems and the goals - plan is put in place
- Challenging the irrational thoughts through direct questioning – disputing. This includes using evidence to contradict the client’s irrational thoughts.
- More rational thoughts leading to the effect of feeling better (overcoming depression).
- Behavioural activation - work to change unhelpful thought patterns and put more effective behaviours in place
- Will often set homework
Different types of CBT - Beck’s Cognitive therapy
- This is the application of the cognitive theory - it aims to identify and challenge negative automatic thoughts surrounding the world, future and self (negative triad)
Key elements -
- Direct challenging
- Hypothesis testing / testing the reality of their beliefs -
1) Set homework e.g. record when people are nice to you; when you enjoyed an event; received positive feedback
2) Findings can be used in future sessions to prove the client wrong when they make an irrational statement