Research methods in Psychopathology Flashcards
Cross-sectional designs
Collect data from many different individuals at a single point in time. Check correlations. Observe variables without influencing them. Can make NO causal claims.
Longitudinal designs overcome is better than cross-sectional designs in which aspect?
Can try to establish temporal precedents. What comes first?
Types of Longitudinal Designs (3)
(1) Retrospective
(2) Follow-Up Studies
(3) High Risk Studies
Retrospective design
Type of Longitudinal Design. Collect a sample of people with a disorder. Try to determine what preceded it.
=> Self report + Existing data (school records, biological…)
Cons of retrospective design (2)
(1) Problem of recall
(2) Lack of control over the data that you get. Not everyone has these records.
Follow-Up Studies def
Type of Longitudinal Design. Follow people with the disorder over time. See what happens to them. Already-ill sample. Understand the natural course of the disorder.
=> Can’t derive etiological explanations but helpful for understanding whether the “ill” correlations persists outside the illness state.
High Risk Studies
Type of Longitudinal Design. Variant of follow-up. Identify people who arelikelyto develop a disorder.
Rly hard to do. Offspring of people with a disorder (genetic) - Follow them over time.
Cons of High-risk studies (3)
(1) Genetic: Need to find people who have the disorder + have children. Hard.
(2) Biological: Associations not well-proven. We don’t have a lot of biological abnormalities that we know are associated strongly w the dev of psychopathology.
(3) Behaviors: May be a risk factor OR early manifestation of the disease
What are the characteristics of a Vulnerability Marker? (3)
(1) Should be trait-like, not state-related. If something ONLY appears when pple are ill, it’s a (passive) correlate/ symptom of the illness.
(2) Ideally, marker should PRECEDE illness, be there DURING illness and be there AFTER illness. => Has to be correlated with the disorder, but has to persist beyond the end of the episode. Could be a scar.
(3) Has to be present in a high-risk population.
Episode markers
Are ONLY present in episode.
Case Control design
Compare one group WITH thedisorder to a second groupWITHOUTthe disorder.
=> Tends to be most useful if the disorder is RARE. e.g. schizophrenia.
Cohort design
A single large sample of people, some of whom have the disorder. You’re not trying to get as many pple as possible.
=> Preferable is disorder is not that rare. E.g. MDD
=> Allows you to compare it to pple with anxiety, cocaine use disorder or pple who don’t have any disorder at all.
Patient populations are ___ representative of people with the disorder in the community. Why? (4)
NOT.
(1) Typically more severe bc treatment-seeking populations.
(2) Higher SES
(3) More likely to be girls
(4) Missing huge portion of pple who have the disorder
(5) Tend to have more comorbidities + chronic.
Proband
Someone who HAS the disorder.
In what ways (other than directly having the disease) we can see that a disorder runs in a family?
(1) Subthreshold/ symptoms: Even if i’m not depressive I may be MORE PRONE to depressive symptoms than the general population.
(2) Coaggregation: Disorders don’t run in families in a very specific ways. E.g. if you’re the proband with depression, depression run in family BUT ALSO higher rates of anxiety disorders than the general population.