Self Esteem Flashcards
Affect
A person’s affect is the expression of emotion or feelings displayed to others through facial expressions, hand gestures, voice tone, and other emotional signs such as laughter or tears.
Antidepressants
Drugs are used to alleviate the symptoms of depression and are also sometimes used to treat other psychological disorders, including anxiety disorders, seasonal affective disorder, and some eating disorders.
Antisocial personality disorder
Also known as psychopathy, sociopathy, dissocial personality disorder, or dyssocial personality disorder, antisocial personality disorder (APD) is a diagnosis applied to persons who routinely behave with little or no regard for the rights, safety, or feelings of others.
Anxiety/ anxiety disorders
A group of mental disturbances characterized by anxiety as a central or core symptom. Although anxiety is a commonplace experience, not everyone who experiences it has an anxiety disorder.
Apathy
Can be defined as an absence or suppression of emotion, feeling, concern or passion. Apathy is an indifference to things generally found to be exciting or moving.
Attention deficit/ hyperactivity disorder
(ADHD) is a chronic developmental disorder characterized by attention problems, including distractibility, hyperactivity, impulsive behaviors, and the inability to remain focused on tasks or activities.
Aggression
any act that is intended to cause pain, suffering, or damage to another person.
Alienation
The state of being emotionally separated from others and from one’s own feelings.
Antisocial behavior
A pattern of behavior that is verbally or physically harmful to other people, animals, or property, including behavior that severely violates social expectations for a particular environment.
Applied psychology
The area of psychology in which basic theory and research are applied to the actual problems faced by individuals on a daily basis.
Autism
A severe psychological disorder that first appears in early childhood and is characterized by impaired social interaction and language development, and other behavioral problems.
Autonomic Nervous System
he nervous system responsible for regulating automatic bodily processes, such as breathing and heart rate. The autonomic system also involves the processes of metabolism, or the storage and expenditure of energy.
Avoidance Learning
An individual’s response to avoid an unpleasant or stressful situation; also known as escape learning.
Behavior Therapy
A goal-oriented, therapeutic approach that treats emotional and behavioral disorders as maladaptive learned responses that can be replaced by healthier ones with appropriate training.
Biofeedback
A technique that allows individuals to monitor their own physiological processes so they can learn to control them.
Bipolar Disorder
A condition (traditionally called manic depression) in which a person alternates between the two emotional extremes of depression and mania (an elated, euphoric mood).
Body Image
The subjective conception of one’s own body, based largely on evaluative judgments about how one is perceived by others.
Central Nervous System
In humans, that portion of the nervous system that lies within the brain and spinal cord; it receives impulses from nerve cells throughout the body, regulates bodily functions, and directs behavior.
Classical Conditioning
The process of closely associating a neutral stimulus with one that evokes a reflexive response so that eventually the neutral stimulus alone will evoke the same response.
Cognitive behavior therapy
A therapeutic approach based on the principle that maladaptive moods and behavior can be changed by replacing distorted or inappropriate ways of thinking with thought patterns that are healthier and more realistic.