Week 2 Flashcards

1
Q

Cloninger described two types of alcoholics. What are those types?

A

Type 1 was characterized by a relatively late onset, loss of control over drinking, experiencing guilt because of one’s drinking, and high scores on the personality trait of harm avoidance (a trait associated with anxiety and pessimism). Type 2, on the other hand, was characterized by an early age of onset, displaying antisocial tendencies and behaviors, and high scores on novelty seeking (a trait related to impulsivity).

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2
Q

Castellanos-Ryan and Conrod describe two domains in which personality can have an influence on addiction. What are those two domains?

A

The inhibited and disinhibited domain

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3
Q

Within the inhibited domain, the personality dimensions that have been most consistently associated with addictive behaviors are…

A

(1) negative emotionality, introversion, or hopelessness; and (2) neuroticism, trait anxiety, and anxiety sensitivity.

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4
Q

Within the disinhibited personality domain, the two dimensions that have been most consistently implicated are…

A

(1) impulsivity, sometimes generally referred to as disinhibition; and (2) extraversion, including sociability and sensation seeking.

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5
Q

The available evidence suggests at least four different developmental or causal pathways to addiction, in which the different personality factors play an important etiological role. Which pathway follows ‘‘hopelessness’’?

A

the negative affect regulation pathway (late onset)

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6
Q

Which developmental pathway follows ‘‘anxiety sensitivity’’?

A

the stress-dampening pathway (late onset)

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7
Q

Which developmental pathway follows ‘‘impulsivity’’?

A

the poor behavioral inhibition and/or deviance proneness pathway (early onset/continued use)

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8
Q

Which developmental pathway follows ‘‘sensation seeking’’?

A

the reward sensitivity pathway (early onset/experimental use)

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9
Q

Meeus et al. looked for evidence of the Dual Systems Model and the Maturational Imbalance Model. What were their conclusions?

A

The data didn’t fit either of the models. The Sensation seeking to balanced sensation seeking group always scored higher on sensation seeking than impulse control, and they showed more risky behaviors than the other groups.

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10
Q

Kreek et al. stated the following: ‘‘We suggest that impulsivity and risk taking contribute most to … and …. We expect that these personality factors contribute less to … after substantial changes to the brain, effected by chronic exposure to the drug of abuse.’’

A

the initiation of drug use, the progression to regular drug use, addiction and relapse

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11
Q

What does the law of effect state?

A

(Risky) behavior will be repeated when the consequence is beneficial.

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12
Q

What is a ‘‘positive punishment’’?

A

Adding something ‘‘bad’’

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13
Q

What is a ‘‘negative reward’’?

A

Removing something ‘‘good’’

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14
Q

What types of individual vulnerability are suggested in the third lecture?

A
  1. Genetic vulnerability
  2. Personality as vulnerability
  3. Psychosocial and psychiatric disorders as vulnerability
  4. Negative life events as vulnerability
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15
Q

Addiction if often multiconditional: what does this mean?

A

That addiction is often caused by a combination of vulnerabilities

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16
Q

The environment can trigger a genotype. Which model describes this process?

A

The diathesis-stress model

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17
Q

Considering smoking, which is influenced more by genes than by the environment? Initiation, amount of cigarettes, nicotine-dependence.

A

Nicotine-dependence (75%-25%).

18
Q

Research on identity shows: age 11 … is more alcohol use at age 16, largest effect for adolescents who are high in ….

A

poor control, reward sensitivity

19
Q

Which disorders can be seen as a vulnerability for addiction?

A

Psycosocial and psychiatric disorders as vulnerability contains externalising problems (ADHD, antisocial behavior disorder (b.v. conduct disorder)) and internalising problems (mood disorder (bv. depression > coping), anxiety and panic disorder (bv. Social anxiety > withdrawn), posttraumatic stress syndroom (PTSS)).

20
Q

While many addictions have gotten less prevalent, gaming addiction has increased. Problems with … as well as … are a risk factor for increase in Internet Gaming Disorder symptoms among young adolescents.

A

attention, social vulnerability

21
Q

What has been suggested concerning negative life events as vulnerability for addiction?

A

Contains self medication hypothesis, diathesis-stress model/differential susceptibility, and changes in the brain.

22
Q

Considering selection in peer groups, what do we mean with selection?

A

Selection refers to the process where adolescents cluster with peers based on pre-existing similarities in behaviors, attitudes, or values.

23
Q

What do we mean with peer influence?

A

influence occurs when adolescents adjust their behaviors, attitudes, or values to those of their peers.

24
Q

Why is peer contagion different from peer influence?

A

Peer contagion however should not be equated with peer influence. It rather is a specific form of influence involving four essential elements: (1) a one-way transmission of an attribute, from persons who have it to persons who do not, (2) persons do not lose the attribute, (3) nor receive anything from others in return, and (4) there is no transmission of the absence of the attribute.

25
Q

Experimental studies suggests that both … and … play a role in the formation of friendships. Similarity in social networks also may occur as a function of an unwanted, more passive process: ….

A

preference for similarity, repulsion from dissimilarity, default selection

26
Q

Experiments have indicated that adolescents are more likely to be influenced by their peers … than …

A

passively (imitation, and conformity to popularity norms), actively (peer pressure)

27
Q

These peer norms can be … norms, referring to the typical behavior in a group, … norms, referring to the approval of behavior in a group, and … norms, referring to the extent to which certain behaviors are associated with popularity in a group.

A

descriptive, injunctive, popularity

28
Q

Prinstein and Giletta suggest five ways of improving research on peer influence. What are these?

A

(1) extending the examination of peer influence to multiple potential sources of socialization, beyond close friends; (2) examining peer influence effects over shorter time frames, and in real time; (3) testing indirect forms of peer influence; (4) extending the conceptualization and measurement of peer influence susceptibility; (5) examining positive and adaptive forms of peer influence.

29
Q

In the fourth lecture three common assumptions are discussed. What are they, and have they been proven?

A
  • Similarity in risk behavior is due to peer influence (bad friends, bad influence) = TRUE
  • Peer influence is often taking place because peers pressure each other to act in a certain way = FALSE
  • Peer influence is one of the most important predictors of adolescent behavior = UNKNOWN
30
Q

Which four theories about (peer) influence have been discussed?

A
  1. Evolutionary theories (humans are preprogrammed and it was positive during evolution, similar behavior was important)
  2. Drastic neurological changes in social brain in adolescence: importance of status and affection
  3. Socio-structural changes make ‘’fitting in’’ adaptive because it enhances compatibility (influence-compatibility model)
  4. Theory specific for risk behavior: the ‘maturity gap’, the dual taxonomy model. (Two types: life-course persistent antisocial role models and adolescent-limited).
31
Q

What is peer pressure?

A

Peer pressure = “the explicit verbal encouragement/offering of a substance (e.g., alcohol), accompanied by coercion, teasing, or insulting if the person does not accept the offer”

32
Q

What are the different types of peer influence discussed in the fourth lecture?

A

Peer pressure, Imitation, Norms, Mutual reinforcement.

33
Q

What is imitation?

A

Imitation: “observing and imitating the behavior of others” conscious; because of anticipated reward or sanction, or unconscious.

34
Q

What is Tajfel’s social identity theory?

A

Social identity theory (Tajfel & Turner, 1986): Group belonging and sense of self, modelling behavior of the group indirectly contributes to a favorable self-identity, via acceptance (=intrinsic rewards).

35
Q

Influence of friends on adolescent’ risk attitudes was strongest in classrooms where risk attitudes were (strongly) associated with …. Popular peers set the norm for friendship selection and influence related to aggression.

A

popularity

36
Q

Influence is most likely to be bi-directional. What does this mean?

A

People are not passive ’reactors’ to their environment.

37
Q

Teens that are engaging in … show more deviant behavior later.

A

deviancy training

38
Q

What is the susceptibility hypothesis?

A

Maybe individuals differ in peer influence susceptibility as a construct in its own right?

39
Q

Which individual characteristics are suggested in lecture 4 to make youngsters more susceptible to peer pressure?

A

Personality (low in conscientiousness) and possibly low self-control.

40
Q

Which parent characteristics are suggested in lecture 4 to make youngsters more susceptible to peer pressure?

A

overprotective parenting, coercive interaction style

41
Q

Which contextual factors are suggested in lecture 4 to make youngsters more susceptible to peer pressure?

A

unstructured settings (–Presence of peers,
Absence of adults, Unstructured activities)

42
Q

Which interventions are suggested in lecture 4?

A

American Stop Smoking Intervention Study (ASSIST), Identify peers who are influential, Appoint influential peers as peer supporters, Train peers, supply them with information about smoking-related risks and how to help others quit.