Chapter7Notes1 BUTCHERCH07.pptRelationship_Matters_Podcast_553.mp3
Can you please answer each Discussion question approx. 1/2page each approx. 137.5 words Discussion 1 Part 1: Describe at least 4 key differences between men and women described by Helen Fisher. AND Part 2: What are some differences between male and female intimacy? Readings & Activities Fisher Chapter 10: Men and Women Are Like Two Feet: They Need Each Other to Get Ahead Gender Differences in Mind Associated Media: The Nature of Love link= https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UybJzG_dts4 Gender Differences in the Brain by Helen Fisher, Ph.D. (important video!) https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qSGd6Ojuw0Q Discussion 2 Read the material in the links to the left and check out the great videos below. 1. Are there any differences between gay and straight love? Why or why not? What does the evidence suggest regarding the similarities and differences between sexual majority and minority love? AND 2. Given what you have read, why is it so common for many heterosexuals to discuss and understand homosexuality only as same sex behavior, rather than as a complex identity no different than a heterosexual identity, with the drive to love and be loved at its core? NOTE: If you self identify as gay/lesbian/bi, what has been your experience with love? Share only what you are comfortable sharing. Readings & Activities [gaystraight-relationships-different/ link= https://glyswny.wordpress.com/lous-page/gaystraight-relationships-different/ ] [ gay-relationships-can-be-more-stable-straight-ones link= https://www.psychologytoday.com/us/blog/disturbed/201311/gay-relationships-can-be-more-stable-straight-ones ] [ www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/ link= https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3121169/ ] Associated Media: iO Tillett Wright: Fifty shades of gay link = https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VAJ-5J21Rd0 Homosexual Love link = https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=v1kcxSPLOEs Discussion 3 What is the difference between ″normal″ mood variation and clinically significant mood variations? Provide several examples. Readings Chapter 7 Discussion 4 Podcast Relationship Matters Podcast Number 55 “Sexualized, objectified, but not satisfied”: What are three key takeaways from this podcast? What is your experience/reaction?
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Chapter 7
Mood Disorders and
Suicide
Abnormal Psychology
Seventeenth Edition
Jill M. Hooley | James N. Butcher
Matthew K. Nock | Susan Mineka
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Multimedia Directory
• Slide 14 Martha: Major Depressive Disorder (MDD)
• Slide 29
Ann: Bipolar Disorder
• Slide 36
Feliziano: Living with Bipolar Disorder
• Slide 41
Depression
• Slide 43 Research close-up: Brain Stimulation
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Learning Objectives (1 of 3)
1.1 Explain how we define abnormality and classify mental
disorder
s.
1.2 Describe the advantages and disadvantages of
classification.
1.3 Explain how culture affects what is considered
abnormal and describe two different culture-specific
disorders.
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Learning Objectives (2 of 3)
7.5 Describe the causal factors influencing the
development and maintenance of bipolar disorders.
7.6 Explain how cultural factors can influence the
expression of mood disorders.
7.7 Describe and distinguish between different treatments
for mood disorders.
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Learning Objectives (3 of 3)
7.8 Describe the prevalence and clinical picture of suicidal
behaviors.
7.9 Explain the efforts currently used to prevent and treat
suicidal behaviors.
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Mood Disorders: An Overview
Mood disorders
• Defining feature = extremes
of emotion (affect)
• Other symptoms or co-
occurring disorders
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Mood Disorders: An Overview
Two key moods
• Depression
• feelings of extraordinary sadness
and dejection
• Mania
• intense and unrealistic feelings of
excitement and euphoria
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Types of Mood Disorders
Unipolar
depressive
disorders
• Only depressive
episodes
Bipolar depressive
disorders
• Manic and
depressive
episodes
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The Prevalence of Mood Disorders
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Demographic Differences in
the United States
Native Americans have relatively high rates
of depression
African-Americans have relatively low rates
U.S. rates of unipolar depression inversely
related to socioeconomic status
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Figure 7.1 Annual Prevalence of Mood Disorders Around the World
This figure shows the annual (12-month) prevalence of mood disorders using data collected via
household surveys in 17 different countries as part of the WHO World Mental Health Survey Initiative
(Adapted from WHO World Mental Health Survey Consortium, 2004.)
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Unipolar Depressive Disorders
Major
Depressive
Disorder
(MDD)
• A major depressive episode
without having manic, hypomanic,
or mixed episodes
• Relapse and recurrence
• May begin at any point in lifespan,
incidence rises during adolescence
• May include additional symptoms
(specifiers)
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Table 7.1 Specifiers of Major Depressive Episodes
Specifier Characteristic Symptoms
With Melancholic Features
Three of the following: early morning awakening, depression worse in the morning, marked
psychomotor agitation or retardation, loss of appetite or weight, excessive guilt, qualitatively
different depressed mood
With Psychotic Features Delusions or hallucinations (usually mood congruent); feelings of guilt and worthlessness common
With Atypical Features
Mood reactivity—brightens to positive events; two of the four following symptoms: weight gain
or increase in appetite, hypersomnia, leaden paralysis (arms and legs feel as heavy as lead),
being acutely sensitive to interpersonal rejection
With Catatonic Features A range of psychomotor symptoms from motoric immobility to extensive psychomotor activity, as well as mutism and rigidity
With Seasonal Pattern
At least two or more episodes in past 2 years that have occurred at the same time (usually fall
or winter), and full remission at the same time (usually spring). No other nonseasonal episodes
in the same 2-year period
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Martha: Major Depressive Disorder
(MDD)
Click to see video with closed captioning
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Persistent Depressive Disorder
Mild to moderate version of depression
• Persistently depressed mood most of
the day for at least 2 years
• Intermittent normal moods occur
briefly
• Lifetime prevalence of 2.5 to 6%
• Average duration is 4-5 years
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Other Forms of Depression
Bereavement-
triggered depression
Postpartum
depression
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Causal Factors in Unipolar
Mood Disorders
Causal
Factors
Biological
causal factors
Psychological
causal factors
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Biological Causal Factors
Genetic
influences
Altered neuro-
transmitter
activity
Hormone &
immune system
regulation
abnormalities
Neuro-physical
& neuro-
anatomical
influences
Sleep and
biological
rhythms
Sex differences
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Psychological Causal Factors
Stressful life
events
Independent
vs.
dependent
Vulnerability
in response
to stress
Risk-related
vulnerability
factors
Personality
and cognitive
diatheses
Early
adversity
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Psychological Causal Factors
Th
eo
ris
ts Freud
Behaviorists
Cognitive model
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Figure 7.4 Beck’s Cognitive Model of Depression
According to Beck’s cognitive model of depression, certain kinds of early experiences can lead to the
formation of dysfunctional assumptions that leave a person vulnerable to depression later in life if certain
critical incidents (stressors) activate those assumptions. Once activated, these dysfunctional
assumptions trigger automatic thoughts that in turn produce depressive symptoms, which further fuel the
depressive automatic thoughts.
(Adapted from Fennell, 1989.)
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Figure 7.5 Negative Cognitive Triad
Beck’s cognitive model of depression describes a pattern of negative automatic thoughts. These
pessimistic predictions center on three themes: the self, the world, and the future.
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Psychological Causal Factors
Th
eo
rie
s
Reformulated
helplessness theory
Hopelessness theory
Excessive rumination
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Psychological Causal Factors
In
te
rp
er
so
na
l
ef
fe
ct
s
Lack of social support or social skills
Hostility and rejection from others
Marital dissatisfaction
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Bipolar and Related Disorders
Bipolar disorders
• Distinguished from unipolar
disorders by presence of
manic or hypomanic
episodes
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Cyclothymic Disorder
Cyclical mood swings
• Less severe than those of bipolar
disorder
• Symptoms present for at least 2 years
• Lacking severe symptoms and
psychotic features of bipolar disorder
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Bipolar Disorders (I and II)
Bipolar I disorder
• Includes at
least one manic
or mixed
episode
Bipolar II
disorder
• Includes
hypomanic
episodes but
not full-blown
manic or mixed
episodes
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Bipolar Disorders (I and II)
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Ann: Bipolar Disorder
Click to see video with closed captioning
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Figure 7.7 The Manic-Depressive Spectrum
There is a spectrum of bipolarity in moods. All of us have our ups and downs, which are indicated here
as normal mood variation. People with a cyclothymic personality have more marked and regular mood
swings, and people with cyclothymic disorder go through periods when they meet the criteria for
dysthymia (except for the 2-year duration) and other periods when they meet the criteria for hypomania.
People with bipolar II disorder have periods of major depression and periods of hypomania. Unipolar
mania is an extremely rare condition. Finally, people with bipolar I disorder have periods of major
depression and periods of mania.
(Adapted from Frederick K. Goodwin and Kay R. Jamison. (2009). Manic Depressive Illness. Copyright ©
1990. Oxford University Press, Inc.)
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Causal Factors in Bipolar Disorders
Causal
factors
Biological Psychological
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Biological Causal Factors
Heredity
Norepinephrine,
serotonin, and
dopamine
Abnormalities in
transportation of
ions across
neural
membrane
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Biological Causal Factors
Cortisol
levels
Shifting
patterns of
blood flow to
prefrontal
cortex
Disturbances
in biological
rhythms
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Psychological Causal Factors
P
sy
ch
ol
og
ic
al
ca
us
al
fa
ct
or
s
Stressful life events
Personality variables
Low social support
Pessimistic attributional
style
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Sociocultural Factors Affecting Unipolar
and Bipolar Disorders
Symptoms of
mood disorders
• Can differ
widely across
cultures
and
demographic
groups
Prevalence of
mood disorders
• Also differs
across
cultures
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Feliziano: Living with Bipolar Disorder
Click to see video with closed captioning
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Cross-Cultural Differences
in Depressive Symptoms
• Western:
psychological
symptoms
• Non-Western:
physical
symptoms
Form of
depression
varies
across
cultures
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Cross-Cultural Differences in
Prevalence
Rates of depression vary more than rates
of bipolar disorder
Lifetime prevalence of depression is 17-
19% in the U.S., but only 1.5% in Taiwan
Reasons for different rates of depression
are not yet clear
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Treatments and Outcomes
Pharmacotherapy
Alternative
biological
treatments
Psychotherapy
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Pharmacotherapy
Antidepressants, mood-
stabilizing, antipsychotic
drugs used to treat
mood disorders
Lithium common mood
stabilizer for bipolar
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Depression
Click to see video with closed captioning
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Alternative Biological Treatments
Electroconvulsive
therapy
Transcranial magnetic
stimulation
Deep brain stimulation
Bright light therapy
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Research close-up: Brain Stimulation
Click to see video with closed captioning
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Psychotherapy
Forms of effective
psychotherapy
• Cognitive-behavioral
therapy
• Behavioral activation
treatment
• Interpersonal therapy
• Family and marital
therapy
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Suicide: The Clinical Picture and the
Causal Pattern
Suicide risk
significant factor
in all types of
depression
Suicide is the
15th leading
cause of death
in the world
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Figure 7.11 Suicide Around the World
The rate of suicide varies dramatically in different parts of the world, as shown in this figure using data
from the World Health Organization. More people die each year by suicide than by all other forms of
violence combined.
(Adapted from World Health Organization, http://www.who.int/mental_health/suicide-prevention/en.)
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Suicide: The Clinical Picture and the
Causal Pattern
Distinguish
between:
Suicidal
self-injury
Nonsuicidal
self-injury
(NSSI)
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The Clinical Picture and
the Causal Pattern
Who Attempts and Dies by Suicide?
Psychological Disorders
Other Psychosocial Factors Associated with
Suicide
Biological Causal Factors
Theoretical Models of Suicidal Behavior
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Who Attempts and
Dies by Suicide?
Suicide
attempts
and age
Completed
suicides
and age
Gender
differences
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Figure 7.12 Cumulative Prevalence of Suicidal Thoughts and Behaviors During Adolescence
Data from the National Comorbidity Survey–Adolescent Supplement, a nationally representative survey
of over 10,000 U.S. adolescents, show that very few people think about suicide during childhood, but
then the percentage of people who have ever thought about suicide, plan suicide, or make a suicide
attempt increases dramatically during adolescence. These data are from the United States (Nock et al.,
2013), and a very similar pattern is observed in other countries around the world (Nock, Borges, Bromet,
Alonso, et al., 2008).
(Adapted from Nock, M. K., Green, J. G., Hwang, I., McLaughlin, K. A., Sampson, N. A., Zaslavsky, A.
M., & Kessler, R. C. (2013). Prevalence, correlates and treatment of lifetime suicidal behavior among
adolescents: Results from the National Comorbidity Survey Replication–Adolescent Supplement (NCS-
A). JAMA Psychiatry, 70, 300–310.)
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Psychological Disorders
Increase
risk of
suicide
• Posttraumatic stress
disorder
• Bipolar disorder
• Conduct disorder
• Intermittent explosive
disorder
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Other Psychosocial Factors Associated
with Suicide
Psychosocial
factors
Impulsivity
Aggression
Pessimism
Family psychopathology or instability
Hopelessness
Negative affectivity
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Biological Factors
Genetics
Reduced
serotonergic
activity
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Sociocultural Factors
Ethnicity
• Whites have
higher rates
of suicide
than African
Americans
Rates of
suicide
• Vary across
cultures and
religions
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Theoretical Models of Suicidal
Behavior
Diathesis–stress
models
Joiner’s
interpersonal-
psychological
model of suicide
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Figure 7.13 Joiner’s Interpersonal-Psychological Model of Suicide
Joiner proposes that people desire to die by suicide when they perceive that they are a burden to others
and experience a sense of thwarted belongingness. However, they cannot act on this suicidal desire
unless they also have acquired the capacity for suicide. When these three factors come together, Joiner
argues, a person is at high risk for suicide.
(Adapted from Joiner, 2005.)
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Treatment of Mental Disorders
Prevention of
suicide can take
the form of
treatment of the
underlying mental
disorder(s)
Antidepressant
medication or lithium
Benzodiazepines
Cognitive-behavioral
therapy
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Crisis Intervention
Cope with
immediate
crisis
Maintain
supportive
contact
Help show
that distress
is impairing
judgment
Help show
distress in
not endless
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Focus on High-Risk Groups
and Other Measures
Provide treatment aimed
directly at decreasing
suicidal thoughts and
behaviors among those
already experiencing these
outcomes
Use cognitive-behavioral
therapy for suicide
prevention for use with
adolescents who have
attempted suicide
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Unresolved Issues
Is there a right to die?
Not all societies agree that others
should interfere with suicide
Challenging ethical and legal questions
remain
ABNORMAL PSYCHOLOGY,
SIXTEENTH EDITION
James N. Butcher/Jill M.Hooley/Susan Mineka
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Chapter 7
Mood Disorders
and Suicide
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This new mother is experiencing postpartum blues; her mood is very labile and she cries easily.
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A person with major depressive disorder may experience a loss of energy, too much or too little sleep, decreased appetite and weight loss, an increase or slowdown in mental and physical activity, difficulty concentrating, irrational guilt, and recurrent thoughts of death or suicide.
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TABLE 7.1
Specifiers of Major Depressive Episodes
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FIGURE 7.1
Number of Stressful Life Events Versus Probability of Major Depressive Episode. Results demonstrate the association between the number of stressful life events (between ages 21 and 26 years) and probability of a major depressive episode at age 26 as a function of 5-HTT genotype. Life events predicted a diagnosis of major depression among carriers of the s allele (ss or sl), but not among carriers of two l alleles (ll).
Source: Caspi et al., 2003. Influence of life stress on depression: Moderation by a polymorphism in the 5-HTT gene. Science, 301, 386–89. Reprinted with permission from Science, 18 July 2003, Vol. 301. Copyright © 2003 AAAS.
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Functional MRI changes (see Chapter 4) in depressed patients in response to affective stimuli from pre- to posttreatment. These red and yellow images illustrate (in three different views) the increase in left prefrontal activation that occurred in a group of depressed patients following treatment compared to their activation pattern during an acute depressive episode. Thus, the red and yellow images depict the increase in cerebral blood in the left prefrontal area in response to affective stimuli from before and after successful antidepressant treatment. The second scan was obtained 8 weeks following the first scan. Patients were treated with an antidepressant medication during those 8 weeks. (This image courtesy of Richard Davidson.)
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FIGURE 7.2
The key brain regions involved in affect and mood disorders are the (A) orbital prefrontal cortex and ventromedial prefrontal cortex, (B) dorsolateral prefrontal cortex, (C) hippocampus and amygdala, and (D) anterior cingulate cortex.
Source: From R. J. Davidson, Diego Pizzagalli, and Jack Nitschke. (2002). The representation and regulation of emotion in depression. In I. H. Gotlib and C. L. Hammen (Eds.), Handbook of Depression (pp. 219–44). New York: Guilford.
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People who live in higher latitudes (northern climates for those in the northern hemisphere) are more likely to exhibit seasonal affective disorder, in which depression occurs primarily in the fall and winter months and tends to remit in the spring or summer months.
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If a woman living in poverty is already genetically at risk for depression, the stresses associated with living in poverty may be especially likely to precipitate a major depression in her.
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Children who have lost a parent through death or permanent separation may become vulnerable to depression if they receive poor subsequent care from another parent or guardian and if their environment and routine are disrupted.
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FIGURE 7.3
Beck’s Cognitive Model of Depression. According to Beck’s cognitive model of depression, certain kinds of early experiences can lead to the ormation of dysfunctional assumptions that leave a person vulnerable to depression later in life if certain critical incidents (stressors) activate those assumptions. Once activated, these dysfunctional assumptions trigger automatic thoughts that in turn produce depressive symptoms, which further fuel the depressive automatic thoughts. (Adapted from Fennell, 1989.)
Copyright © 2014, 2013, 2010 by Pearson Education, Inc. All rights reserved.
*
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FIGURE 7.4
Negative Cognitive Triad. Beck’s cognitive model of depression describes a pattern of negative automatic thoughts. These pessimistic predictions center on three themes: the self, the world, and the future.
Copyright © 2014, 2013, 2010 by Pearson Education, Inc. All rights reserved.
*
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Woman are more likely than men to ruminate when they are depressed. Men, in contrast, tend to engage in distracting activities when they get into a depressed mood.
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Why are people without social support networks more prone to depression when faced with major stressors?
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FIGURE 7.5
Brain Activation in Response to Maternal Criticism. When healthy (never depressed) participants hear criticism from their own mothers they show significantly greater activation in dorsolateral prefrontal cortex and anterior cingulate cortex than do people who have a history of depression but who are currently fully recovered. Amgygala activation during criticism is significantly greater in formerly depressed participants than it is in controls. (Hooley et al., 2009.)
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TABLE 7.2
Distinguishing between Bipolar I and Bipolar II Disorder
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FIGURE 7.6
The Manic-Depressive Spectrum. There is a spectrum of bipolarity in moods. All of us have our ups and downs, which are indicated here as normal mood variation. People with a cyclothymic personality have more marked and regular mood swings, and people with cyclothymic disorder go through periods when they meet the criteria for dysthymia (except for the 2-year duration) and other periods when they meet the criteria for hypomania. People with bipolar II disorder have periods of major depression and periods of hypomania. Unipolar mania is an extremely rare condition. Finally, people with bipolar I disorder have periods of major depression and periods of mania. (Adapted from Goodwin & Jamison, 2009.)
Source: From Frederick K. Goodwin and Kay R. Jamison. (2009). Manic Depressive Illness. Copyright © 1990. Oxford University Press, Inc. Used by permission of Oxford University Press, Inc.
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Many highly creative people are believed to have had bipolar disorder, going through periods of intense creative productivity during manic phases, and often going through unproductive periods when clinically depressed. One such individual was the British novelist Virginia Woolf (1882–1941). Woolf committed suicide by drowning herself.
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In some cultures the concept of depression as we know it simply does not exist. For example, Australian aborigines who are “depressed” show none of the guilt and self-abnegation commonly seen in more developed countries. They also do not show suicidal tendencies but instead are more likely to vent their hostilities onto others rather than onto themselves.
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FIGURE 7.7
Prevalence Rates for Depression Across Several Nations. USA-NCS, United States according to the National Comorbidity Study; USA-ECA, United States according to the Epidemiological Catchment Area Study.
Source: Tsai, J. L., and Chentsova-Dutton, Y. (2002). “Understanding depression across cultures.” In I. H. Gotlib and C. L. Hammen (Eds.) Handbook of depression (p. 471). Copyright © 2002. The Guilford Press. Reprinted with permission.
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FIGURE 7.8
Rates of Mood Disorders in Writers and Artists. Although it is difficult to determine a reliable diagnosis of influential writers, poets, and artists (many of whom are long ago deceased), a number of psychological historians have compiled figures such as these, which clearly indicate that such individuals are far more likely than the general population to have had a unipolar or bipolar mood disorder. (Adapted from Jamison, K. R., 1993. Touched with Fire. Free Press.)
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FIGURE 7.9
Survival curve illustrating how many months following the end of treatment it took patients from the two groups before they had another episode of depression (recurrence). One group had previously received cognitive therapy (CT) and the other group had received antidepressant medication (ADM).
Source: From Hollon, et al. (2005, April). Prevention of relapse following cognitive therapy vs. medications in moderate to severe depression. Arch. Gen. Psychiat., 62(4), 417–26. © 2005 American Medical Association. Reprinted with permission.
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Ernest Hemingway (left) committed suicide on July 2, 1961. Thirty-five years later to the day, his granddaughter Margaux (right) took her own life as well. The Hemingway family has endured five suicides over four generations—Ernest’s father Clarence, Ernest and his siblings Ursula and Leicester, and granddaughter Margaux.
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Copyright © 2014, 2013, 2010 by Pearson Education, Inc. All rights reserved.
Kurt Cobain, lead vocalist of the rock band Nirvana, died from a self-inflicted gunshot wound on April 8, 1994. He left behind his wife, Courtney Love, and their daughter, Frances, to deal with the emotional burden of his suicide. Forty to sixty percent of those who successfully commit suicide are depressed.
Copyright © 2014, 2013, 2010 by Pearson Education, Inc. All rights reserved.
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Copyright © 2014, 2013, 2010 by Pearson Education, Inc. All rights reserved.
FIGURE 7.10
U.S. Suicide Rates by Age, Gender, and Racial Group Suicide rates are higher in males than in females and higher in whites than in African Americans.
Source: National Institute of Mental Health, October 20, 2002. Data: Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, National Center for Health Statistics.
Copyright © 2014, 2013, 2010 by Pearson Education, Inc. All rights reserved.
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2016
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