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What Is Normal and Abnormal?

What Is Normal and Abnormal?. A man kissing another man. A woman slapping a child. A man driving a nail through his hand. A man barking like a dog. A woman refusing to eat for several days. Standards For What Is Normal and Abnormal. Cultural relativism Unusualness of behavior

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What Is Normal and Abnormal?

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  1. What Is Normal and Abnormal? A man kissing another man A woman slapping a child A man driving a nail through his hand A man barking like a dog A woman refusing to eat for several days

  2. Standards For What Is Normal and Abnormal • Cultural relativism • Unusualness of behavior • Discomfort of the person exhibiting the behavior • Mental illness

  3. Standard 1: Cultural Relativism • No universal standards or rules for labeling a behavior as abnormal. • Instead, behaviors can only be abnormal relative to cultural norms. Example: In many cultures, family members sleep together in one room, often in the same bed. In the U.S., it is considered normal for a baby to sleep in her own bed in her own room.

  4. Gender Role Expectations • How are men expected to act? What types of behaviors are discouraged? • How are women encouraged to act? What types of behaviors are discouraged?

  5. Standard 2: Unusualness • Is the behavior rare? • (Depends in part on the norms for that behavior in a culture.)

  6. Standard 3: Discomfort • Proponents of this view argue that a behavior is only abnormal if the individual suffers as a result of the behavior(s) and wishes to be rid of them. • Some therapists object to the subjective discomfort criterion because people are not always aware of problems that their behavior may create for themselves or others.

  7. Standard 4: Mental Illness • Is the behavior caused by an identifiable disease? • There is no medical test that identifies this process if it does exist.

  8. Maladaptiveness • Does the behavior prevent normal daily functioning? • Does the person suffer distress? • Is there emotional or physical harm?

  9. Historical Perspectives • Biological theories • Similar to physical disease, breakdown of some systems of the body. • Supernatural theories • Divine intervention, curses, demonic possession, and personal sin. • Psychological theories • Mental disorders as the result of trauma(s).

  10. Ancient Theories • Stone age • Spirit possession • Trephination • Ancient China • Yin and Yang Emotions controlled by internal organs

  11. Ancient Theories, continued • Ancient Egypt, Greece and Rome • Dominated by natural theories • Hysteria • Medieval views • Witchcraft • Psychic epidemics

  12. The Growth of Asylums During the Renaissance • As early as the twelfth century hospitals began to include special rooms for people with mental disorders. • Treatment was often inhumane. • Example:Bedlam • Asylums were established and run by people who thought mental disorders were medical illnesses. • Example:Benjamin Rush • b

  13. Moral Treatment Of the 18th Century • Movement toward a more humane treatment of the mentally ill • Psychological view People become mad because they are separated from nature and succumb to the stresses imposed by the rapid social changes of the period.

  14. Modern Perspectives • New classification systems • Discovery of the cause of general paresis

  15. Modern Perspectives, continued • Psychoanalytic perspective • Roots of behaviorism • Cognitive revolution

  16. Patient’s Rights Movement • Mental patients could recover more fully or live more satisfying lives if they were integrated into the community, with the support of community-based treatment facilities.

  17. Professions Within Abnormal Psychology Psychiatrists Clinical psychologists Clinical social workers Psychiatric nurses

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