Chapter 13. Defining Psychological Disorders

13. Defining Psychological Disorders

When Minor Body Imperfections Lead to Suicide

“I think we probably noticed in his early teens that he became very conscious about aspects of his

appearance…he began to brood over it quite a lot,” said Maria, as she called in to the talk radio program to

describe her son Robert.

Maria described how Robert had begun to worry about his weight. A friend had commented that he had a

“fat” stomach, and Robert began to cut down on eating. Then he began to worry that he wasn’t growing

enough and devised an elaborate series of stretching techniques to help him get taller.

Robert scrutinized his face and body in the mirror for hours, finding a variety of imagined defects. He

believed that his nose was crooked, and he was particularly concerned about a lump that he saw on it: “A

small lump,” said his mother. “I should say it wasn’t very significant, but it was significant to him.”

Robert insisted that all his misery stemmed from this lump on his nose, that everybody noticed it. In his

sophomore year of high school, he had cosmetic surgery to remove it.

Around this time, Robert had his first panic attack and began to worry that everybody could notice him

sweating and blushing in public. He asked his parents for a $10,000 loan, which he said was for overseas

study. He used the money for a procedure designed to reduce sweating and blushing. Then, dissatisfied with

the results, he had the procedure reversed.

Robert was diagnosed with body dysmorphic disorder. His mother told the radio host, “At the time we were

really happy because we thought that finally we actually knew what we were trying to fight and to be quite

honest, I must admit I thought well it sounds pretty trivial.…things seemed to go quite well and he got a

new girlfriend and he was getting excellent marks in his clinical work in hospital and he promised us that he

wasn’t going to have any more surgery.”

However, a lighthearted comment from a friend about a noticeable vein in his forehead prompted a relapse.

Robert had surgery to tie off the vein. When that didn’t solve all his problems as he had hoped, he attempted

to have the procedure reversed but learned that it would require complicated microsurgery. He then used

injections on himself to try opening the vein again, but he could never completely reverse the first surgery.

Robert committed suicide shortly afterward, in 2001 (Mitchell, 2002).

References

Mitchell, N. (Producer). (2002, April 28). Body dysmorphic disorder and cosmetic “surgery of the psyche.” All in

the mind. ABC Radio National. Retrieved from http://www.abc.net.au/rn/allinthemind/stories/2003/746058.htm

528

13.1 Psychological Disorder: What Makes a Behaviour Abnormal?

Learning Objectives

1. Define “psychological disorder” and summarize the general causes of disorder.

2. Explain why it is so difficult to define disorder, and how the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual

of Mental Disorders (DSM) is used to make diagnoses.

3. Describe the stigma of psychological disorders and their impact on those who suffer from them.

The focus of this chapter and the next is, to many people, the heart of psychology. This emphasis on abnormal

psychology — the application of psychological science to understanding and treating mental disorders — is

appropriate, as more psychologists are involved in the diagnosis and treatment of psychological disorder than in

any other endeavour, and these are probably the most important tasks psychologists face. In 2012, approximately

2.8 million people, or 10.1% of Canadians aged 15 and older, reported symptoms consistent with at least one of six

mental or substance use disorders in the past 12 months (Pearson, Janz, & Ali, 2013). At least a half billion people

are affected worldwide. The six disorders measured by the Canadian Mental Health Survey were major depressive

episode, bipolar disorder, generalized anxiety disorder, and abuse of or dependence on alcohol, cannabis, or other

drugs. The impact of mental illness is particularly strong on people who are poorer, of lower socioeconomic class,

and from disadvantaged ethnic groups.

People with psychological disorders are also stigmatized by the people around them, resulting in shame and

embarrassment, as well as prejudice and discrimination against them. Thus the understanding and treatment of

psychological disorder has broad implications for the everyday life of many people. Table 13.1, “Prevalence Rates

for Psychological Disorders in Canada, 2012,” shows the prevalence, the frequency of occurrence of a given

condition in a population at a given time, of some of the major psychological disorders in Canada.

Table 13.1. Prevalence Rates for Psychological Disorders in Canada, 2012, adapted by J. Walinga

from Statistics Canada 2013. [Long Description]

In this chapter our focus is on the disorders themselves. We will review the major psychological disorders and

consider their causes and their impact on the people who suffer from them. Then in Chapter 14, “Treating

Psychological Disorders,” we will turn to consider the treatment of these disorders through psychotherapy and drug

therapy.

529

Defining Disorder

A psychological disorder is an ongoing dysfunctional pattern of thought, emotion, and behaviour that causes

significant distress, and that is considered deviant in that person’s culture or society (Butcher, Mineka, & Hooley,

2007). Psychological disorders have much in common with other medical disorders. They are out of the patient’s

control, they may in some cases be treated by drugs, and their treatment is often covered by medical insurance.

Like medical problems, psychological disorders have both biological (nature) as well as environmental (nurture)

influences. These causal influences are reflected in the bio-psycho-social model of illness (Engel, 1977).

The bio-psycho-social model of illness is a way of understanding disorder that assumes that disorder is caused

by biological, psychological, and social factors (Figure 13.1, “The Bio-Psycho-Social Model”). The biological

component of the bio-psycho-social model refers to the influences on disorder that come from the functioning of

the individual’s body. Particularly important are genetic characteristics that make some people more vulnerable

to a disorder than others and the influence of neurotransmitters. The psychological component of the bio-psychosocial

model refers to the influences that come from the individual, such as patterns of negative thinking and stress

responses. The social component of the bio-psycho-social model refers to the influences on disorder due to social

and cultural factors such as socioeconomic status, homelessness, abuse, and discrimination.

Figure 13.1 The Bio-Psycho-Social Model. The bio-psycho-social model of disorder proposes that

disorders are caused by biological, psychological, and social-cultural factors.

To consider one example, the psychological disorder of schizophrenia has a biological cause because it is known

that there are patterns of genes that make a person vulnerable to the disorder (Gejman, Sanders, & Duan, 2010). But

whether or not the person with a biological vulnerability experiences the disorder depends in large part on

psychological factors such as how the individual responds to the stress he or she experiences, as well as social

factors such as whether or not the person is exposed to stressful environments in adolescence and whether or not

the person has support from people who care about him or her (Sawa & Snyder, 2002; Walker, Kestler, Bollini, &

Hochman, 2004). Similarly, mood and anxiety disorders are caused in part by genetic factors such as hormones and

neurotransmitters, in part by the individual’s particular thought patterns, and in part by the ways that other people in

the social environment treat the person with the disorder. We will use the bio-psycho-social model as a framework

for considering the causes and treatments of disorder.

13.1 PSYCHOLOGICAL DISORDER: WHAT MAKES A BEHAVIOUR ABNORMAL? • 530

Although they share many characteristics with them, psychological disorders are nevertheless different from

medical conditions in important ways. For one, diagnosis of psychological disorders can be more difficult. Although

a medical doctor can see cancer in the lungs using an MRI scan or see blocked arteries in the heart using cardiac

catheterization, there is no corresponding test for psychological disorder. Current research is beginning to provide

more evidence about the role of brain structures in psychological disorder, but for now the brains of people with

severe mental disturbances often look identical to those of people without such disturbances.

Because there are no clear biological diagnoses, psychological disorders are instead diagnosed on the basis of

clinical observations of the behaviours that the individual engages in. These observations find that emotional states

and behaviours operate on a continuum, ranging from more normal and accepted to more deviant, abnormal, and

unaccepted. The behaviours that are associated with disorder are in many cases the same behaviours that we engage

in during our normal everyday life. Washing one’s hands is a normal healthy activity, but it can be overdone by

those with an obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD). It is not unusual to worry about and try to improve one’s

body image. The dancer in Figure 13.2, “How Thin Is Too Thin?” needs to be thin for her career, but when does

her dieting turn into a psychological disorder? Psychologists believe this happens when the behaviour becomes

distressing and dysfunctional to the person. Robert’s struggle with his personal appearance, as discussed at the

beginning of this chapter, was clearly unusual, unhealthy, and distressing to him.

Figure 13.2 How Thin Is Too Thin?

Whether a given behaviour is considered a psychological disorder is determined not only by whether a behaviour

is unusual (e.g., whether it is mild anxiety versus extreme anxiety) but also by whether a behaviour is

maladaptive — that is, the extent to which it causes distress (e.g., pain and suffering) and dysfunction (impairment

in one or more important areas of functioning) to the individual (American Psychiatric Association, 2013). An

intense fear of spiders, for example, would not be considered a psychological disorder unless it has a significant

531 • INTRODUCTION TO PSYCHOLOGY - 1ST CANADIAN EDITION

negative impact on the sufferer’s life, for instance by causing him or her to be unable to step outside the house. The

focus on distress and dysfunction means that behaviours that are simply unusual (such as some political, religious,

or sexual practices) are not classified as disorders.

Put your psychology hat on for a moment and consider the behaviours of the people listed in Table 13.2,

“Diagnosing Disorder.” For each, indicate whether you think the behaviour is or is not a psychological disorder. If

you’re not sure, what other information would you need to know to be more certain of your diagnosis?

Table 13.2 Diagnosing Disorder.

[Skip Table]

Yes No

Need more

information Description

Jackie frequently talks to herself while she is working out her math homework. Her roommate

sometimes hears her and wonders if she is okay.

Charlie believes that the noises made by cars and planes going by outside his house have secret

meanings. He is convinced that he was involved in the start of a nuclear war and that the only way

for him to survive is to find the answer to a difficult riddle.

Harriet gets very depressed during the winter months when the light is low. She sometimes stays in

her pajamas for the whole weekend, eating chocolate and watching TV.

Frank seems to be afraid of a lot of things. He worries about driving on the highway and about

severe weather that may come through his neighbourhood. But mostly he fears mice, checking

under his bed frequently to see if any are present.

A worshiper speaking in “tongues” at an Evangelical church views himself as “filled” with the

Holy Spirit and is considered blessed with the gift to speak the “language of angels.”

A trained clinical psychologist would have checked off “need more information” for each of the examples in Table

13.2, “Diagnosing Disorder,” because although the behaviours may seem unusual, there is no clear evidence that

they are distressing or dysfunctional for the person. Talking to ourselves out loud is unusual and can be a symptom

of schizophrenia, but just because we do it once in a while does not mean that there is anything wrong with us.

It is natural to be depressed, particularly in the long winter nights, but how severe should this depression be, and

how long should it last? If the negative feelings last for an extended time and begin to lead the person to miss

work or classes, then they may become symptoms of a mood disorder. It is normal to worry about things, but when

does worry turn into a debilitating anxiety disorder? And what about thoughts that seem to be irrational, such as

being able to speak the language of angels? Are they indicators of a severe psychological disorder, or part of a

normal religious experience? Again, the answer lies in the extent to which they are (or are not) interfering with the

individual’s functioning in society.

Another difficulty in diagnosing psychological disorders is that they frequently occur together. For instance, people

diagnosed with anxiety disorders also often have mood disorders (Hunt, Slade, & Andrews, 2004), and people

diagnosed with one personality disorder frequently suffer from other personality disorders as well. Comorbidity

occurs when people who suffer from one disorder also suffer at the same time from other disorders. Because many

psychological disorders are comorbid, most severe mental disorders are concentrated in a small group of people

(about 6% of the population) who have more than three of them (Kessler, Chiu, Demler, & Walters, 2005).

13.1 PSYCHOLOGICAL DISORDER: WHAT MAKES A BEHAVIOUR ABNORMAL? • 532

Psychology in Everyday Life: Combating the Stigma of Abnormal Behaviour

Every culture and society has its own views on what constitutes abnormal behaviour and what causes it

(Brothwell, 1981). The Old Testament Book of Samuel tells us that as a consequence of his sins, God sent

King Saul an evil spirit to torment him (1 Samuel 16:14). Ancient Hindu tradition attributed psychological

disorder to sorcery and witchcraft. During the Middle Ages it was believed that mental illness occurred

when the body was infected by evil spirits, particularly the devil. Remedies included whipping, bloodletting,

purges, and trepanation (cutting a hole in the skull, Figure 13.3) to release the demons.

Figure 13.3 Trepanation. Trepanation (drilling holes in the skull) has been

used since prehistoric times in attempts to cure epilepsy, schizophrenia,

and other psychological disorders.

Until the 18th century, the most common treatment for the mentally ill was to incarcerate them in asylums or

“madhouses.” During the 18th century, however, some reformers began to oppose this brutal treatment of the

mentally ill, arguing that mental illness was a medical problem that had nothing to do with evil spirits or demons.

In France, one of the key reformers was Philippe Pinel (1745-1826), who believed that mental illness was caused

by a combination of physical and psychological stressors, exacerbated by inhumane conditions. Pinel advocated the

introduction of exercise, fresh air, and daylight for the inmates, as well as treating them gently and talking with

them.

Reformers such as Phillipe Pinel (1745-1826), Dorothea Dix (1802-1887), Richard M. Bucke (1837-1902), Charles

K. Clarke (1857-1924), Clifford W. Beers (1876-1943), and Clarence M. Hincks (1885-1964) were instrumental

in creating mental hospitals that treated patients humanely and attempted to cure them if possible (Figure 13.5).

These reformers saw mental illness as an underlying psychological disorder, which was diagnosed according to its

symptoms and which could be cured through treatment.

533 • INTRODUCTION TO PSYCHOLOGY - 1ST CANADIAN EDITION

Dr Richard Bucke was appointed superintendent of the Asylum for the Insane in Hamilton in 1876 and a year later

of the asylum in London, Ontario. He believed mental illness was a failure of the human biological adaptive process.

In his attempts to reform the crude treatment of mentally ill patients he abandoned the practice of pacifying the

inmates with alcohol or restraining them, and inaugurated regular cultural and sports events for patients.

Dr Charles Clarke was an assistant superintendent at the Hamilton asylum in the early 1880s, and later

superintendent of the asylum at Kingston, Ontario. By 1887 he had changed the asylum from a jail to a hospital

and was instructing nurses and attendants in the care of the mentally ill. By 1893 he was advocating that the term

“asylum” be dropped and that special hospitals be constructed for the mentally ill.

Dr Clarence Hincks, born in St Mary’s, Ontario, was interested in mental health partly due to his own experiences

with severe depression. In 1918, with Beers’s help, he organized the Canadian National Committee for Mental

Hygiene, which later became the Canadian Mental Health Association.

Dix was a Massachusetts schoolteacher who wrote, lectured, and informed the public and legislators about the

deplorable conditions in mental institutions like those shown in Figure 13.4. She was successful in influencing a

number of state legislatures either to establish or improve their mental institutions, and because of her efforts a

mental hospital was built in St. John’s, Newfoundland, in 1885. She also lobbied the Nova Scotia legislature and

oversaw the building of a hospital for mental patients in that province.

Phillipe Pinel was a French physician who became intensely interested in mental health in the 1770s. He took a

psychological approach as opposed to the prominent biological approach that was the custom and introduced new

forms of treatments that involved close contact with and careful observation of patients. Pinel visited each patient

up to several times a day, engaging them in lengthy conversations, and took careful notes in an effort to assemble a

detailed case history and a natural history of the patient’s illness. At the time, his therapy was quite contrary to the

usual practices of bleeding, purging, or blistering.

Figure 13.4 Asylums for People with Mental Disorders. Until the early 1900s people with mental

disorders were often imprisoned in asylums such as these.

Despite the progress made since the 1800s in public attitudes about those who suffer from psychological disorders,

people, including police, coworkers, and even friends and family members, still stigmatize people with

psychological disorders. A stigma refers to a disgrace or defect that indicates that person belongs to a culturally

devalued social group. In some cases the stigma of mental illness is accompanied by the use of disrespectful and

dehumanizing labels, including names such as crazy, nuts, mental, schizo, and retard.

The stigma of mental disorder affects people while they are ill, while they are healing, and even after they have

healed (Schefer, 2003). On a community level, stigma can affect the kinds of services social service agencies

give to people with mental illness, and the treatment provided to them and their families by schools, workplaces,

places of worship, and health-care providers. Stigma about mental illness also leads to employment discrimination,

despite the fact that with appropriate support, even people with severe psychological disorders are able to hold a

13.1 PSYCHOLOGICAL DISORDER: WHAT MAKES A BEHAVIOUR ABNORMAL? • 534

Figure 13.5 Portraits of Philippe Pine, Benjamin Rush, and Dorothea Dix. Reformers such as

Philippe Pinel, Benjamin Rush, and Dorothea Dix fought the often brutal treatment of the mentally

ill and were instrumental in changing perceptions and treatment of them.

job (Boardman, Grove, Perkins, & Shepherd, 2003; Leff & Warner, 2006; Ozawa & Yaeda, 2007; Pulido, Diaz, &

Ramirez, 2004).

The mass media has a significant influence on society’s attitude toward mental illness (Francis, Pirkis, Dunt, &

Blood, 2001). While media portrayal of mental illness is often sympathetic, negative stereotypes still remain in

newspapers, magazines, film, and television. (See the following video for an example.)

Television advertisements may perpetuate negative stereotypes about the mentally ill.

For example, in 2010 Burger King ran an ad called “The King’s Gone Crazy,” in

which the company’s mascot runs around an office complex carrying out acts of

violence and wreaking havoc.

Watch: “Burger King: The King’s Gone Crazy” [YouTube]:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xYA7AnVwejo

The most significant problem of the stigmatization of those with psychological

disorder is that it slows their recovery. People with mental problems internalize

societal attitudes about mental illness, often becoming so embarrassed or ashamed that they conceal their difficulties

and fail to seek treatment. Stigma leads to lowered self-esteem, increased isolation, and hopelessness, and it may

negatively influence the individual’s family and professional life (Hayward & Bright, 1997).

Despite all of these challenges, however, many people overcome psychological disorders and go on to lead

productive lives. It is up to all of us who are informed about the causes of psychological disorder and the impact of

these conditions on people to understand, first, that mental illness is not a “fault” any more than is cancer. People do

not choose to have a mental illness. Second, we must all work to help overcome the stigma associated with disorder.

Organizations such as the Canadian Mental Health Association (CMHA) help by working to reduce the negative

impact of stigma through education, community action, and individual support.

Diagnosing Disorder: The DSM

Psychologists have developed criteria that help them determine whether behaviour should be considered a

psychological disorder and which of the many disorders particular behaviours indicate. These criteria are laid out in

a 1,000-page manual known as the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders (DSM), a document

that provides a common language and standard criteria for the classification of mental disorders (American

Psychiatric Association, 2013). The DSM is used by therapists, researchers, drug companies, health insurance

535 • INTRODUCTION TO PSYCHOLOGY - 1ST CANADIAN EDITION

companies, and policymakers in Canada and the United States to determine what services are appropriately provided

for treating patients with given symptoms.

The first edition of the DSM was published in 1952 on the basis of census data and psychiatric hospital statistics.

Since then, the DSM has been revised five times. The last major revision was the fourth edition (DSM-IV), published

in 1994, and an update of that document was produced in 2000 (DSM-IV-TR). The fifth edition (DSM-5) is the

most recent edition and was published in 2013. The Medical Council of Canada transitioned to the DSM-5 recently

(MCC, 2013). The DSM-IV-TR was designed in conjunction with the World Health Organization’s 10th version of

the International Classification of Diseases (ICD-10), which is used as a guide for mental disorders in Europe and

other parts of the world.

The DSM does not attempt to specify the exact symptoms that are required for a diagnosis. Rather, the DSM uses

categories, and patients whose symptoms are similar to the description of the category are said to have that disorder.

The DSM frequently uses qualifiers to indicate different levels of severity within a category. For instance, the

disorder of mental retardation can be classified as mild, moderate, or severe.

Each revision of the DSM takes into consideration new knowledge as well as changes in cultural norms about

disorder. Homosexuality, for example, was listed as a mental disorder in the DSM until 1973, when it was removed

in response to advocacy by politically active gay rights groups and changing social norms. The current version of

the DSM lists about 400 disorders.

Although the DSM has been criticized regarding the nature of its categorization system (and it is frequently revised

to attempt to address these criticisms), for the fact that it tends to classify more behaviours as disorders with every

revision (even “academic problems” are now listed as a potential psychological disorder), and for the fact that it is

primarily focused on Western illness, it is nevertheless a comprehensive, practical, and necessary tool that provides

a common language to describe disorder. Most insurance companies will not pay for therapy unless the patient has

a DSM diagnosis. The DSM approach allows a systematic assessment of the patient, taking into account the mental

disorder in question, the patient’s medical condition, psychological and cultural factors, and the way the patient

functions in everyday life.

Diagnosis or Overdiagnosis? ADHD, Autistic Disorder, and Asperger’s Disorder

Two common critiques of the DSM are that the categorization system leaves quite a bit of ambiguity in diagnosis

and that it covers such a wide variety of behaviours. Let’s take a closer look at three common disorders— attentiondeficit/

hyperactivity disorder (ADHD), autistic disorder, and Asperger’s disorder — that have recently raised

controversy because they are being diagnosed significantly more frequently than they were in the past.

Attention-Deficit/Hyperactivity Disorder (ADHD)

Zack, aged seven years, has always had trouble settling down. He is easily bored and distracted. In school, he cannot

stay in his seat for very long and he frequently does not follow instructions. He is constantly fidgeting or staring

into space. Zack has poor social skills and may overreact when someone accidentally bumps into him or uses one

of his toys. At home, he chatters constantly and rarely settles down to do a quiet activity, such as reading a book.

Symptoms such as Zack’s are common among seven-year-olds, and particularly among boys. But what do the

symptoms mean? Does Zack simply have a lot of energy and a short attention span? Boys mature more slowly than

girls at this age, and perhaps Zack will catch up in the next few years. One possibility is for the parents and teachers

to work with Zack to help him be more attentive, to put up with the behaviour, and to wait it out.

13.1 PSYCHOLOGICAL DISORDER: WHAT MAKES A BEHAVIOUR ABNORMAL? • 536

But many parents, often on the advice of the child’s teacher, take their children to a psychologist for diagnosis. If

Zack were taken for testing today, it is very likely that he would be diagnosed with a psychological disorder known

as attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD). ADHD is a developmental behaviour disorder characterized

by problems with focus, difficulty maintaining attention, and inability to concentrate, in which symptoms start

before seven years of age (Canadian Mental Health Association, 2014). Although it is usually first diagnosed in

childhood, ADHD can remain problematic in adults, and up to 7% of university students are diagnosed with it

(Weyandt & DuPaul, 2006). In adults the symptoms of ADHD include forgetfulness, difficulty paying attention

to details, procrastination, disorganized work habits, and not listening to others. ADHD is about 70% more likely

to occur in males than in females (Kessler, Chiu, Demler, & Walters, 2005), and is often comorbid with other

behavioural and conduct disorders.

The diagnosis of ADHD has quadrupled over the past 20 years, and it is now diagnosed in about one out of every 37

Canadian children. It is the most common psychological disorder among children in the world (Olfson, Gameroff,

Marcus, & Jensen, 2003). ADHD is also being diagnosed much more frequently in adolescents and adults (Barkley,

1998). You might wonder what this all means. Are the increases in the diagnosis of ADHD because today’s children

and adolescents are actually more distracted and hyperactive than their parents were, due to a greater awareness

of ADHD among teachers and parents, or due to psychologists and psychiatrists’ tendency to overdiagnose the

problem? Perhaps drug companies are also involved, because ADHD is often treated with prescription medications,

including stimulants such as Ritalin.

Although skeptics argue that ADHD is overdiagnosed and is a handy excuse for behavioural problems, most

psychologists believe that ADHD is a real disorder that is caused by a combination of genetic and environmental

factors. Twin studies have found that ADHD is heritable (National Institute of Mental Health, 2010), and

neuroimaging studies have found that people with ADHD may have structural differences in areas of the brain

that influence self-control and attention (Seidman, Valera, & Makris, 2005). Other studies have also pointed to

environmental factors, such as a mother’s smoking and drinking alcohol during pregnancy and the consumption of

lead and food additives by those who are affected (Braun, Kahn, Froehlich, Auinger, & Lanphear, 2006; Linnet et

al., 2003; McCann et al., 2007). Social factors, such as family stress and poverty, also contribute to ADHD (Burt,

Krueger, McGue, & Iacono, 2001).

Autistic Disorder and Asperger’s Disorder

Jared’s kindergarten teacher has voiced her concern to Jared’s parents about his difficulties with interacting with

other children and his delay in developing normal language. Jared is able to maintain eye contact and enjoys mixing

with other children, but he cannot communicate with them very well. He often responds to questions or comments

with long-winded speeches about trucks or some other topic that interests him, and he seems to lack awareness of

other children’s wishes and needs.

Jared’s concerned parents took him to a multidisciplinary child development centre for consultation. Here he was

tested by a pediatric neurologist, a psychologist, and a child psychiatrist.

The pediatric neurologist found that Jared’s hearing was normal, and there were no signs of any neurological

disorder. He diagnosed Jared with a pervasive developmental disorder, because while his comprehension and

expressive language was poor, he was still able to carry out nonverbal tasks, such as drawing a picture or doing a

puzzle.

Based on her observation of Jared’s difficulty interacting with his peers, and the fact that he did not respond warmly

to his parents, the psychologist diagnosed Jared with autistic disorder (autism), a disorder of neural development

characterized by impaired social interaction and communication and by restricted and repetitive behaviour, and in

537 • INTRODUCTION TO PSYCHOLOGY - 1ST CANADIAN EDITION

which symptoms begin before seven years of age. The psychologist believed that the autism diagnosis was correct

because, like other children with autism, Jared, has a poorly developed ability to see the world from the perspective

of others, engages in unusual behaviours such as talking about trucks for hours, and responds to stimuli, such as the

sound of a car or an airplane, in unusual ways.

The child psychiatrist believed that Jared’s language problems and social skills were not severe enough to warrant

a diagnosis of autistic disorder and instead proposed a diagnosis of Asperger’s disorder, a developmental disorder

that affects a child’s ability to socialize and communicate effectively with others and in which symptoms begin

before seven years of age. The symptoms of Asperger’s are almost identical to that of autism (with the exception of

a delay in language development), and the child psychiatrist simply saw these problems as less extreme.

Imagine how Jared’s parents must have felt at this point. Clearly there is something wrong with their child, but

even the experts cannot agree on exactly what the problem is. Diagnosing problems such as Jared’s is difficult,

yet the number of children like him is increasing dramatically. Disorders related to autism and Asperger’s disorder

now affect 0.68% of Canadian children (Statistics Canada, 2003). The milder forms of autism, and particularly

Asperger’s, have accounted for most of this increase in diagnosis.

Although for many years autism was thought to be primarily a socially determined disorder, in which parents who

were cold, distant, and rejecting created the problem, current research suggests that biological factors are most

important. The heritability of autism has been estimated to be as high as 90% (Freitag, 2007). Scientists speculate

that autism is caused by an unknown genetically determined brain abnormality that occurs early in development. It is

likely that several different brain sites are affected (Moldin, 2003), and the search for these areas is being conducted

in many scientific laboratories.

But does Jared have autism or Asperger’s? The problem is that diagnosis is not exact (remember the idea of

categories), and the experts themselves are often unsure how to classify behaviour. Furthermore, the appropriate

classifications change with time and new knowledge. Under the DSM-5, released on May 18, 2013, Asperger’s

Syndrome is now subsumed under the category of Autism Spectrum Disorder (ASD).

Key Takeaways

• More psychologists are involved in the diagnosis and treatment of psychological disorder than in

any other endeavour, and those tasks are probably the most important psychologists face.

• The impact on people with a psychological disorder comes both from the disease itself and from

the stigma associated with disorder.

• A psychological disorder is an ongoing dysfunctional pattern of thought, emotion, and behaviour

that causes significant distress and that is considered deviant in that person’s culture or society.

• According to the bio-psycho-social model, psychological disorders have biological,

psychological, and social causes.

• It is difficult to diagnose psychological disorders, although the DSM provides guidelines that are

based on a category system. The DSM is frequently revised, taking into consideration new

knowledge as well as changes in cultural norms about disorder.

• There is controversy about the diagnosis of disorders such as ADHD, autistic disorder, and

Asperger’s disorder.

13.1 PSYCHOLOGICAL DISORDER: WHAT MAKES A BEHAVIOUR ABNORMAL? • 538

Exercises and Critical Thinking

1. Do you or your friends hold stereotypes about the mentally ill? Can you think of or find clips

from any films or other popular media that portray mental illness positively or negatively? Is it

more or less acceptable to stereotype the mentally ill than to stereotype other social groups?

2. Consider the diagnosis of ADHD, autism, and Asperger’s disorder from the biological,

personal, and social-cultural perspectives. Do you think that these disorders are overdiagnosed?

How might clinicians determine if ADHD is dysfunctional or distressing to the individual?

References

American Psychiatric Association. (2013). Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders, Fifth Edition.

Arlington, VA: American Psychiatric Association.

Barkley, R. A. (1998). Attention-deficit hyperactivity disorder: A handbook for diagnosis and treatment (2nd ed.).

New York, NY: Guilford Press.

Boardman, J., Grove, B., Perkins, R., & Shepherd, G. (2003). Work and employment for people with psychiatric

disabilities. British Journal of Psychiatry, 182(6), 467–468.

Braun, J., Kahn, R., Froehlich, T., Auinger, P., & Lanphear, B. (2006). Exposures to environmental toxicants and

attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder in U.S. children. Environmental Health Perspectives, 114(12), 1904–1909.

Brothwell, D. (1981). Digging up bones: The excavation, treatment, and study of human skeletal remains. Ithaca,

NY: Cornell University Press.

Burt, S. A., Krueger, R. F., McGue, M., & Iacono, W. G. (2001). Sources of covariation among attentiondeficit/

hyperactivity disorder, oppositional defiant disorder, and conduct disorder: The importance of shared

environment. Journal of Abnormal Psychology, 110(4), 516–525.

Butcher, J., Mineka, S., & Hooley, J. (2007). Abnormal psychology and modern life (13th ed.). Boston, MA: Allyn

& Bacon.

Canadian Mental Health Association. (2014). Understanding mental illness: Attention deficit disorder. Retrieved

May 2014 from http://www.cmha.ca/mental-health/understanding-mental-illness/attention-deficit-disorders/

Engel, G. (1977). The need for a new medical model: A challenge for biomedicine. Science, 196(4286), 129.

Francis, C., Pirkis, J., Dunt, D., & Blood, R. (2001). Mental health and illness in the media: A review of the

literature. Canberra, Australia: Commonwealth Department of Health & Aged Care.

Freitag C. M. (2007). The genetics of autistic disorders and its clinical relevance: A review of the

literature. Molecular Psychiatry, 12(1), 2–22.

539 • INTRODUCTION TO PSYCHOLOGY - 1ST CANADIAN EDITION

Gejman, P., Sanders, A., & Duan, J. (2010). The role of genetics in the etiology of schizophrenia. Psychiatric

Clinics of North America, 33(1), 35–66.

Hayward, P., & Bright, J. (1997). Stigma and mental illness: A review and critique. Journal of Mental Health, 6(4),

345–354.

Hunt, C., Slade, T., & Andrews, G. (2004). Generalized anxiety disorder and major depressive disorder comorbidity

in the National Survey of Mental Health and Well Being. Depression and Anxiety, 20, 23–31.

Kessler, R. C., Chiu, W. T., Demler, O., & Walters, E. E. (2005). Prevalence, severity, and comorbidity of

12-month DSM-IV disorders in the National Comorbidity Survey Replication. Archives of General Psychiatry,

62(6), 617–627.

Leff, J., & Warner, R. (2006). Social inclusion of people with mental illness. New York, NY: Cambridge University

Press.

Linnet K., Dalsgaard, S., Obel, C., Wisborg, K., Henriksen T., Rodriguez, A.,…Jarvelin, M. (2003). Maternal

lifestyle factors in pregnancy risk of attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder and associated behaviors: Review of the

current evidence. American Journal of Psychiatry, 160(6), 1028–1040.

McCann, D., Barrett, A., Cooper, A., Crumpler, D., Dalen, L., Grimshaw, K.,…Stevenson, J. (2007). Food additives

and hyperactive behaviour in 3-year-old and 8/9-year-old children in the community: A randomised, doubleblinded,

placebo-controlled trial. Lancet, 370(9598), 1560–1567.

Medical Council of Canada. (2013). Medical Council of Canada transition to DSM-5. Retrieved May 2014

from http://mcc.ca/2014/01/transition-to-dsm-5/

Moldin, S. O. (2003). Editorial: Neurobiology of autism: The new frontier. Genes, Brain & Behavior, 2(5),

253–254.

National Institute of Mental Health. (2010). Attention-deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD). Retrieved

from http://www.nimh.nih.gov/health/topics/attention-deficit-hyperactivity-disorder-adhd/index.shtml

Olfson, M., Gameroff, M., Marcus, S., & Jensen, P. (2003). National trends in the treatment of attention deficit

hyperactivity disorder. American Journal of Psychiatry, 160, 1071–1077.

Ozawa, A., & Yaeda, J. (2007). Employer attitudes toward employing persons with psychiatric disability in

Japan. Journal of Vocational Rehabilitation, 26(2), 105–113.

Pearson, C., Janz, T., & Ali, J. (2013). Mental and substance use disorders in Canada: Health at a Glance. Statistics

Canada, Catalogue no. 82-624-X.

Pulido, F., Diaz, M., & Ram.rez, M. (2004). Work integration of people with severe mental disorder: A pending

question. Revista Psiquis, 25(6), 26–43.

Sawa, A., & Snyder, S. (2002). Schizophrenia: Diverse approaches to a complex disease. Science, 296(5568),

692–695.

Schefer, R. (2003, May 28). Addressing stigma: Increasing public understanding of mental illness [PDF]. Presented

to the Standing Senate Committee on Social Affairs, Science and Technology. Retrieved from http://www.camh.net/

education/Resources_communities_organizations/addressing_stigma_senatepres03.pdf

13.1 PSYCHOLOGICAL DISORDER: WHAT MAKES A BEHAVIOUR ABNORMAL? • 540

Seidman, L., Valera, E., & Makris, N. (2005). Structural brain imaging of attention deficit/hyperactivity

disorder. Biological Psychiatry, 57, 1263–1272.

Statistics Canada. (2003). Canadian Community Health Survey 2003; numbers compiled for the Library of

Parliament. Retrieved May 2014 from http://www.parl.gc.ca/Content/LOP/ResearchPublications/

prb0593-e.htm#footnote8

Statistics Canada. (2013). Health at a Glance: Mental and substance use disorders in Canada [PDF]; Catalogue

no.82-624-X, Health Statistics Canada. Retrieved July 2014 from http://www.statcan.gc.ca/pub/82-624-x/2013001/

article/11855-eng.pdf

Walker, E., Kestler, L., Bollini, A., & Hochman, K. (2004). Schizophrenia: Etiology and course. Annual Review of

Psychology, 55, 401–430.

Weyandt, L. L., & DuPaul, G. (2006). ADHD in college students. Journal of Attention Disorders, 10(1), 9–19.

Image Attributions

Figure 13.1: “beautiful-dancer-by-aisha-mitchell” by Gerard Van der Leun is licensed under CC BY-NC-ND 2.0

license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/2.0/deed.en_CA).

Figure 13.3: Engraving of a trepanation by Peter Treveris (http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/

File:Peter_Treveris_-_ engraving_of_Trepanation_for_Handywarke_of_surgeri_1525.png) is in public domain.

Figure 13.4: Sheriff Hill Lunatic Asylum by U.S. Library of Congress, (http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/

File:Sheriff_Hill_Lunatic_Asylum.jpg) is in the public domain.

Figure 13.5: Philippe Pinel portrait by Anna M.rim.e (http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/

File:Philippe_Pinel_%281745_-_1826%29.jpg) is in the public domain. Benjamin Rush Painting by Charles Wilson

Peale (http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Benjamin_Rush_Painting_by_Peale.jpg) is in the public domain.

Dix Dorothea portrait by U.S. Library of Congress, (http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Dix-Dorothea-

LOC.jpg) is in the public domain.

541 • INTRODUCTION TO PSYCHOLOGY - 1ST CANADIAN EDITION

Long Descriptions

Table 13.1 long description: Prevalence rates for psychological disorders in Canada, 2012.

Disorder Lifetime 12-month

Alcohol abuse or dependence 18.1% 3.2%

Substance use disorder Cannabis abuse or dependence 6.8% 1.3%

Other drug abuse or dependence (excluding Cannabis) 4% 0.7%

Total substance use disorders 21.6% 4.4%

Major Depressive Episode 11.3% 4.7%

Mood Disorder Bipolar disorder 2.6% 1.5%

Generalized anxiety disorder 8.7% 2.6%

Total mood disorders 12.6% 5.4%

Total Mental/Substance disorders 33.1% 10.1%

[Return to Table 13.1]

13.1 PSYCHOLOGICAL DISORDER: WHAT MAKES A BEHAVIOUR ABNORMAL? • 542

13.2 Anxiety and Dissociative Disorders: Fearing the World Around Us

Learning Objectives

1. Outline and describe the different types of anxiety disorders.

2. Outline and describe the different types of dissociative disorders.

3. Explain the biological and environmental causes of anxiety and dissociative disorders.

Anxiety, the nervousness or agitation that we sometimes experience, often about something that is going to happen,

is a natural part of life. We all feel anxious at times, maybe when we think about our upcoming visit to the dentist

or the presentation we have to give to our class next week. Anxiety is an important and useful human emotion; it is

associated with the activation of the sympathetic nervous system and the physiological and behavioural responses

that help protect us from danger. But too much anxiety can be debilitating, and every year millions of people suffer

from anxiety disorders, which are psychological disturbances marked by irrational fears, often of everyday objects

and situations (Kessler, Chiu, Demler, & Walters, 2005).

Generalized Anxiety Disorder

Consider the following, in which Chase describes her feelings of a persistent and exaggerated sense of anxiety, even

when there is little or nothing in her life to provoke it:

For a few months now I’ve had a really bad feeling inside of me. The best way to describe it is like a really

bad feeling of negative inevitability, like something really bad is impending, but I don’t know what. It’s like

I’m on trial for murder or I’m just waiting to be sent down for something. I have it all of the time but it gets

worse in waves that come from nowhere with no apparent triggers. I used to get it before going out for nights

out with friends, and it kinda stopped me from doing it as I’d rather not go out and stress about the feeling, but

now I have it all the time so it doesn’t really make a difference anymore (Chase, 2010).

Chase is probably suffering from a generalized anxiety disorder (GAD), a psychological disorder diagnosed in

situations in which a person has been excessively worrying about money, health, work, family life, or relationships

for at least six months, even though he or she knows that the concerns are exaggerated, and when the anxiety causes

significant distress and dysfunction.

In addition to their feelings of anxiety, people who suffer from GAD may also experience a variety of physical

symptoms, including irritability, sleep troubles, difficulty concentrating, muscle aches, trembling, perspiration, and

hot flashes. The sufferer cannot deal with what is causing the anxiety, nor avoid it, because there is no clear cause

for anxiety. In fact, the sufferer frequently knows, at least cognitively, that there is really nothing to worry about.

About 3% of the general population suffer from GAD, and about two-thirds are women (Kessler, Chiu, Demler, &

543

Walters, 2005; Robins & Regier, 1991). Generalized anxiety disorder is most likely to develop between the ages of

seven and 40 years, but its influence may in some cases lessen with age (Rubio & Lopez-Ibor, 2007).

Panic Disorder

When I was about 30 I had my first panic attack. I was driving home, my three little girls were in their car

seats in the back, and all of a sudden I couldn’t breathe, I broke out into a sweat, and my heart began racing

and literally beating against my ribs! I thought I was going to die. I pulled off the road and put my head on the

wheel. I remember songs playing on the CD for about 15 minutes and my kids’ voices singing along. I was

sure I’d never see them again. And then, it passed. I slowly got back on the road and drove home. I had no idea

what it was (Ceejay, 2006).

Ceejay is experiencing panic disorder, a psychological disorder characterized by sudden attacks of anxiety and

terror that have led to significant behavioural changes in the person’s life. Symptoms of a panic attack include

shortness of breath, heart palpitations, trembling, dizziness, choking sensations, nausea, and an intense feeling of

dread or impending doom. Panic attacks can often be mistaken for heart attacks or other serious physical illnesses,

and they may lead the person experiencing them to go to a hospital emergency room. Panic attacks may last as little

as one or as much as 20 minutes, but they often peak and subside within about 10 minutes.

Sufferers are often anxious because they fear that they will have another attack. They focus their attention on

the thoughts and images of their fears, becoming excessively sensitive to cues that signal the possibility of threat

(MacLeod, Rutherford, Campbell, Ebsworthy, & Holker, 2002). They may also become unsure of the source of their

arousal, misattributing it to situations that are not actually the cause. As a result, they may begin to avoid places

where attacks have occurred in the past, such as driving, using an elevator, or being in public places. In Canada,

12-month and lifetime prevalence rates for panic attacks are 1.6% and 3.7%, respectively (Health Canada, 2006).

Phobias

A phobia (from the Greek word phobos, which means fear) is a specific fear of a certain object, situation, or

activity. The fear experience can range from a sense of unease to a full-blown panic attack. Most people learn to live

with their phobias, but for others the fear can be so debilitating that they go to extremes to avoid the fearful situation.

A sufferer of arachnophobia (fear of spiders), for example, may refuse to enter a room until it has been checked

thoroughly for spiders, or may refuse to vacation in the countryside because spiders may be there. Phobias are

characterized by their specificity and their irrationality. A person with acrophobia (a fear of height) could fearlessly

sail around the world on a sailboat with no concerns yet refuse to go out onto the balcony on the fifth floor of a

building.

A common phobia is social phobia, extreme shyness around people or discomfort in social situations. Social

phobia may be specific to a certain event, such as speaking in public or using a public restroom, or it can be a

more generalized anxiety toward almost all people outside of close family and friends. People with social phobia

will often experience physical symptoms in public, such as sweating profusely, blushing, stuttering, nausea, and

dizziness. They are convinced that everybody around them notices these symptoms as they are occurring. Women

are somewhat more likely than men to suffer from social phobia.

The most incapacitating phobia is agoraphobia, defined as anxiety about being in places or situations from which

escape might be difficult or embarrassing, or in which help may not be available (American Psychiatric Association,

2000). Typical places that provoke the panic attacks are parking lots; crowded streets or shops; and bridges, tunnels,

or expressways. People (mostly women) who suffer from agoraphobia may have great difficulty leaving their homes

and interacting with other people.

13.2 ANXIETY AND DISSOCIATIVE DISORDERS: FEARING THE WORLD AROUND US • 544

Phobias are one of the most common anxiety disorders, are among the most common psychiatric illnesses, and are

about twice as prevalent in women as in men (Fredrikson, Annas, Fischer, & Wik, 1996; Kessler, Meron-Ruscio,

Shear, & Wittchen, 2009). In most cases phobias first appear in childhood and adolescence, and usually persist into

adulthood. Table 13.3, “The Most Common Phobias,” presents a list of the common phobias that are diagnosed by

psychologists.

Table 13.3 The Most Common Phobias.

Name Description

Acrophobia Fear of heights

Agoraphobia Fear of situations in which escape is difficult

Arachnophobia Fear of spiders

Astraphobia Fear of thunder and lightning

Claustrophobia Fear of closed-in spaces

Cynophobia Fear of dogs

Mysophobia Fear of germs or dirt

Ophidiophobia Fear of snakes

Pteromerhanophobia Fear of flying

Social phobia Fear of social situations

Trypanophobia Fear of injections

Zoophobia Fear of small animals

Obsessive-Compulsive Disorders

Although he is best known his perfect shots on the field, the British soccer star David Beckham (Figure 13.6, “David

Beckham”) also suffers from obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD). As he describes it, “I have got this obsessivecompulsive

disorder where I have to have everything in a straight line or everything has to be in pairs. I’ll put my

Pepsi cans in the fridge and if there’s one too many then I’ll put it in another cupboard somewhere. I’ve got that

problem. I’ll go into a hotel room. Before I can relax, I have to move all the leaflets and all the books and put them

in a drawer. Everything has to be perfect” (Dolan, 2006).

David Beckham’s experience with obsessive behaviour is not unusual. We all get a little obsessive at times. We

may continuously replay a favorite song in our heads, worry about getting the right outfit for an upcoming party, or

find ourselves analyzing a series of numbers that seem to have a certain pattern. And our everyday compulsions can

be useful. Going back inside the house once more to be sure that we really did turn off the sink faucet or checking

the mirror a couple of times to be sure that our hair is combed are not necessarily bad ideas.

Obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD) is a psychological disorder that is diagnosed when an individual

continuously experiences distressing or frightening thoughts, and engages in obsessions (repetitive thoughts) or

compulsions (repetitive behaviours) in an attempt to calm these thoughts. OCD is diagnosed when the obsessive

thoughts are so disturbing and the compulsive behaviours are so time consuming that they cause distress and

significant dysfunction in a person’s everyday life. Washing your hands once or even twice to make sure that they

are clean is normal; washing them 20 times is not. Keeping your fridge neat is a good idea; spending hours a day on

545 • INTRODUCTION TO PSYCHOLOGY - 1ST CANADIAN EDITION

Figure 13.6 David Beckham. Source:

it is not. The sufferers know that these rituals are senseless, but they cannot bring themselves to stop them, in part

because the relief that they feel after they perform them acts as a reinforcer, making the behaviour more likely to

occur again.

Sufferers of OCD may avoid certain places that trigger the obsessive thoughts, or use alcohol or drugs to try to calm

themselves down. OCD has a low prevalence rate (about 1% of the population in a given year) in relation to other

anxiety disorders, and usually develops in adolescence or early adulthood (Horwath & Weissman, 2000; Samuels &

Nestadt, 1997). The course of OCD varies from person to person. Symptoms can come and go, decrease, or worsen

over time.

Post-traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD)

People who have survived a terrible ordeal, such as combat, torture, sexual assault, imprisonment, abuse, natural

disasters, or the death of someone close to them may develop post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD). The anxiety

may begin months or even years after the event. People with PTSD experience high levels of anxiety along with

reexperiencing the trauma (flashbacks), and a strong desire to avoid any reminders of the event. They may lose

interest in things they used to enjoy; startle easily; have difficulty feeling affection; and may experience terror, rage,

depression, or insomnia. The symptoms may be felt especially when approaching the area where the event took

place or when the anniversary of that event is near.

PTSD has affected approximately 8% of the population (Kessler, Berglund, Jin, Demler, & Walters, 2005). PTSD is

13.2 ANXIETY AND DISSOCIATIVE DISORDERS: FEARING THE WORLD AROUND US • 546

a frequent outcome of childhood or adultsexual abuse, a disorder that has its ownDiagnostic and Statistical Manual

of Mental DisordersDSM diagnosis. Women are more likely to develop PTSD than men (Davidson, 2000).

Romeo Dallaire, seen in Figure 13.7 “Rom.o Dallaire,” who served as Canadian Lieutenant General and Force

Commander of UNAMIR, the ill-fated United Nations peacekeeping force for Rwanda in 1993 and 1994, attempted

to stop the genocide that was being waged by Hutu extremists against Tutsis and Hutu moderates. Dallaire has

worked to bring understanding of post-traumatic stress disorder to the general public. He was a visiting lecturer at

several Canadian and American universities and a Fellow of the Carr Center for Human Rights Policy, Kennedy

School of Government at Harvard University. He has also pursued research on conflict resolution and the use

of child soldiers and written several articles and chapters in publications on conflict resolution, humanitarian

assistance, and human rights. Recently he wrote a book about the use of child soldiers, They Fight Like

Soldiers, They Die Like Children.

Figure 13.7 Rom.o Dallaire.

Risk factors for PTSD include the degree of the trauma’s severity, the lack of family and community support, and

additional life stressors (Brewin, Andrews, & Valentine, 2000). Many people with PTSD also suffer from another

547 • INTRODUCTION TO PSYCHOLOGY - 1ST CANADIAN EDITION

mental disorder, particularly depression, other anxiety disorders, and substance abuse (Brady, Back, & Coffey,

2004).

Dissociative Disorders: Losing the Self to Avoid Anxiety

In 1985, Michelle Philpots of England suffered a head injury in a motorcycle accident. Five years later, she reinjured

her head in a serious car accident. These injuries did enough cumulative damage to Philpots’s brain that she

eventually started having seizures and was diagnosed with epilepsy. By 1994, she was suffering from anterograde

amnesia and had completely lost the ability to create new memories, as all of her memories are wiped clean after

she goes to sleep. Upon waking, she believes that it is still 1994. Even though Philpots was in a relationship with

her husband long before she suffered amnesia, they did not actually get married until 1997. As a result, Philpots’s

husband has to show her their wedding pictures every morning in order to remind her that they’re married. A popular

movie, 50 First Dates, is loosely based on Philpots’s story.

People who experience anxiety are haunted by their memories and experiences, and although they desperately wish

to get past them, they normally cannot. In some cases, however, such as with Michelle Philpots, people who become

overwhelmed by stress experience an altered state of consciousness in which they become detached from the reality

of what is happening to them. A dissociative disorder is a condition that involves disruptions or breakdowns of

memory, awareness, and identity. The dissociation is used as a defence against the trauma.

Dissociative Amnesia and Fugue

Dissociative amnesia is a psychological disorder that involves extensive, but selective, memory loss, but in which

there is no physiological explanation for the forgetting (van der Hart & Nijenhuis, 2009). The amnesia is normally

brought on by a trauma—a situation that causes such painful anxiety that the individual “forgets” in order to escape.

These kinds of trauma include disasters, accidents, physical abuse, rape, and other forms of severe stress (Cloninger

& Dokucu, 2008). Although the personality of people who experience dissociative amnesia remains fundamentally

unchanged — and they recall how to carry out daily tasks such as reading, writing, and problem solving — they

tend to forget things about their personal lives — for instance, their name, age, and occupation — and may fail to

recognize family and friends (van der Hart & Nijenhuis, 2009).

A related disorder, dissociative fugue, is a psychological disorder in which an individual loses complete memory

of his or her identity and may even assume a new one, often far from home. The individual with dissociative fugue

experiences all the symptoms of dissociative amnesia but also leaves the situation entirely. The fugue state may last

for just a matter of hours or may continue for months. Recovery from the fugue state tends to be rapid, but when

people recover they commonly have no memory of the stressful event that triggered the fugue or of events that

occurred during their fugue state (Carde.a & Gleaves, 2007).

Dissociative Identity Disorder

You may remember the story of Sybil (a pseudonym for Shirley Ardell Mason, who was born in 1923), a person

who, over a period of 40 years, claimed to possess 16 distinct personalities (Figure 13.8, “Sybil”). Mason was in

therapy for many years trying to integrate these personalities into one complete self. A TV movie about Mason’s

life, starring Sally Field as Sybil, appeared in 1976.

Sybil suffered from the most severe of the dissociative disorders, dissociative identity disorder. Dissociative

identity disorder is a psychological disorder in which two or more distinct and individual personalities exist

in the same person, and there is an extreme memory disruption regarding personal information about the other

13.2 ANXIETY AND DISSOCIATIVE DISORDERS: FEARING THE WORLD AROUND US • 548

Figure 13.8 Sybil. Shirley Ardell Mason.

personalities (van der Hart & Nijenhuis, 2009). Dissociative identity disorder was once known as multiple

personality disorder, and this label is still sometimes used. This disorder is sometimes mistakenly referred to as

schizophrenia.

In some cases of dissociative identity disorder, there can be more than 10 different personalities in one individual.

Switches from one personality to another tend to occur suddenly, often triggered by a stressful situation (Gillig,

2009). The host personality is the personality in control of the body most of the time, and the alter personalities

tend to differ from each other in terms of age, race, gender, language, manners, and even sexual orientation (Kluft,

1996). A shy, introverted individual may develop a boisterous, extroverted alter personality. Each personality has

unique memories and social relationships (Dawson, 1990). Women are more frequently diagnosed with dissociative

identity disorder than are men, and when they are diagnosed also tend to have more “personalities” (American

Psychiatric Association, 2000).

The dissociative disorders are relatively rare conditions and are most frequently observed in adolescents and young

adults. In part because they are so unusual and difficult to diagnose, clinicians and researchers disagree about the

legitimacy of the disorders, and particularly about dissociative identity disorder. Some clinicians argue that the

descriptions in the DSM accurately reflect the symptoms of these patients, whereas others believe that patients

are faking, role-playing, or using the disorder as a way to justify behaviour (Barry-Walsh, 2005; Kihlstrom, 2004;

Lilienfeld & Lynn, 2003; Lipsanen et al., 2004). Even the diagnosis of Shirley Ardell Mason (Sybil) is disputed.

Some experts claim that Mason was highly hypnotizable and that her therapist unintentionally suggested the

existence of her multiple personalities (Miller & Kantrowitz, 1999).

Explaining Anxiety and Dissociation Disorders

Both nature and nurture contribute to the development of anxiety disorders. In terms of our evolutionary

experiences, humans have evolved to fear dangerous situations. Those of us who had a healthy fear of the dark, of

storms, of high places, of closed spaces, and of spiders and snakes were more likely to survive and have descendants.

Our evolutionary experience can account for some modern fears as well. A fear of elevators may be a modern

version of our fear of closed spaces, while a fear of flying may be related to a fear of heights.

549 • INTRODUCTION TO PSYCHOLOGY - 1ST CANADIAN EDITION

Also supporting the role of biology, anxiety disorders, including PTSD, are heritable (Hettema, Neale, & Kendler,

2001), and molecular genetics studies have found a variety of genes that are important in the expression of such

disorders (Smoller et al., 2008; Thoeringer et al., 2009). Neuroimaging studies have found that anxiety disorders

are linked to areas of the brain that are associated with emotion, blood pressure and heart rate, decision making, and

action monitoring (Brown & McNiff, 2009; Damsa, Kosel, & Moussally, 2009). People who experience PTSD also

have a somewhat smaller hippocampus in comparison with those who do not, and this difference leads them to have

a very strong sensitivity to traumatic events (Gilbertson et al., 2002).

Whether the genetic predisposition to anxiety becomes expressed as a disorder depends on environmental factors.

People who were abused in childhood are more likely to be anxious than those who had normal childhoods, even

with the same genetic disposition to anxiety sensitivity (Stein, Schork, & Gelernter, 2008). And the most severe

anxiety and dissociative disorders, such as PTSD, are usually triggered by the experience of a major stressful event.

One problem is that modern life creates a lot of anxiety. Although our life expectancy and quality of life have

improved over the past 50 years, the same period has also created a sharp increase in anxiety levels (Twenge,

2006). These changes suggest that most anxiety disorders stem from perceived, rather than actual, threats to our

well-being.

Anxieties are also learned through classical and operant conditioning. Just as rats that are shocked in their cages

develop a chronic anxiety toward their laboratory environment (which has become a conditioned stimulus for fear),

rape victims may feel anxiety when passing by the scene of the crime, and victims of PTSD may react to memories

or reminders of the stressful event. Classical conditioning may also be accompanied by stimulus generalization. A

single dog bite can lead to generalized fear of all dogs; a panic attack that follows an embarrassing moment in one

place may be generalized to a fear of all public places. People’s responses to their anxieties are often reinforced.

Behaviours become compulsive because they provide relief from the torment of anxious thoughts. Similarly, leaving

or avoiding fear-inducing stimuli leads to feelings of calmness or relief, which reinforces phobic behaviour.

In contrast to the anxiety disorders, the causes of the dissociative orders are less clear, which is part of the reason that

there is disagreement about their existence. Unlike most psychological orders, there is little evidence of a genetic

predisposition; they seem to be almost entirely environmentally determined. Severe emotional trauma during

childhood, such as physical or sexual abuse, coupled with a strong stressor, is typically cited as the underlying

cause (Alpher, 1992; Carde.a & Gleaves, 2007). Kihlstrom, Glisky, and Angiulo (1994) suggest that people with

personalities that lead them to fantasize and become intensely absorbed in their own personal experiences are

more susceptible to developing dissociative disorders under stress. Dissociative disorders can in many cases be

successfully treated, usually by psychotherapy (Lilienfeld & Lynn, 2003).

Key Takeaways

• Anxiety is a natural part of life, but too much anxiety can be debilitating. Every year millions of

people suffer from anxiety disorders.

• People who suffer from generalized anxiety disorder experience anxiety, as well as a variety of

physical symptoms.

• Panic disorder involves the experience of panic attacks, including shortness of breath, heart

palpitations, trembling, and dizziness.

• Phobias are specific fears of a certain object, situation, or activity. Phobias are characterized by

their specificity and their irrationality.

13.2 ANXIETY AND DISSOCIATIVE DISORDERS: FEARING THE WORLD AROUND US • 550

• A common phobia is social phobia — extreme shyness around people or discomfort in social

situations.

• Obsessive-compulsive disorder is diagnosed when a person’s repetitive thoughts are so disturbing

and his or her compulsive behaviours so time consuming that they cause distress and significant

disruption in a person’s everyday life.

• People who have survived a terrible ordeal, such as combat, torture, rape, imprisonment, abuse,

natural disasters, or the death of someone close to them, may develop PTSD.

• Dissociative disorders, including dissociative amnesia and dissociative fugue, are conditions that

involve disruptions or breakdowns of memory, awareness, and identity. The dissociation is used

as a defence against the trauma.

• Dissociative identity disorder, in which two or more distinct and individual personalities exist in

the same person, is relatively rare and difficult to diagnose.

• Both nature and nurture contribute to the development of anxiety disorders.

Exercises and Critical Thinking

1. Under what situations do you experience anxiety? Are these experiences rational or irrational?

Does the anxiety keep you from doing some things that you would like to be able to do?

2. Do you or people you know suffer from phobias? If so, what are the phobias and how do you

think the phobias began? Do they seem more genetic or more environmental in origin?

References

Alpher, V. S. (1992). Introject and identity: Structural-interpersonal analysis and psychological assessment of

multiple personality disorder. Journal of Personality Assessment. 58(2), 347–367.

American Psychiatric Association. (2000). Diagnostic and statistical manual of mental disorders (4th ed., text rev.).

Washington, DC: Author.

Barry-Walsh, J. (2005). Dissociative identity disorder. Australian and New Zealand Journal of Psychiatry, 39,

109–110.

Brady, K. T., Back, S. E., & Coffey, S. F. (2004). Substance abuse and posttraumatic stress disorder. Current

Directions in Psychological Science, 13(5), 206–209.

Brewin, C., Andrews, B., & Valentine, J. (2000). Meta-analysis of risk factors for posttraumatic stress disorder in

trauma-exposed adults. Journal of Consulting and Clinical Psychology, 68(5), 748–766.

551 • INTRODUCTION TO PSYCHOLOGY - 1ST CANADIAN EDITION

Brown, T., & McNiff, J. (2009). Specificity of autonomic arousal to DSM-IV panic disorder and posttraumatic stress

disorder. Behaviour Research and Therapy, 47(6), 487–493.

Carde.a, E., & Gleaves, D. (2007). Dissociative disorders. In M. M. Hersen, S. M. Turner, & D. C. Beidel

(Eds.), Adult psychological disorder and diagnosis (5th ed., pp. 473–503). Hoboken, NJ: John Wiley & Sons.

Ceejay. (2006, September). My dance with panic [Web log post]. Panic Survivor. Retrieved

from http://www.panicsurvivor.com/index.php/2007102366/Survivor-Stories/My-Dance-With-Panic.html

Chase. (2010, February 28). Re: “anxiety?” [Online forum comment]. Mental Health Forum. Retrieved

from http://www.mentalhealthforum.net/forum/showthread.php?t=9359

Cloninger, C., & Dokucu, M. (2008). Somatoform and dissociative disorders. In S. H. Fatemi & P. J. Clayton

(Eds.), The medical basis of psychiatry (3rd ed., pp. 181–194). Totowa, NJ: Humana Press.

Damsa, C., Kosel, M., & Moussally, J. (2009). Current status of brain imaging in anxiety disorders. Current Opinion

in Psychiatry, 22(1), 96–110.

Davidson, J. (2000). Trauma: The impact of post-traumatic stress disorder. Journal of Psychopharmacology, 14(2

Suppl 1), S5–S12.

Dawson, P. L. (1990). Understanding and cooperation among alter and host personalities. American Journal of

Occupational Therapy, 44(11), 994–997.

Dolan, A. (2006, April 3). The obsessive disorder that haunts my life. Daily Mail. Retrieved

from http://www.dailymail.co.uk/tvshowbiz/article-381802/The-obsessive-disorder-haunts-life.html

Fredrikson, M., Annas, P., Fischer, H., & Wik, G. (1996). Gender and age differences in the prevalence of specific

fears and phobias. Behaviour Research and Therapy, 34(1), 33–39.

Gilbertson, M. W., Shenton, M. E., Ciszewski, A., Kasai, K., Lasko, N. B., Orr, S. P.,…Pitman, R. K. (2002).

Smaller hippocampal volume predicts pathologic vulnerability to psychological trauma. Nature Neuroscience,

5(11), 1242.

Gillig, P. M. (2009). Dissociative identity disorder: A controversial diagnosis. Psychiatry, 6(3), 24–29.

Gould, M. (2007, October 10). You can teach a man to kill but not to see dying. The Guardian. Retrieved

from http://www.guardian.co.uk/society/2007/oct/10/guardiansocietysupplement.socialcare2

Health Canada. (2006). It’s your health: Mental health – anxiety disorders. Retrieved July 2014 from

http://www.hc-sc.gc.ca/hl-vs/iyh-vsv/diseases-maladies/anxiety-anxieux-eng.php

Hettema, J. M., Neale, M. C., & Kendler, K. S. (2001). A review and meta-analysis of the genetic epidemiology of

anxiety disorders. The American Journal of Psychiatry, 158(10), 1568–1578.

Horwath, E., & Weissman, M. (2000). The epidemiology and cross-national presentation of obsessive-compulsive

disorder. Psychiatric Clinics of North America, 23(3), 493–507.

Kessler, R. C. , Berglund P., Demler O., Jin R, & Walters E. E. (2005) Lifetime prevalence and age-of-onset

distributions of DSM-IV disorders in the National Comorbidity Survey Replication. Archives of General Psychiatry,

62(6):593-602.

13.2 ANXIETY AND DISSOCIATIVE DISORDERS: FEARING THE WORLD AROUND US • 552

Kessler, R., Chiu, W., Demler, O., & Walters, E. (2005). Prevalence, severity, and comorbidity of 12-month DSMIV

disorders in the National Comorbidity Survey Replication. Archives of General Psychiatry, 62(6), 617–627.

Kessler, R., Meron-Ruscio, A., Shear, K., & Wittchen, H. (2009). Epidemiology of anxiety disorders. In M.

Anthony, & M. Stein (Eds). Oxford handbook of anxiety and related disorders. New York, NY: Oxford University

Press.

Kihlstrom, J. F., Glisky, M. L., & Angiulo, M. J. (1994). Dissociative tendencies and dissociative disorders. Journal

of Abnormal Psychology, 103, 117–124.

Kihlstrom, J. F. (2004). An unbalanced balancing act: Blocked, recovered, and false memories in the laboratory and

clinic. Clinical Psychology: Science and Practice, 11(1), 34–41.

Kluft, R. P. (1996). The diagnosis and treatment of dissociative identity disorder. In The Hatherleigh guide to

psychiatric disorders (1st ed., Vol. 1, pp. 49–96). New York, NY: Hatherleigh Press.

Lilienfeld, S. O., & Lynn, S. J. (2003). Dissociative identity disorder: Multiple personalities, multiple controversies.

In S. O. Lilienfeld, S. J. Lynn, & J. M. Lohr (Eds.), Science and pseudoscience in clinical psychology (pp. 109–142).

New York, NY: Guilford Press.

Lipsanen, T., Korkeila, J., Peltola, P., Jarvinen, J., Langen, K., & Lauerma, H. (2004). Dissociative disorders among

psychiatric patients: Comparison with a nonclinical sample. European Psychiatry, 19(1), 53–55.

MacLeod, C., Rutherford, E., Campbell, L., Ebsworthy, G., & Holker, L. (2002). Selective attention and emotional

vulnerability: Assessing the causal basis of their association through the experimental manipulation of attentional

bias. Journal of Abnormal Psychology, 111(1), 107–123.

Miller, M., & Kantrowitz, B. (1999, January 25). Unmasking Sybil: A reexamination of the most famous psychiatric

patient in history. Newsweek, pp. 11–16.

Robins, L., & Regier, D. A. (1991). Psychiatric disorders in America: The Epidemiologic Catchment Area Study.

New York, NY: Free Press.

Rubio, G., & Lopez-Ibor, J. (2007). Generalized anxiety disorder: A 40-year follow up study. Acta Psychiatric

Scandinavica, 115, 372–379.

Samuels, J., & Nestadt, G. (1997). Epidemiology and genetics of obsessive-compulsive disorder. International

Review of Psychiatry, 9, 61–71.

Smoller, J., Paulus, M., Fagerness, J., Purcell, S., Yamaki, L., Hirshfeld-Becker, D.,…Stein, M. (2008). Influence

of RGS2 on anxiety-related temperament, personality, and brain function. Archives of General Psychiatry, 65(3),

298–308.

Stein, M., Schork, N., & Gelernter, J. (2008). Gene-by-environment (serotonin transporter and childhood

maltreatment) interaction for anxiety sensitivity, an intermediate phenotype for anxiety

disorders. Neuropsychopharmacology, 33(2), 312–319.

Thoeringer, C., Ripke, S., Unschuld, P., Lucae, S., Ising, M., Bettecken, T.,…Erhardt, A. (2009). The GABA

transporter 1 (SLC6A1): A novel candidate gene for anxiety disorders. Journal of Neural Transmission, 116(6),

649–657.

553 • INTRODUCTION TO PSYCHOLOGY - 1ST CANADIAN EDITION

Twenge, J. (2006). Generation me. New York, NY: Free Press.

van der Hart, O., & Nijenhuis, E. R. S. (2009). Dissociative disorders. In P. H. Blaney & T. M. Millon (Eds.), Oxford

textbook of psychological disorder (2nd ed., pp. 452–481). New York, NY: Oxford University Press.

Image Attributions

Figure 13.6: Photo courtesy of Raj Patel, http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/

File:Beckham_LA_Galaxy_cropped.jpg

Figure 13.7: Rom.o Dallaire by gdcgraphics (http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/

File:Rom%C3%A9oDallaire07TIFF.jpg) used under CC BY 2.0 (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0/

deed.en).

Figure 13.8: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Shirley_Ardell_Mason.jpg.

13.2 ANXIETY AND DISSOCIATIVE DISORDERS: FEARING THE WORLD AROUND US • 554

13.3 Mood Disorders: Emotions as Illness

Learning Objectives

1. Summarize and differentiate the various forms of mood disorders, in particular dysthymia,

major depressive disorder, and bipolar disorder.

2. Explain the genetic and environmental factors that increase the likelihood that a person will

develop a mood disorder.

The everyday variations in our feelings of happiness and sadness reflect our mood, which can be defined as the

positive or negative feelings that are in the background of our everyday experiences. In most cases we are in a

relatively good mood, and this positive mood has some positive consequences —it encourages us to do what needs

to be done and to make the most of the situations we are in (Isen, 2003). When we are in a good mood our thought

processes open up, and we are more likely to approach others. We are more friendly and helpful to others when we

are in a good mood than we are when we are in a bad mood, and we may think more creatively (De Dreu, Baas, &

Nijstad, 2008). On the other hand, when we are in a bad mood we are more likely to prefer to be alone rather than

interact with others, we focus on the negative things around us, and our creativity suffers.

It is not unusual to feel down or low at times, particularly after a painful event such as the death of someone close to

us, a disappointment at work, or an argument with a partner. We often get depressed when we are tired, and many

people report being particularly sad during the winter when the days are shorter. Mood (or affective) disorders are

psychological disorders in which the person’s mood negatively influences his or her physical, perceptual, social,

and cognitive processes. People who suffer from mood disorders tend to experience more intense—and particularly

more intense negative — moods. About 5% of the Canadian population suffers from a mood disorder in a given

year (Health Canada, 2002).

The most common symptom of mood disorders is negative mood, also known as sadness or depression (Figure 13.9,

“Depression”). Consider the feelings of this person, who was struggling with depression and was diagnosed with

major depressive disorder:

I didn’t want to face anyone; I didn’t want to talk to anyone. I didn’t really want to do

anything for myself…I couldn’t sit down for a minute really to do anything that took

deep concentration…It was like I had big huge weights on my legs and I was trying to

swim and just kept sinking. And I’d get a little bit of air, just enough to survive and

then I’d go back down again. It was just constantly, constantly just fighting, fighting,

fighting, fighting, fighting. (National Institute of Mental Health, 2010)

555

Figure 13.9 Depression.

Mood disorders can occur at any age, and the median age of onset is 32 years (Kessler, Berglund, Demler, Jin, &

Walters, 2005). Recurrence of depressive episodes is fairly common and is greatest for those who first experience

depression before the age of 15 years. About twice as many women as men suffer from depression (Culbertson,

1997). This gender difference is consistent across many countries and cannot be explained entirely by the fact that

women are more likely to seek treatment for their depression. Rates of depression have been increasing, although

the reasons for this increase are not known (Kessler et al., 2003).

As you can see in the list below, the experience of depression has a variety of negative effects on our behaviours. In

addition to the loss of interest, productivity, and social contact that accompanies depression, the person’s sense of

hopelessness and sadness may become so severe that he or she considers or even succeeds in committing suicide. In

2009 there were 3,890 suicides in Canada, a rate of 11.5 per 100,000 (Navaneelan, 2012). Almost all the people who

commit suicide have a diagnosable psychiatric disorder at the time of their death (Statistics Canada, 2012; Sudak,

2005).

Behaviours Associated with Depression

• Changes in appetite; weight loss or gain

• Difficulty concentrating, remembering details, and making decisions

• Fatigue and decreased energy

• Feelings of hopelessness, helplessness, and pessimism

• Increased use of alcohol or drugs

• Irritability, restlessness

• Loss of interest in activities or hobbies once pleasurable, including sex

• Loss of interest in personal appearance

• Persistent aches or pains, headaches, cramps, or digestive problems that do not improve with

treatment

• Sleep disorders, either trouble sleeping or excessive sleeping

• Thoughts of suicide or attempts at suicide

13.3 MOOD DISORDERS: EMOTIONS AS ILLNESS • 556

Dysthymia and Major Depressive Disorder

The level of depression observed in people with mood disorders varies widely. People who experience depression

for many years, to the point that it becomes to seem normal and part of their everyday life, and who feel that they

are rarely or never happy, will likely be diagnosed with a mood disorder. If the depression is mild but long-lasting,

they will be diagnosed with dysthymia, a condition characterized by mild, but chronic, depressive symptoms that

last for at least two years.

If the depression continues and becomes even more severe, the diagnosis may become that of major depressive

disorder. Major depressive disorder (clinical depression) is a mental disorder characterized by an allencompassing

low mood accompanied by low self-esteem and loss of interest or pleasure in normally enjoyable

activities. Those who suffer from major depressive disorder feel an intense sadness, despair, and loss of interest

in pursuits that once gave them pleasure. These negative feelings profoundly limit the individual’s day-to-day

functioning and ability to maintain and develop interests in life (Fairchild & Scogin, 2008).

About 4.8% of Canadian adults suffer from a major depressive disorder in any given year. Major depressive disorder

occurs about twice as often in women as it does in men (Kessler, Chiu, Demler, & Walters, 2005; Kessler et al.,

2003). In some cases clinically depressed people lose contact with reality and may receive a diagnosis of major

depressive episode with psychotic features. In these cases the depression includes delusions and hallucinations.

Bipolar Disorder

Juliana is a 21-year-old single woman. Over the past several years she had been treated by a psychologist for

depression, but for the past few months she had been feeling a lot better. Juliana had landed a good job in a law

office and found a steady boyfriend. She told her friends and parents that she had been feeling particularly good —

her energy level was high and she was confident in herself and her life.

One day Juliana was feeling so good that she impulsively quit her new job and left town with her boyfriend on a

road trip. But the trip didn’t turn out well because Juliana became impulsive, impatient, and easily angered. Her

euphoria continued, and in one of the towns that they visited she left her boyfriend and went to a party with some

strangers that she had met. She danced into the early morning and ended up having sex with several of the men.

Eventually Juliana returned home to ask for money, but when her parents found out about her recent behaviour and

confronted her, she acted aggressively and abusively to them, so they referred her to a social worker. Juliana was

hospitalized, where she was diagnosed with bipolar disorder.

While dysthymia and major depressive disorder are characterized by overwhelming negative moods, bipolar

disorder is a psychological disorder characterized by swings in mood from overly “high” to sad and hopeless,

and back again, with periods of near-normal mood in between. Bipolar disorder is diagnosed in cases such as

Juliana’s, where experiences with depression are followed by a more normal period and then a period of mania or

euphoria in which the person feels particularly awake, alive, excited, and involved in everyday activities but is also

impulsive, agitated, and distracted. Without treatment, it is likely that Juliana would cycle back into depression and

then eventually into mania again, with the likelihood that she would harm herself or others in the process.

Based on his intense bursts of artistic productivity (in one two-month period in 1889 he produced 60 paintings),

personal writings, and behaviour (including cutting off his own ear), it is commonly thought that Vincent van Gogh

suffered from bipolar disorder. He committed suicide at age 37 (Thomas & Bracken, 2001). His painting, Starry

Night, is shown in Figure 13.10.

557 • INTRODUCTION TO PSYCHOLOGY - 1ST CANADIAN EDITION

Figure 13.10 Starry Night by Vincent van Gogh.

Bipolar disorder is an often chronic and lifelong condition that may begin in childhood. Although the normal pattern

involves swings from high to low, in some cases the person may experience both highs and lows at the same time.

Determining whether a person has bipolar disorder is difficult due to the frequent presence of comorbidity with both

depression and anxiety disorders. Bipolar disorder is more likely to be diagnosed when it is initially observed at an

early age, when the frequency of depressive episodes is high, and when there is a sudden onset of the symptoms

(Bowden, 2001).

Explaining Mood Disorders

Mood disorders are known to be at least in part genetic, because they are heritable (Berrettini, 2006; Merikangas

et al., 2002). Neurotransmitters also play an important role in mood disorders. Serotonin, dopamine, and

norepinephrine are all known to influence mood (Sher & Mann, 2003), and drugs that influence the actions of these

chemicals are often used to treat mood disorders.

The brains of those with mood disorders may in some cases show structural differences from those without them.

Videbech and Ravnkilde (2004) found that the hippocampus was smaller in depressed subjects than in normal

subjects, and this may be the result of reduced neurogenesis (the process of generating new neurons) in depressed

people (Warner-Schmidt & Duman, 2006). Antidepressant drugs may alleviate depression in part by increasing

neurogenesis (Duman & Monteggia, 2006).

Research Focus: Using Molecular Genetics to Unravel the Causes of Depression

Avshalom Caspi and his colleagues (Caspi et al., 2003) used a longitudinal study to test whether genetic

predispositions might lead some people, but not others, to suffer from depression as a result of environmental

stress. Their research focused on a particular gene, the 5-HTT gene, which is known to be important in the

production and use of the neurotransmitter serotonin. The researchers focused on this gene because serotonin

is known to be important in depression, and because selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors (SSRIs) have

been shown to be effective in treating depression.

13.3 MOOD DISORDERS: EMOTIONS AS ILLNESS • 558

People who experience stressful life events, for instance involving threat, loss, humiliation, or defeat, are

likely to experience depression. But biological-situational models suggest that a person’s sensitivity to

stressful events depends on his or her genetic makeup. The researchers therefore expected that people with

one type of genetic pattern would show depression following stress to a greater extent than people with a

different type of genetic pattern.

The research included a sample of 1,037 adults from Dunedin, New Zealand. Genetic analysis on the basis of

DNA samples allowed the researchers to divide the sample into two groups on the basis of the characteristics

of their 5-HTT gene. One group had a short version (or allele) of the gene, whereas the other group did not

have the short allele of the gene.

The participants also completed a measure where they indicated the number and severity of stressful life

events that they had experienced over the past five years. The events included employment, financial,

housing, health, and relationship stressors. The dependent measure in the study was the level of depression

reported by the participant, as assessed using a structured interview test (Robins, Cottler, Bucholtz, &

Compton, 1995).

As you can see in Figure 13.11 as the number of stressful experiences the participants reported increased

from 0 to 4, depression also significantly increased for the participants with the short version of the gene (top

panel). But for the participants who did not have a short allele, increasing stress did not increase depression

(bottom panel). Furthermore, for the participants who experienced four stressors over the past five years,

33% of the participants who carried the short version of the gene became depressed, whereas only 17% of

participants who did not have the short version did.

Figure 13.11 Research. [Long Description]

This important study provides an excellent example of how genes and environment work together: an

individual’s response to environmental stress was influenced by his or her genetic makeup.

But psychological and social determinants are also important in creating mood disorders and depression. In terms

559 • INTRODUCTION TO PSYCHOLOGY - 1ST CANADIAN EDITION

of psychological characteristics, mood states are influenced in large part by our cognitions. Negative thoughts about

ourselves and our relationships to others create negative moods, and a goal of cognitive therapy for mood disorders

is to attempt to change people’s cognitions to be more positive. Negative moods also create negative behaviours

toward others, such as acting sad, slouching, and avoiding others, which may lead those others to respond negatively

to the person, for instance by isolating that person, which then creates even more depression (Figure 13.12, “Cycle

of Depression”). You can see how it might become difficult for people to break out of this “cycle of depression.”

Figure 13.12 Cycle of Depression. Negative thoughts cause negative

emotions which may cause negative behaviours which may lead to

negative responses from others which may cause more negative thoughts.

Weissman et al. (1996) found that rates of depression varied greatly among countries, with the highest rates in

European and North American countries and the lowest rates in Asian countries. These differences seem to be due

to discrepancies between individual feelings and cultural expectations about what one should feel. People from

European and North American cultures report that it is important to experience emotions such as happiness and

excitement, whereas the Chinese report that it is more important to be stable and calm. Because North Americans

may feel that they are not happy or excited but that they are supposed to be, this may increase their depression (Tsai,

Knutson, & Fung, 2006).

Key Takeaways

• Mood is the positive or negative feelings that are in the background of our everyday experiences.

• We all may get depressed in our daily lives, but people who suffer from mood disorders tend to

experience more intense — and particularly more intense negative — moods.

• The most common symptom of mood disorders is negative mood.

• If a person experiences mild but long-lasting depression, he or she will be diagnosed with

dysthymia. If the depression continues and becomes even more severe, the diagnosis may become

that of major depressive disorder.

13.3 MOOD DISORDERS: EMOTIONS AS ILLNESS • 560

• Bipolar disorder is characterized by swings in mood from overly “high” to sad and hopeless, and

back again, with periods of near-normal mood in between.

• Mood disorders are caused by the interplay among biological, psychological, and social variables.

Exercises and Critical Thinking

1. Give a specific example of the negative cognitions, behaviours, and responses of others that

might contribute to a cycle of depression like that shown in Figure 13.12, “Cycle of Depression.”

2. Given the discussion about the causes of negative moods and depression, what might people do

to try to feel better on days that they are experiencing negative moods?

References

Berrettini, W. (2006). Genetics of bipolar and unipolar disorders. In D. J. Stein, D. J. Kupfer, & A. F. Schatzberg

(Eds.), Textbook of mood disorders. Washington, DC: American Psychiatric Publishing.

Bowden, C. L. (2001). Strategies to reduce misdiagnosis of bipolar depression. Psychiatric Services, 52(1), 51–55.

Caspi, A., Sugden, K., Moffitt, T. E., Taylor, A., Craig, I. W., Harrington, H.,…Poulton, R. (2003). Influence of life

stress on depression: Moderation by a polymorphism in the 5-HTT gene. Science, 301(5631), 386–389.

Culbertson, F. M. (1997). Depression and gender: An international review. American Psychologist, 52, 25–31.

De Dreu, C. K. W., Baas, M., & Nijstad, B. A. (2008). Hedonic tone and activation level in the mood-creativity

link: Toward a dual pathway to creativity model. Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, 94(5), 739–756.

Duman, R. S., & Monteggia, L. M. (2006). A neurotrophic model for stress-related mood disorders. Biological

Psychiatry, 59, 1116–1127.

Fairchild, K., & Scogin, F. (2008). Assessment and treatment of depression. In K. Laidlow & B. Knight

(Eds.), Handbook of emotional disorders in later life: Assessment and treatment. New York, NY: Oxford University

Press.

Health Canada. (2002). A Report on Mental Illnesses in Canada. Ottawa, Canada. Retrieved July 2014 from

http://www.phac-aspc.gc.ca/publicat/miic-mmac/chap_2-eng.php

Isen, A. M. (2003). Positive affect as a source of human strength. In J. Aspinall, A psychology of human strengths:

Fundamental questions and future directions for a positive psychology (pp. 179–195). Washington, DC: American

Psychological Association.

Kessler, R. C., Berglund, P. A., Demler, O., Jin, R., & Walters, E. E. (2005). Lifetime prevalence and age-of-onset

561 • INTRODUCTION TO PSYCHOLOGY - 1ST CANADIAN EDITION

distributions of DSM-IV disorders in the National Comorbidity Survey Replication (NCS-R). Archives of General

Psychiatry, 62(6), 593–602.

Kessler, R. C., Berglund, P., Demler, O, Jin, R., Koretz, D., Merikangas, K. R.,…Wang, P. S. (2003). The

epidemiology of major depressive disorder: Results from the National Comorbidity Survey Replication (NCSR).

Journal of the American Medical Association, 289(23), 3095–3105.

Kessler, R. C., Chiu, W. T., Demler, O., & Walters, E. E. (2005). Prevalence, severity, and comorbidity of

12-month DSM-IV disorders in the National Comorbidity Survey Replication. Archives of General Psychiatry,

62(6), 617–27.

Merikangas, K., Chakravarti, A., Moldin, S., Araj, H., Blangero, J., Burmeister, M,…Takahashi, A. S. (2002).

Future of genetics of mood disorders research. Biological Psychiatry, 52(6), 457–477.

National Institute of Mental Health. (2010, April 8). People with depression discuss their illness. Retrieved

from http://www.nimh.nih.gov/media/video/health/depression.shtml

Navaneelan, T. (2012). Health at a Glance: Suicide rates: an overview. Statistics Canada. Retrieved 2014 from

http://www.statcan.gc.ca/pub/82-624-x/2012001/article/11696-eng.htm

Robins, L. N., Cottler, L., Bucholtz, K., & Compton, W. (1995). Diagnostic interview schedule for DSM-1V. St.

Louis, MO: Washington University.

Sher, L., & Mann, J. J. (2003). Psychiatric pathophysiology: Mood disorders. In A. Tasman, J. Kay, & J. A.

Lieberman (Eds.), Psychiatry. New York, NY: John Wiley & Sons.

Statistics Canada. (2012). Suicides and suicide rate by sex and age group. Retrieved July 2014 from

http://www.statcan.gc.ca/tables-tableaux/sum-som/l01/cst01/hlth66a-eng.htm

Sudak, H. S. (2005). Suicide. In B. J. Sadock & V. A. Sadock (Eds.), Kaplan & Sadock’s comprehensive textbook

of psychiatry. Philadelphia, PA: Lippincott Williams & Wilkins.

Thomas, P., & Bracken, P. (2001). Vincent’s bandage: The art of selling a drug for bipolar disorder. British Medical

Journal, 323, 1434.

Tsai, J. L., Knutson, B., & Fung, H. H. (2006). Cultural variation in affect valuation. Journal of Personality and

Social Psychology, 90, 288–307.

Videbech, P., & Ravnkilde, B. (2004). Hippocampal volume and depression: A meta-analysis of MRI

studies. American Journal of Psychiatry, 161, 1957–1966.

Warner-Schmidt, J. L., & Duman, R. S. (2006). Hippocampal neurogenesis: Opposing effects of stress and

antidepressant treatment. Hippocampus, 16, 239–249.

Weissman, M. M., Bland, R. C., Canino, G. J., Greenwald, S., Hwu, H-G., Joyce, P. R., Yeh, E-K. (1996). Crossnational

epidemiology of major depression and bipolar disorder. Journal of the American Medical Association, 276,

293–299.

13.3 MOOD DISORDERS: EMOTIONS AS ILLNESS • 562

Image Attributions

Figure 13.9: “sad looking woman” by Bradley Gordon is licensed under CC BY 2.0 license

(http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0/deed.en_CA)

Figure 13.11: Adapted from Caspi, A., et al., 2003.

Long Description

Figure 13.11 long description: Genetics and Causes of Depression

Major Depression Episode (%)

Number of stressful life events experienced Group with short version of allele Group without short version of allele

0 10% 10%

1 11% 16%

2 14% 18%

3 28% 11%

4 or more 33% 18%

[Return to Figure 13.11]

563 • INTRODUCTION TO PSYCHOLOGY - 1ST CANADIAN EDITION

13.4 Schizophrenia: The Edge of Reality and Consciousness

Learning Objectives

1. Categorize and describe the three major symptoms of schizophrenia.

2. Differentiate the five types of schizophrenia and their characteristics.

3. Identify the biological and social factors that increase the likelihood that a person will develop

schizophrenia.

The term schizophrenia, which in Greek means split mind, was first used to describe a psychological disorder by

Eugen Bleuler (1857-1939), a Swiss psychiatrist who was studying patients who had very severe thought disorders.

Schizophrenia is a serious psychological disorder marked by delusions, hallucinations, loss of contact with reality,

inappropriate affect, disorganized speech, social withdrawal, and deterioration of adaptive behaviour (Figure

13.13, “Schizophrenia”).

Figure 13.13 Schizophrenia. People with schizophrenia may exhibit disorganized behaviour, as

this person does.

Schizophrenia is the most chronic and debilitating of all psychological disorders. It affects men and women equally,

occurs in similar rates across ethnicities and across cultures, and affects at any one time approximately 350,000

people in Canada (Public Health Agency of Canada, 2012). Onset of schizophrenia is usually between the ages of

16 and 30 and rarely after the age of 45 or in children (Mueser & McGurk, 2004; Nicolson, Lenane, Hamburger,

Fernandez, Bedwell, & Rapoport, 2000).

564

Symptoms of Schizophrenia

Schizophrenia is accompanied by a variety of symptoms, but not all patients have all of them (Lindenmayer &

Khan, 2006). As you can see in Table 13.4, “Positive, Negative, and Cognitive Symptoms of Schizophrenia,” the

symptoms are divided into positive symptoms, negative symptoms, and cognitive symptoms (American Psychiatric

Association, 2008; National Institute of Mental Health, 2010). Positive symptoms refer to the presence of abnormal

behaviours or experiences (such as hallucinations) that are not observed in normal people, whereas negative

symptoms (such as lack of affect and an inability to socialize with others) refer to the loss or deterioration of

thoughts and behaviours that are typical of normal functioning. Finally, cognitive symptoms are the changes in

cognitive processes that accompany schizophrenia (Skrabalo, 2000). Because the patient has lost contact with

reality, we say that he or she is experiencing psychosis, which is a psychological condition characterized by a loss

of contact with reality.

Table 13.4 Positive, Negative, and Cognitive Symptoms of Schizophrenia.

[Skip Table]

Positive symptoms Negative symptoms Cognitive symptoms

Hallucinations Social withdrawal Poor executive control

Delusions (of grandeur or persecution) Flat affect and lack of pleasure in everyday life Trouble focusing

Derailment Apathy and loss of motivation Working memory problems

Grossly disorganized behaviour Distorted sense of time Poor problem-solving abilities

Inappropriate affect Lack of goal-oriented activity

Movement disorders Limited speech

Poor hygiene and grooming

People with schizophrenia almost always suffer from hallucinations — imaginary sensations that occur in the

absence of a real stimulus or which are gross distortions of a real stimulus. Auditory hallucinations are the most

common and are reported by approximately three-quarters of patients (Nicolson, Mayberg, Pennell, & Nemeroff,

2006). Schizophrenic patients frequently report hearing imaginary voices that curse them, comment on their

behaviour, order them to do things, or warn them of danger (National Institute of Mental Health, 2009). Visual

hallucinations are less common and frequently involve seeing God or the devil (De Sousa, 2007).

Schizophrenic people also commonly experience delusions, which are false beliefs not commonly shared by others

within one’s culture, and maintained even though they are obviously out of touch with reality. People with delusions

of grandeur believe that they are important, famous, or powerful. They often become convinced that they are

someone else, such as the president or God, or that they have some special talent or ability. Some claim to have been

assigned to a special covert mission (Buchanan & Carpenter, 2005). People with delusions of persecution believe

that a person or group seeks to harm them. They may think that people are able to read their minds and control their

thoughts (Maher, 2001). If a person suffers from delusions of persecution, there is a good chance that he or she will

become violent, and this violence is typically directed at family members (Buchanan & Carpenter, 2005).

People suffering from schizophrenia also often suffer from the positive symptom of derailment — the shifting

from one subject to another, without following any one line of thought to conclusion — and may exhibit grossly

disorganized behaviour including inappropriate sexual behaviour, peculiar appearance and dress, unusual agitation

(e.g., shouting and swearing), strange body movements, and awkward facial expressions. It is also common for

565 • INTRODUCTION TO PSYCHOLOGY - 1ST CANADIAN EDITION

schizophrenia sufferers to experience inappropriate affect. For example, a patient may laugh uncontrollably when

hearing sad news. Movement disorders typically appear as agitated movements, such as repeating a certain motion

again and again, but can in some cases include catatonia, a state in which a person does not move and is

unresponsive to others (Janno, Holi, Tuisku, & Wahlbeck, 2004; Rosebush & Mazurek, 2010).

Negative symptoms of schizophrenia include social withdrawal, poor hygiene and grooming, poor problem-solving

abilities, and a distorted sense of time (Skrabalo, 2000). Patients often suffer from flat affect, which means that

they express almost no emotional response (e.g., they speak in a monotone and have a blank facial expression)

even though they may report feeling emotions (Kring, 1999). Another negative symptom is the tendency toward

incoherent language, such as repeating the speech of others (“echo speech”). Some schizophrenics experience motor

disturbances, ranging from complete catatonia and apparent obliviousness to their environment to random and

frenzied motor activity during which they become hyperactive and incoherent (Kirkpatrick & Tek, 2005).

Not all schizophrenic patients exhibit negative symptoms, but those who do also tend to have the poorest outcomes

(Fenton & McGlashan, 1994). Negative symptoms are predictors of deteriorated functioning in everyday life and

often make it impossible for sufferers to work or to care for themselves.

Cognitive symptoms of schizophrenia are typically difficult for outsiders to recognize but make it extremely

difficult for the sufferer to lead a normal life. These symptoms include difficulty comprehending information and

using it to make decisions (the lack of executive control), difficulty maintaining focus and attention, and problems

with working memory (the ability to use information immediately after it is learned).

Explaining Schizophrenia

There is no single cause of schizophrenia. Rather, a variety of biological and environmental risk factors interact in

a complex way to increase the likelihood that someone might develop schizophrenia (Walker, Kestler, Bollini, &

Hochman, 2004).

Studies in molecular genetics have not yet identified the particular genes responsible for schizophrenia, but

it is evident from research using family, twin, and adoption studies that genetics are important (Walker &

Tessner, 2008). As you can see in Figure 13.14 ,”Genetic Disposition to Develop Schizophrenia,” the likelihood of

developing schizophrenia increases dramatically if a close relative also has the disease.

Neuroimaging studies have found some differences in brain structure between schizophrenic and normal patients.

In some people with schizophrenia, the cerebral ventricles (fluid-filled spaces in the brain) are enlarged (Suddath,

Christison, Torrey, Casanova, & Weinberger, 1990). People with schizophrenia also frequently show an overall loss

of neurons in the cerebral cortex, and some show less activity in the frontal and temporal lobes, which are the areas

of the brain involved in language, attention, and memory. This would explain the deterioration of functioning in

language and thought processing that is commonly experienced by schizophrenic patients (Galderisi et al., 2008).

Many researchers believe that schizophrenia is caused in part by excess dopamine, and this theory is supported

by the fact that most of the drugs useful in treating schizophrenia inhibit dopamine activity in the brain (Javitt &

Laruelle, 2006). Levels of serotonin may also play a part (Inayama et al., 1996). But recent evidence suggests that

the role of neurotransmitters in schizophrenia is more complicated than was once believed. It also remains unclear

whether observed differences in the neurotransmitter systems of people with schizophrenia cause the disease, or if

they are the result of the disease itself or its treatment (Csernansky & Grace, 1998).

A genetic predisposition to developing schizophrenia does not always develop into the actual disorder. Even if a

person has an identical twin with schizophrenia, that person still has less than a 50% chance of developing it, and

13.4 SCHIZOPHRENIA: THE EDGE OF REALITY AND CONSCIOUSNESS • 566

Figure 13.14 Genetic Disposition to Develop Schizophrenia. The risk of developing schizophrenia

increases substantially if a person has a relative with the disease. [Long Description]

over 60% of all schizophrenic people have no first- or second-degree relatives with schizophrenia (Gottesman &

Erlenmeyer-Kimling, 2001; Riley & Kendler, 2005). This suggests that there are important environmental causes as

well.

One hypothesis is that schizophrenia is caused in part by disruptions to normal brain development in infancy that

may be caused by poverty, malnutrition, and disease (Brown et al., 2004; Murray & Bramon, 2005; Susser et al.,

1996; Waddington, Lane, Larkin, & O’Callaghan, 1999). Stress also increases the likelihood that a person will

develop schizophrenic symptoms; onset and relapse of schizophrenia typically occur during periods of increased

stress (Walker, Mittal, & Tessner, 2008). However, it may be that people who develop schizophrenia are more

vulnerable to stress than others and not necessarily that they experience more stress than others (Walker, Mittal, &

Tessner, 2008). Many homeless people are likely to be suffering from undiagnosed schizophrenia.

Another social factor that has been found to be important in schizophrenia is the degree to which one or more of

the patient’s relatives is highly critical or highly emotional in their attitude toward the patient. Hooley and Hiller

(1998) found that schizophrenic patients who ended a stay in a hospital and returned to a family with high expressed

emotion were three times more likely to relapse than patients who returned to a family with low expressed emotion.

It may be that the families with high expressed emotion are a source of stress to the patient.

Key Takeaways

• Schizophrenia is a serious psychological disorder marked by delusions, hallucinations, and loss of

contact with reality.

• Schizophrenia is accompanied by a variety of symptoms, but not all patients have all of them.

• Because the schizophrenic patient has lost contact with reality, we say that he or she is

experiencing psychosis.

567 • INTRODUCTION TO PSYCHOLOGY - 1ST CANADIAN EDITION

• Positive symptoms of schizophrenia include hallucinations, delusions, derailment, disorganized

behaviour, inappropriate affect, and catatonia.

• Negative symptoms of schizophrenia include social withdrawal, poor hygiene and grooming, poor

problem-solving abilities, and a distorted sense of time.

• Cognitive symptoms of schizophrenia include difficulty comprehending and using information

and problems maintaining focus.

• There is no single cause of schizophrenia. Rather, there are a variety of biological and

environmental risk factors that interact in a complex way to increase the likelihood that someone

might develop schizophrenia.

Exercise and Critical Thinking

1. How should society deal with people with schizophrenia? Is it better to keep patients in

psychiatric facilities against their will, but where they can be observed and supported, or to allow

them to live in the community, where they may commit violent crimes against themselves or

others? What factors influence your opinion?

References

American Psychiatric Association. (2008). Diagnostic and statistical manual of mental disorders (4th ed., text rev.).

Washington, DC: Author.

Brown, A. S., Begg, M. D., Gravenstein, S., Schaefer, C. S., Wyatt, R. J., Bresnahan, M.,…Susser, E. S. (2004).

Serologic evidence of prenatal influenza in the etiology of schizophrenia. Archives of General Psychiatry, 61,

774–780.

Buchanan, R. W., & Carpenter, W. T. (2005). Concept of schizophrenia. In B. J. Sadock & V. A. Sadock

(Eds.), Kaplan & Sadock’s comprehensive textbook of psychiatry. Philadelphia, PA: Lippincott Williams &

Wilkins.

Csernansky, J. G., & Grace, A. A. (1998). New models of the pathophysiology of schizophrenia: Editors’

introduction. Schizophrenia Bulletin, 24(2), 185–187.

De Sousa, A. (2007). Types and contents of hallucinations in schizophrenia. Journal of Pakistan Psychiatric

Society, 4(1), 29.

Fenton, W. S., & McGlashan, T. H. (1994). Antecedents, symptom progression, and long-term outcome of the

deficit syndrome in schizophrenia. American Journal of Psychiatry, 151, 351–356.

13.4 SCHIZOPHRENIA: THE EDGE OF REALITY AND CONSCIOUSNESS • 568

Galderisi, S., Quarantelli, M., Volper, U., Mucci, A., Cassano, G. B., Invernizzi, G.,…Maj, M. (2008). Patterns of

structural MRI abnormalities in deficit and nondeficit schizophrenia. Schizophrenia Bulletin, 34, 393–401.

Gottesman, I. I. (1991). Schizophrenia genesis: The origins of madness. New York, NY: W. H. Freeman.

Gottesman, I. I., & Erlenmeyer-Kimling, L. (2001). Family and twin studies as a head start in defining prodomes

and endophenotypes for hypothetical early interventions in schizophrenia. Schizophrenia Research, 5(1), 93–102.

Hooley, J. M., & Hiller, J. B. (1998). Expressed emotion and the pathogenesis of relapse in schizophrenia. In M.

F. Lenzenweger & R. H. Dworkin (Eds.), Origins and development of schizophrenia: Advances in experimental

psychopathology (pp. 447–468). Washington, DC: American Psychological Association.

Inayama, Y., Yoneda, H., Sakai, T., Ishida, T., Nonomura, Y., Kono, Y.,…Asaba, H. (1996). Positive association

between a DNA sequence variant in the serotonin 2A receptor gene and schizophrenia. American Journal of

Medical Genetics, 67(1), 103–105.

Janno, S., Holi, M., Tuisku, K., & Wahlbeck, K. (2004). Prevalence of neuroleptic-induced movement disorders in

chronic schizophrenia patients. American Journal of Psychiatry, 161, 160–163.

Javitt, D. C., & Laruelle, M. (2006). Neurochemical theories. In J. A. Lieberman, T. S. Stroup, & D. O. Perkins

(Eds.), Textbook of schizophrenia (pp. 85–116). Washington, DC: American Psychiatric Publishing.

Kirkpatrick, B., & Tek, C. (2005). Schizophrenia: Clinical features and psychological disorder concepts. In B.

J. Sadock & S. V. Sadock (Eds.), Kaplan & Sadock’s comprehensive textbook of psychiatry (pp. 1416–1435).

Philadelphia, PA: Lippincott Williams & Wilkins.

Kring, A. M. (1999). Emotion in schizophrenia: Old mystery, new understanding. Current Directions in

Psychological Science, 8, 160–163.

Lindenmayer, J. P., & Khan, A. (2006). Psychological disorder. In J. A. Lieberman, T. S. Stroup, & D. O. Perkins

(Eds.), Textbook of schizophrenia (pp. 187–222). Washington, DC: American Psychiatric Publishing.

Maher, B. A. (2001). Delusions. In P. B. Sutker & H. E. Adams (Eds.), Comprehensive handbook of psychological

disorder (3rd ed., pp. 309–370). New York, NY: Kluwer Academic/Plenum.

Mueser, K. T., & McGurk, S. R. (2004). Schizophrenia. Lancet, 363(9426), 2063–2072.

Murray, R. M., & Bramon, E. (2005). Developmental model of schizophrenia. In B. J. Sadock & V. A. Sadock

(Eds.), Kaplan & Sadock’s comprehensive textbook of psychiatry (pp. 1381–1395). Philadelphia, PA: Lippincott

Williams & Wilkins.

National Institute of Mental Health (2009, September 8). What are the symptoms of schizophrenia? Retrieved from

http://www.nimh.nih.gov/health/publications/schizophrenia/what-are-the-symptoms-of-schizophrenia.shtml

National Institute of Mental Health. (2010, April 26). What is schizophrenia? Retrieved

from http://www.nimh.nih.gov/health/topics/schizophrenia/index.shtml

Nicolson, R., Lenane, M., Hamburger, S. D., Fernandez, T., Bedwell, J., & Rapoport, J. L. (2000). Lessons from

childhood-onset schizophrenia. Brain Research Review, 31(2–3), 147–156.

Nicolson, S. E., Mayberg, H. S., Pennell, P. B., & Nemeroff, C. B. (2006). Persistent auditory hallucinations that

are unresponsive to antipsychotic drugs. The American Journal of Psychiatry, 163, 1153–1159.

569 • INTRODUCTION TO PSYCHOLOGY - 1ST CANADIAN EDITION

Public Health Agency of Canada. (2012). A report on mental illnesses in Canada. Retrieved May 2014 from

http://www.phac-aspc.gc.ca/publicat/miic-mmac/sum-eng.php

Riley, B. P., & Kendler, K. S. (2005). Schizophrenia: Genetics. In B. J. Sadock & V. A. Sadock (Eds.), Kaplan &

Sadock’s comprehensive textbook of psychiatry (pp.1354–1370). Philadelphia, PA: Lippincott Williams & Wilkins.

Rosebush, P. I., & Mazurek, M. F. (2010). Catatonia and its treatment. Schizophrenia Bulleting, 36(2), 239–242.

Skrabalo, A. (2000). Negative symptoms in schizophrenia(s): The conceptual basis. Harvard Brain, 7, 7–10.

Suddath, R. L., Christison, G. W., Torrey, E. F., Casanova, M. F., & Weinberger, D. R. (1990). Anatomical

abnormalities in the brains of monozygotic twins discordant for schizophrenia. New England Journal of Medicine,

322(12), 789–794.

Susser, E. B., Neugebauer, R., Hock, H.W., Brown, A. S., Lin, S., Labowitz, D., & Gorman, J. M. (1996).

Schizophrenia after prenatal famine: Further evidence. Archives of general psychiatry, 53, 25–31.

Waddington J. L., Lane, A., Larkin, C., & O’Callaghan, E. (1999). The neurodevelopmental basis of schizophrenia:

Clinical clues from cerebro-craniofacial dysmorphogenesis, and the roots of a lifetime trajectory of

disease. Biological Psychiatry, 46(1), 31–9.

Walker, E., & Tessner, K. (2008). Schizophrenia. Perspectives on Psychological Science, 3(1), 30–37.

Walker, E., Kesler, L., Bollini, A., & Hochman, K. (2004). Schizophrenia: Etiology and course. Annual Review of

Psychology, 55, 401–430.

Walker, E., Mittal, V., & Tessner, K. (2008). Stress and the hypothalamic pituitary adrenal axis in the developmental

course of schizophrenia. Annual Review of Clinical Psychology, 4, 189–216.

Image Attributions

Figure 13.13: by Max Avdeev, http://www.flickr.com/photos/avdeev/4203380988

Figure 13.14: Adapted from Gottesman, 1991.

13.4 SCHIZOPHRENIA: THE EDGE OF REALITY AND CONSCIOUSNESS • 570

Long Descriptions

Figure 13.14 long description: Genetic disposition to develop schizophrenia

Genes shared Relationship to person with schizophrenia Risk of developing schizophrenia (%)

First cousins 2%

Third-degree relatives (12.5%)

Uncles and aunts 2%

Nephews and nieces 4%

Second-degree relatives (25%)

Grandchildren 5%

Half-siblings 6%

First-degree relatives (50%)

Parents 6%

Siblings 9%

Children 13%

Fraternal twins 17%

100%

Identical twins 48%

[Return to Figure 13.14]

571 • INTRODUCTION TO PSYCHOLOGY - 1ST CANADIAN EDITION

13.5 Personality Disorders

Learning Objectives

1. Categorize the different types of personality disorders and differentiate antisocial personality

disorder from borderline personality disorder.

2. Outline the biological and environmental factors that may contribute to a person developing a

personality disorder.

To this point in the chapter we have considered the psychological disorders of the Diagnostic and Statistical

Manual of Mental Disorders (DSM) categorization system. A personality disorder is a disorder characterized

by inflexible patterns of thinking, feeling, or relating to others that cause problems in personal, social, and

work situations. Personality disorders tend to emerge during late childhood or adolescence and usually continue

throughout adulthood (Widiger, 2006). The disorders can be problematic for the people who have them, but they

are less likely to bring people to a therapist for treatment.

The personality disorders are summarized in Table 13.5, “Descriptions of the Personality Disorders.” They are

categorized into three types: those characterized by odd or eccentric behaviour, those characterized by dramatic or

erratic behaviour, and those characterized by anxious or inhibited behaviour. As you consider the personality types

described in Table 13.5, I’m sure you’ll think of people that you know who have each of these traits, at least to

some degree. Probably you know someone who seems a bit suspicious and paranoid, who feels that other people are

always “ganging up on him,” and who really do not trust other people very much. Perhaps you know someone who

fits the bill of being overly dramatic—the “drama queen” who is always raising a stir and whose emotions seem to

turn everything into a big deal. Or you might have a friend who is overly dependent on others and can’t seem to get

a life of her own.

The personality traits that make up the personality disorders are common — we see them in the people with whom

we interact every day—yet they may become problematic when they are rigid, overused, or interfere with everyday

behaviour (Lynam & Widiger, 2001). What is perhaps common to all the disorders is the person’s inability to

accurately understand and be sensitive to the motives and needs of the people around them.

572

Table 13.5 Descriptions of the Personality Disorders.1

[Skip Table]

Cluster

Personality

disorder Characteristics

Schizotypal

Peculiar or eccentric manners of speaking or dressing. Strange beliefs. “Magical thinking” such as

belief in ESP or telepathy. Difficulty forming relationships. May react oddly in conversation, not

respond, or talk to self. Speech elaborate or difficult to follow. (Possibly a mild form of

schizophrenia.)

Paranoid

Distrust in others, suspicion that people have sinister motives. Apt to challenge the loyalties of

friends and read hostile intentions into others’ actions. Prone to anger and aggressive outbursts

but otherwise emotionally cold. Often jealous, guarded, secretive, overly serious.

A. Odd/

eccentric

Schizoid

Extreme introversion and withdrawal from relationships. Prefers to be alone, little interest in

others. Humourless, distant, often absorbed with own thoughts and feelings, a daydreamer.

Fearful of closeness, with poor social skills, often seen as a “loner.”

Antisocial

Impoverished moral sense or “conscience.” History of deception, crime, legal problems,

impulsive and aggressive or violent behaviour. Little emotional empathy or remorse for hurting

others. Manipulative, careless, callous. At high risk for substance abuse and alcoholism.

Borderline

Unstable moods and intense, stormy personal relationships. Frequent mood changes and anger,

unpredictable impulses. Self-mutilation or suicidal threats or gestures to get attention or

manipulate others. Self-image fluctuation and a tendency to see others as “all good” or “all bad.”

Histrionic

Constant attention seeking. Grandiose language, provocative dress, exaggerated illnesses, all to

gain attention. Believes that everyone loves him. Emotional, lively, overly dramatic, enthusiastic,

and excessively flirtatious.

B.

Dramatic/

erratic

Narcissistic

Inflated sense of self-importance, absorbed by fantasies of self and success. Exaggerates own

achievement, assumes others will recognize they are superior. Good first impressions but poor

longer-term relationships. Exploitative of others.

Avoidant

Socially anxious and uncomfortable unless he or she is confident of being liked. In contrast with

schizoid person, yearns for social contact. Fears criticism and worries about being embarrassed in

front of others. Avoids social situations due to fear of rejection.

Dependent

Submissive, dependent, requiring excessive approval, reassurance, and advice. Clings to people

and fears losing them. Lacking self-confidence. Uncomfortable when alone. May be devastated

by end of close relationship or suicidal if breakup is threatened.

C.

Anxious/

inhibited

Obsessivecompulsive

Conscientious, orderly, perfectionist. Excessive need to do everything “right.” Inflexibly high

standards and caution can interfere with his or her productivity. Fear of errors can make this

person strict and controlling. Poor expression of emotions. (Not the same as obsessive-compulsive

disorder.)

The personality disorders create a bit of a problem for diagnosis. For one, it is frequently difficult for the clinician

to accurately diagnose which of the many personality disorders a person has, although the friends and colleagues

of the person can generally do a good job of it (Oltmanns & Turkheimer, 2006). And the personality disorders are

highly comorbid; if a person has one, it’s likely that he or she has others as well. Also, the number of people with

personality disorders is estimated to be as high as 15% of the population (Grant et al., 2004), which might make us

wonder if these are really disorders in any real sense of the word.

Although they are considered as separate disorders, the personality disorders are essentially milder versions of more

severe disorders (Huang et al., 2009). For example, obsessive-compulsive personality disorder is a milder version

of obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD), and schizoid and schizotypal personality disorders are characterized

573 • INTRODUCTION TO PSYCHOLOGY - 1ST CANADIAN EDITION

by symptoms similar to those of schizophrenia. This overlap in classification causes some confusion, and some

theorists have argued that the personality disorders should be eliminated from the DSM. But clinicians normally

differentiate Axis I and Axis II disorders, and thus the distinction is useful for them (Krueger, 2005; Phillips, Yen,

& Gunderson, 2003; Verheul, 2005).

Although it is not possible to consider the characteristics of each of the personality disorders in this book, let’s

focus on two that have important implications for behaviour. The first, borderline personality disorder (BPD), is

important because it is so often associated with suicide, and the second, antisocial personality disorder (APD),

because it is the foundation of criminal behaviour. Borderline and antisocial personality disorders are also good

examples to consider because they are so clearly differentiated in terms of their focus. BPD (more frequently found

in women than men) is known as an internalizing disorder because the behaviours that it entails (e.g., suicide and

self-mutilation) are mostly directed toward the self. APD (mostly found in men), on the other hand, is a type of

externalizing disorder in which the problem behaviours (e.g., lying, fighting, vandalism, and other criminal activity)

focus primarily on harm to others.

Borderline Personality Disorder

Borderline personality disorder (BPD) is a psychological disorder characterized by a prolonged disturbance

of personality accompanied by mood swings, unstable personal relationships, identity problems, threats of selfdestructive

behaviour, fears of abandonment, and impulsivity. BPD is widely diagnosed—up to 20% of psychiatric

patients are given the diagnosis, and it may occur in up to 2% of the general population (Hyman, 2002). About

three-quarters of diagnosed cases of BDP are women.

People with BPD fear being abandoned by others. They often show a clinging dependency on the other person

and engage in manipulation to try to maintain the relationship. They become angry if the other person limits the

relationship, but also deny that they care about the person. As a defence against fear of abandonment, borderline

people are compulsively social. But their behaviours, including their intense anger, demands, and suspiciousness,

repel people.

People with BPD often deal with stress by engaging in self-destructive behaviours, for instance by being sexually

promiscuous, getting into fights, binge eating and purging, engaging in self-mutilation or drug abuse, and

threatening suicide. These behaviours are designed to call forth a “saving” response from the other person. People

with BPD are a continuing burden for police, hospitals, and therapists. Borderline individuals also show disturbance

in their concepts of identity: they are uncertain about self-image, gender identity, values, loyalties, and goals. They

may have chronic feelings of emptiness or boredom and be unable to tolerate being alone.

BPD has both genetic and environmental roots. In terms of genetics, research has found that those with BPD

frequently have neurotransmitter imbalances (Zweig-Frank et al., 2006), and the disorder is heritable (Minzenberg,

Poole, & Vinogradov, 2008). In terms of environment, many theories about the causes of BPD focus on a disturbed

early relationship between the child and his or her parents. Some theories focus on the development of attachment in

early childhood, while others point to parents who fail to provide adequate attention to the child’s feelings. Others

focus on parental abuse (both sexual and physical) in adolescence, as well as on divorce, alcoholism, and other

stressors (Lobbestael & Arntz, 2009). The dangers of BPD are greater when they are associated with childhood

sexual abuse, early age of onset, substance abuse, and aggressive behaviours. The problems are amplified when

the diagnosis is comorbid (as it often is) with other disorders, such as substance abuse disorder, major depressive

disorder, and post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) (Skodol et al., 2002).

13.5 PERSONALITY DISORDERS • 574

Research Focus: Affective and Cognitive Deficits in BPD

Posner et al. (2003) hypothesized that the difficulty that individuals with BPD have in regulating their

lives (e.g., in developing meaningful relationships with other people) may be due to imbalances in the fast

and slow emotional pathways in the brain. Specifically, they hypothesized that the fast emotional pathway

through the amygdala is too active, and the slow cognitive-emotional pathway through the prefrontal cortex

is not active enough in those with BPD.

The participants in their research were 16 patients with BPD and 14 healthy comparison participants. All

participants were tested in a functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) machine while they performed

a task that required them to read emotional and nonemotional words, and then press a button as quickly as

possible whenever a word appeared in a normal font and not press the button whenever the word appeared

in an italicized font.

The researchers found that while all participants performed the task well, the patients with BPD had more

errors than the controls (both in terms of pressing the button when they should not have and not pressing it

when they should have). These errors primarily occurred on the negative emotional words.

Figure 13.15 shows the comparison of the level of brain activity in the emotional centres in the amygdala

(left panel) and the prefrontal cortex (right panel). In comparison to the controls, the BPD patients showed

relatively larger affective responses when they were attempting to quickly respond to the negative emotions,

and showed less cognitive activity in the prefrontal cortex in the same conditions. This research suggests

that excessive affective reactions and lessened cognitive reactions to emotional stimuli may contribute to the

emotional and behavioural volatility of borderline patients.

Figure 13.15 BPD Research. Individuals with BPD showed less cognitive and greater emotional

brain activity in response to negative emotional words.

575 • INTRODUCTION TO PSYCHOLOGY - 1ST CANADIAN EDITION

Antisocial Personality Disorder (APD)

In contrast to borderline personality disorder, which involves primarily feelings of inadequacy and a fear of

abandonment, antisocial personality disorder (APD) is characterized by a disregard of the rights of others, and a

tendency to violate those rights without being concerned about doing so. APD is a pervasive pattern of violation of

the rights of others that begins in childhood or early adolescence and continues into adulthood. APD is about three

times more likely to be diagnosed in men than in women. To be diagnosed with APD the person must be 18 years

of age or older and have a documented history of conduct disorder before the age of 15. People having antisocial

personality disorder are sometimes referred to as “sociopaths” or “psychopaths.”

People with APD feel little distress for the pain they cause others. They lie, engage in violence against animals and

people, and frequently have drug and alcohol abuse problems. They are egocentric and frequently impulsive, for

instance suddenly changing jobs or relationships. People with APD soon end up with a criminal record and often

spend time incarcerated. The intensity of antisocial symptoms tends to peak during the 20s and then may decrease

over time.

Biological and environmental factors are both implicated in the development of antisocial personality disorder

(Rhee & Waldman, 2002). Twin and adoption studies suggest a genetic predisposition (Rhee & Waldman,

2002), and biological abnormalities include low autonomic activity during stress, biochemical imbalances, right

hemisphere abnormalities, and reduced gray matter in the frontal lobes (Lyons-Ruth et al., 2007; Raine, Lencz,

Bihrle, LaCasse, & Colletti, 2000). Environmental factors include neglectful and abusive parenting styles, such as

the use of harsh and inconsistent discipline and inappropriate modelling (Huesmann & Kirwil, 2007).

Key Takeaways

• A personality disorder is a disorder characterized by inflexible patterns of thinking, feeling, or

relating to others that causes problems in personal, social, and work situations.

• Personality disorders are categorized into three clusters, characterized by odd or eccentric

behaviour, dramatic or erratic behaviour, and anxious or inhibited behaviour.

• Although they are considered as separate disorders, the personality disorders are essentially

milder versions of more severe Axis I disorders.

• Borderline personality disorder is a prolonged disturbance of personality accompanied by mood

swings, unstable personal relationships, and identity problems, and it is often associated with

suicide.

• Antisocial personality disorder is characterized by a disregard of others’ rights and a tendency to

violate those rights without being concerned about doing so.

13.5 PERSONALITY DISORDERS • 576

Exercises and Critical Thinking

1. What characteristics of men and women do you think make them more likely to have APD and

BDP, respectively? Do these differences seem to you to be more genetic or more environmental?

2. Do you know people who suffer from antisocial personality disorder? What behaviours do they

engage in, and why are these behaviours so harmful to them and others?

References

American Psychiatric Association. (2013). Diagnostic and statistical manual of mental disorders (5th ed.).

Washington, DC: Author.

Grant, B., Hasin, D., Stinson, F., Dawson, D., Chou, S., Ruan, W., & Pickering, R. P. (2004). Prevalence, correlates,

and disability of personality disorders in the United States: Results from the national epidemiologic survey on

alcohol and related conditions. Journal of Clinical Psychiatry, 65(7), 948–958.

Huang, Y., Kotov, R., de Girolamo, G., Preti, A., Angermeyer, M., Benjet, C.,…Kessler, R. C. (2009). DSM-IV

personality disorders in the WHO World Mental Health Surveys. British Journal of Psychiatry, 195(1), 46–53.

Huesmann, L. R., & Kirwil, L. (2007). Why observing violence increases the risk of violent behavior by the

observer. In D. J. Flannery, A. T. Vazsonyi, & I. D. Waldman (Eds.), The Cambridge handbook of violent behavior

and aggression (pp. 545–570). New York, NY: Cambridge University Press.

Hyman, S. E. (2002). A new beginning for research on borderline personality disorder. Biological Psychiatry,

51(12), 933–935.

Krueger, R. F. (2005). Continuity of Axes I and II: Towards a unified model of personality, personality disorders,

and clinical disorders. Journal of Personality Disorders, 19, 233–261.

Lobbestael, J., & Arntz, A. (2009). Emotional, cognitive and physiological correlates of abuse-related stress in

borderline and antisocial personality disorder. Behaviour Research and Therapy, 48(2), 116–124.

Lynam, D., & Widiger, T. (2001). Using the five-factor model to represent the DSM-IV personality disorders: An

expert consensus approach. Journal of Abnormal Psychology, 110(3), 401–412.

Lyons-Ruth, K., Holmes, B. M., Sasvari-Szekely, M., Ronai, Z., Nemoda, Z., & Pauls, D. (2007). Serotonin

transporter polymorphism and borderline or antisocial traits among low-income young adults. Psychiatric Genetics,

17, 339–343.

Minzenberg, M. J., Poole, J. H., & Vinogradov, S. (2008). A neurocognitive model of borderline personality

disorder: Effects of childhood sexual abuse and relationship to adult social attachment disturbance. Development

and Psychological disorder. 20(1), 341–368.

Oltmanns, T. F., & Turkheimer, E. (2006). Perceptions of self and others regarding pathological personality traits.

577 • INTRODUCTION TO PSYCHOLOGY - 1ST CANADIAN EDITION

In R. F. Krueger & J. L. Tackett (Eds.), Personality and psychopathology (pp. 71–111). New York, NY: Guilford

Press.

Phillips, K. A., Yen, S., & Gunderson, J. G. (2003). Personality disorders. In R. E. Hales & S. C. Yudofsky

(Eds.), Textbook of clinical psychiatry. Washington, DC: American Psychiatric Publishing.

Posner, M., Rothbart, M., Vizueta, N., Thomas, K., Levy, K., Fossella, J.,…Kernberg, O. (2003). An approach to

the psychobiology of personality disorders. Development and Psychopathology, 15(4), 1093–1106.

Raine, A., Lencz, T., Bihrle, S., LaCasse, L., & Colletti, P. (2000). Reduced prefrontal gray matter volume and

reduced autonomic activity in antisocial personality disorder. Archive of General Psychiatry, 57, 119–127.

Rhee, S. H., & Waldman, I. D. (2002). Genetic and environmental influences on anti-social behavior: A metaanalysis

of twin and adoptions studies. Psychological Bulletin, 128(3), 490–529.

Skodol, A. E., Gunderson, J. G., Pfohl, B., Widiger, T. A., Livesley, W. J., & Siever, L. J. (2002). The borderline

diagnosis I: Psychopathology, comorbidity, and personality structure. Biological Psychiatry, 51(12), 936–950.

Verheul, R. (2005). Clinical utility for dimensional models of personality pathology. Journal of Personality

Disorders, 19, 283–302.

Widiger, T.A. (2006). Understanding personality disorders. In S. K. Huprich (Ed.), Rorschach assessment to the

personality disorders. The LEA series in personality and clinical psychology (pp. 3–25). Mahwah, NJ: Lawrence

Erlbaum Associates.

Zweig-Frank, H., Paris, J., Kin, N. M. N. Y., Schwartz, G., Steiger, H., & Nair, N. P. V. (2006). Childhood sexual

abuse in relation to neurobiological challenge tests in patients with borderline personality disorder and normal

controls. Psychiatry Research, 141(3), 337–341.

Image Attributions

Figure 13.15: Adapted from Posner et al., 2003.

Notes

1. Adapted from American Psychiatric Association, 2013

13.5 PERSONALITY DISORDERS • 578

13.6 Somatoform, Factitious, and Sexual Disorders

Learning Objectives

1. Differentiate the symptoms of somatoform and factitious disorders.

2. Summarize the sexual disorders and paraphilias.

Although mood, anxiety, and personality disorders represent the most prevalent psychological disorders, there are

a variety of other disorders that affect people. This complexity of symptoms and classifications helps make it clear

how difficult it is to accurately and consistently diagnose and treat psychological disorders. In this section we will

review three other disorders that are of interest to psychologists and that affect millions of people: somatoform

disorder, factitious disorder, and sexual disorder.

Somatoform and Factitious Disorders

Somatoform and factitious disorders both occur in cases where psychological disorders are related to the experience

or expression of physical symptoms. The important difference between them is that in somatoform disorders the

physical symptoms are real, whereas in factitious disorders they are not.

One case in which psychological problems create real physical impairments is in the somatoform disorder known

as somatization disorder (also called Briquet’s syndrome or Brissaud-Marie syndrome). Somatization disorder is

a psychological disorder in which a person experiences numerous long-lasting but seemingly unrelated physical

ailments that have no identifiable physical cause. A person with somatization disorder might complain of joint

aches, vomiting, nausea, muscle weakness, and sexual dysfunction. The symptoms that result from a somatoform

disorder are real and cause distress to the individual, but they are due entirely to psychological factors. The

somatoform disorder is more likely to occur when the person is under stress, and it may disappear naturally over

time. Somatoform disorder is more common in women than in men, and usually first appears in adolescents or those

in their early 20s.

Another type of somatoform disorder is conversion disorder, a psychological disorder in which patients experience

specific neurological symptoms such as numbness, blindness, or paralysis, but where no neurological explanation

is observed or possible (Agaki & House, 2001). The difference between conversion and somatoform disorders

is in terms of the location of the physical complaint. In somatoform disorder the malaise is general, whereas in

conversion disorder there are one or several specific neurological symptoms.

Conversion disorder gets its name from the idea that the existing psychological disorder is “converted” into the

physical symptoms. It was the observation of conversion disorder (then known as hysteria) that first led Sigmund

Freud to become interested in the psychological aspects of illness in his work with Jean-Martin Charcot. Conversion

disorder is not common (a prevalence of less than 1%), but it may in many cases be undiagnosed. Conversion

disorder occurs twice or more frequently in women than in men.

579

There are two somatoform disorders that involve preoccupations. We have seen an example of one of them, body

dysmorphic disorder, in the Chapter 13, “Defining Psychological Disorders,” opener. Body dysmorphic disorder

(BDD) is a psychological disorder accompanied by an imagined or exaggerated defect in body parts or body odour.

There are no sex differences in prevalence, but men are most often obsessed with their body build, their genitals,

and hair loss, whereas women are more often obsessed with their breasts and body shape. BDD usually begins in

adolescence.

Hypochondriasis (hypochondria) is another psychological disorder that is focused on preoccupation,

accompanied by excessive worry about having a serious illness. The patient often misinterprets normal body

symptoms such as coughing, perspiring, headaches, or a rapid heartbeat as signs of serious illness, and the patient’s

concerns remain even after he or she has been medically evaluated and assured that the health concerns are

unfounded. Many people with hypochondriasis focus on a particular symptom such as stomach problems or heart

palpitations.

Two other psychological disorders relate to the experience of physical problems that are not real. Patients with

factitious disorder fake physical symptoms in large part because they enjoy the attention and treatment that they

receive in the hospital. They may lie about symptoms, alter diagnostic tests such as urine samples to mimic disease,

or even injure themselves to bring on more symptoms. In the more severe form of factitious disorder known as

Münchausen syndrome, the patient has a lifelong pattern of a series of successive hospitalizations for faked

symptoms.

Factitious disorder is distinguished from another related disorder known as malingering, which also involves

fabricating the symptoms of mental or physical disorders, but where the motivation for doing so is to gain financial

reward; to avoid school, work, or military service; to obtain drugs; or to avoid prosecution.

The somatoform disorders are almost always comorbid with other psychological disorders, including anxiety and

depression and dissociative states (Smith et al., 2005). People with BDD, for instance, are often unable to leave their

house, are severely depressed or anxious, and may also suffer from other personality disorders.

Somatoform and factitious disorders are problematic not only for the patient; they also have societal costs. People

with these disorders frequently follow through with potentially dangerous medical tests and are at risk for drug

addiction from the drugs they are given and for injury from the complications of the operations they submit to (Bass,

Peveler, & House, 2001; Looper & Kirmayer, 2002). In addition, people with these disorders may take up hospital

space that is needed for people who are really ill. To help combat these costs, emergency room and hospital workers

use a variety of tests for detecting these disorders.

Sexual Disorders

Sexual disorders refer to a variety of problems revolving around performing or enjoying sex. These include

disorders related to sexual function, gender identity, and sexual preference.

Disorders of Sexual Function

Sexual dysfunction is a psychological disorder that occurs when the physical sexual response cycle is inadequate

for reproduction or for sexual enjoyment. There are a variety of potential problems (Table 13.6, “Sexual

Dysfunctions as Described in the DSM “), and their nature varies for men and women (Figure 13.16, “Prevalence of

Sexual Dysfunction in Men and Women”). Sexual disorders affect up to 43% of women and 31% of men (Laumann,

Paik, & Rosen, 1999). Sexual disorders are often difficult to diagnose because in many cases the dysfunction occurs

13.6 SOMATOFORM, FACTITIOUS, AND SEXUAL DISORDERS • 580

at the partner level (one or both of the partners are disappointed with the sexual experience) rather than at the

individual level.

Table 13.6 Sexual Dysfunctions as Described in the DSM.1

[Skip Table]

Disorder Description

Hypoactive sexual

desire disorder Persistently or recurrently deficient (or absent) sexual fantasies and desire for sexual activity

Sexual aversion

disorder

Persistent or recurrent extreme aversion to, and avoidance of, all (or almost all) genital sexual contact

with a sexual partner

Female sexual

arousal disorder

Persistent or recurrent inability to attain, or to maintain until completion of the sexual activity, an

adequate lubrication-swelling response of sexual excitement

Male erectile

disorder

Persistent or recurrent inability to attain or maintain an adequate erection until completion of the

sexual activity

Female orgasmic

disorder Persistent or recurrent delay in, or absence of, orgasm following a normal sexual excitement phase

Male orgasmic

disorder

Persistent or recurrent delay in, or absence of, orgasm following a normal sexual excitement phase

during sexual activity

Premature

ejaculation

Persistent or recurrent ejaculation with minimal sexual stimulation before, on, or shortly after

penetration and before the person wishes it

Dyspareunia Recurrent or persistent genital pain associated with sexual intercourse in either a male or a female

Vaginismus Recurrent or persistent involuntary spasm of the musculature of the outer third of the vagina that

interferes with sexual intercourse

Figure 13.16 Prevalence of Sexual Dysfunction in Men and Women. This chart shows the

percentage of respondents who reported each type of sexual difficulty over the previous 12

months. [Long Description]

Hypoactive sexual desire disorder, one of the most common sexual dysfunctions, refers to a persistently low or

nonexistent sexual desire. How low sexual desire is defined, however, is problematic because it depends on the

person’s sex and age, on cultural norms, as well as on the relative desires of the individual and the partner. Again,

the importance of dysfunction and distress is critical. If neither partner is much interested in sex, for instance,

the lack of interest may not cause a problem. Hypoactive sexual desire disorder is often comorbid with other

psychological disorders, including mood disorders and problems with sexual arousal or sexual pain (Donahey &

Carroll, 1993).

581 • INTRODUCTION TO PSYCHOLOGY - 1ST CANADIAN EDITION

Sexual aversion disorder refers to an avoidance of sexual behaviour caused by disgust or aversion to genital

contact. The aversion may be a phobic reaction to an early sexual experience or sexual abuse, a misattribution of

negative emotions to sex that are actually caused by something else, or a reaction to a sexual problem such as erectile

dysfunction (Kingsberg & Janata, 2003).

Female sexual arousal disorder refers to persistent difficulties becoming sexually aroused or sufficiently

lubricated in response to sexual stimulation in women. The disorder may be comorbid with hypoactive sexual desire

or orgasmic disorder, or mood or anxiety disorders.

Male erectile disorder (sometimes referred to as impotence) refers to persistent and dysfunctional difficulty in

achieving or maintaining an erection sufficient to complete sexual activity. Prevalence rates vary by age, from about

6% of university-aged males to 35% of men in their 70s. About half the men aged 40 to 70 report having problems

getting or maintaining an erection “now and then.”

Most erectile dysfunction occurs as a result of physiological factors, including illness, and the use of medications,

alcohol, or other recreational drugs. Erectile dysfunction is also related to anxiety, low self-esteem, and general

problems in the particular relationship. Assessment for physiological causes of erectile dysfunction is made using

a test in which a device is attached to the man’s penis before he goes to sleep. During the night the man may have

an erection, and if he does the device records its occurrence. If the man has erections while sleeping, this provides

assurance that the problem is not physiological.

One of the most common sexual dysfunctions in men is premature ejaculation. It is not possible to exactly specify

what defines premature, but if the man ejaculates before or immediately upon insertion of the penis into the vagina,

most clinicians will identify the response as premature. Most men diagnosed with premature ejaculation ejaculate

within one minute after insertion (Waldinger, 2003). Premature ejaculation is one of the most prevalent sexual

disorders and causes much anxiety in many men.

Female orgasmic disorder refers to the inability to obtain orgasm in women. The woman enjoys sex and foreplay

and shows normal signs of sexual arousal but cannot reach the peak experience of orgasm. Male orgasmic disorder

includes a delayed or retarded ejaculation (very rare) or (more commonly) premature ejaculation.

Finally, dyspareunia and vaginismus refer to sexual pain disorders that create pain and involuntary spasms,

respectively, in women, and thus make it painful to have sex. In most cases these problems are biological and can be

treated with hormones, creams, or surgery.

Sexual dysfunctions have a variety of causes. In some cases the primary problem is biological, and the disorder

may be treated with medication. Other causes include a repressive upbringing in which the parents have taught the

person that sex is dirty or sinful, or the experience of sexual abuse (Beitchman, Zucker, Hood, & DaCosta, 1992). In

some cases the sex problem may be due to the fact that the person has a different sexual orientation than he or

she is engaging in. Other problems include poor communication between the partners, a lack of sexual skills, and

(particularly for men) performance anxiety.

It is important to remember that most sexual disorders are temporary—they are experienced for a period of time, in

certain situations or with certain partners, and then (without, or if necessary with, the help of therapy) go away. It is

also important to remember that there are a wide variety of sex acts that are enjoyable. Couples with happy sex lives

work together to find ways that work best for their own styles. Sexual problems often develop when the partners do

not communicate well with each other, and are reduced when they do.

13.6 SOMATOFORM, FACTITIOUS, AND SEXUAL DISORDERS • 582

Gender Identity Disorder

Gender identity refers to the identification with a sex. Most children develop an appropriate attachment to their own

sex. In some cases, however, children or adolescents—sometimes even those as young as three or four years old—

believe that they have been trapped in a body of the wrong sex. Gender identity disorder (GID, or transsexualism)

is diagnosed when the individual displays a repeated and strong desire to be the other sex, a persistent discomfort

with one’s sex, and a belief that one was born the wrong sex, accompanied by significant dysfunction and distress.

GID usually appears in adolescence or adulthood and may intensify over time (Bower, 2001). Since many cultures

strongly disapprove of cross-gender behaviour, it often results in significant problems for affected persons and those

in close relationships with them.

Gender identity disorder is rare, occurring only in about one in every 12,000 males and one in every 30,000 females

(Olsson & M.ller, 2003). The causes of GID are as of yet unknown, although they seem to be related in part to

the amount of testosterone and other hormones in the uterus (Kraemer, Noll, Delsignore, Milos, Schnyder, & Hepp,

2009).

Figure 13.17 Transsexuality.

The classification of GID as a mental disorder has been challenged because people who suffer from GID do not

regard their own cross-gender feelings and behaviours as a disorder and do not feel that they are distressed or

dysfunctional (Figure 13.17, “Transsexuality”). People suffering from GID often argue that a “normal” gender

identity may not necessarily involve an identification with one’s own biological sex. GID represents another

example, then, of how culture defines disorder; the 2013 DSM has changed the categorizations used in this domain.

583 • INTRODUCTION TO PSYCHOLOGY - 1ST CANADIAN EDITION

Paraphilias

A third class of sexual disorders relates to sexual practices and interest. In some cases sexual interest is so unusual

that it is known as a paraphilia — a sexual deviation where sexual arousal is obtained from a consistent pattern

of inappropriate responses to objects or people, and in which the behaviours associated with the feelings are

distressing and dysfunctional. Paraphilias may sometimes be only fantasies, and in other cases may result in actual

sexual behaviour (Table 13.7, “Some Paraphilias”).

Table 13.7 Some Paraphilias.

Paraphilia Behaviour or fantasy that creates arousal

Bestiality Sex with animals

Exhibitionism Exposing genitals to an unsuspecting person

Fetishism Nonliving or unusual objects or clothing of the opposite sex

Frotteurism Rubbing up against unsuspecting persons

Masochism Being beaten, humiliated, bound, or otherwise made to suffer

Pedophilia Sexual activity with a prepubescent child

Sadism Witnessing suffering of another person

Voyeurism Observing an unsuspecting person who is naked, disrobing, or engaged in intimate behaviour

People with paraphilias are usually rejected by society but for two different reasons. In some cases, such as

voyeurism and pedophilia, the behaviour is unacceptable (and illegal) because it involves a lack of consent on the

part of the recipient of the sexual advance. But other paraphilias are rejected simply because they are unusual,

even though they are consensual and do not cause distress or dysfunction to the partners. Sexual sadism and sexual

masochism, for instance, are usually practiced consensually, and thus may not be harmful to the partners or to

society. A recent survey found that individuals who engage in sadism and masochism are as psychologically healthy

as those who do not (Connolly, 2006). Again, as cultural norms about the appropriateness of behaviours change, the

new revision of the DSM (2013), changed its classification system of these behaviours.

Key Takeaways

• Somatoform disorders, including body dysmorphic disorder and hypochondriasis, occur when

people become excessively and inaccurately preoccupied with the potential that they have an

illness or stigma.

• Patients with factitious disorder fake physical symptoms in large part because they enjoy the

attention and treatment that they receive in the hospital. In the more severe form of factitious

disorder known as Münchhausen syndrome, the patient has a lifelong pattern with a series of

successive hospitalizations for faked symptoms.

• Sexual dysfunction is a psychological disorder that occurs when the physical sexual response

cycle is inadequate for reproduction or for sexual enjoyment. The types of problems experienced

13.6 SOMATOFORM, FACTITIOUS, AND SEXUAL DISORDERS • 584

are different for men and women. Many sexual dysfunctions are only temporary or can be treated

with therapy or medication.

• Gender identity disorder (GID, also called transsexualism) is a rare disorder that is diagnosed

when the individual displays a repeated and strong desire to be the other sex, a persistent

discomfort with one’s sex, and a belief that one was born the wrong sex, accompanied by

significant dysfunction and distress.

• The classification of GID as a mental disorder has been challenged because people who suffer

from it do not regard their own cross-gender feelings and behaviours as a disorder and do not feel

that they are distressed or dysfunctional.

• A paraphilia is a sexual deviation where sexual arousal is obtained from a consistent pattern of

inappropriate responses to objects or people, and in which the behaviours associated with the

feelings are distressing and dysfunctional. Some paraphilias are illegal because they involve a

lack of consent on the part of the recipient of the sexual advance, but other paraphilias are simply

unusual, even though they may not cause distress or dysfunction.

Exercises and Critical Thinking

1. Consider the biological, personal, and social-cultural aspects of gender identity disorder. Do

you think that this disorder is really a “disorder,” or is it simply defined by social-cultural norms

and beliefs?

2. Consider the paraphilias in Table 13.7, “Some Paraphilias.” Do they seem like disorders to you,

and how would one determine if they were or were not?

3. View one of the following films and consider the diagnosis that might be given to the

characters in it: Antwone Fisher, Ordinary People, Girl Interrupted, Grosse Pointe Blank, A

Beautiful Mind, What About Bob?, Sybil, One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest.

References

Akagi, H., & House, A. O. (2001). The epidemiology of hysterical conversion. In P. Halligan, C. Bass, & J.

Marshall (Eds.), Hysterical conversion: Clinical and theoretical perspectives (pp. 73–87). Oxford, England: Oxford

University Press.

American Psychiatric Association. (2000). Diagnostic and statistical manual of mental disorders (4th ed., text rev.).

Washington, DC: Author.

Bass, C., Peveler, R., & House, A. (2001). Somatoform disorders: Severe psychiatric illnesses neglected by

psychiatrists. British Journal of Psychiatry, 179, 11–14.

585 • INTRODUCTION TO PSYCHOLOGY - 1ST CANADIAN EDITION

Beitchman, J. H., Zucker, K. J., Hood, J. E., & DaCosta, G. A. (1992). A review of the long-term effects of child

sexual abuse. Child Abuse & Neglect, 16(1), 101–118.

Bower, H. (2001). The gender identity disorder in the DSM-IV classification: A critical evaluation. Australian and

New Zealand Journal of Psychiatry, 35(1), 1–8.

Connolly, P. (2006). Psychological functioning of bondage/domination/sado-masochism (BDSM)

practitioners. Journal of Psychology & Human Sexuality, 18(1), 79–120.

Donahey, K. M., & Carroll, R. A. (1993). Gender differences in factors associated with hypoactive sexual

desire. Journal of Sex & Marital Therapy, 19(1), 25–40.

Kingsberg, S. A., & Janata, J. W. (2003). The sexual aversions. In S. B. Levine, C. B. Risen, & S. E. Althof

(Eds.), Handbook of clinical sexuality for mental health professionals (pp. 153–165). New York, NY: Brunner-

Routledge.

Kraemer, B., Noll, T., Delsignore, A., Milos, G., Schnyder, U., & Hepp, U. (2009). Finger length ratio (2D:4D) in

adults with gender identity disorder. Archives of Sexual Behavior, 38(3), 359–363.

Laumann, E. O., Paik, A., & Rosen, R. (1999). Sexual dysfunction in the United States. Journal of the American

Medical Association, 281(6), 537–544.

Looper, K. J., & Kirmayer, L. J. (2002). Behavioral medicine approaches to somatoform disorders. Journal of

Consulting and Clinical Psychology, 70(3), 810–827.

Olsson, S.-E., & M.ller, A. R. (2003). On the incidence and sex ratio of transsexualism in Sweden,

1972–2002. Archives of Sexual Behavior, 32(4), 381–386.

Smith, R. C., Gardiner, J. C., Lyles, J. S., Sirbu, C., Dwamena, F. C., Hodges, A.,…Goddeeris, J. (2005).

Exploration of DSM-IV criteria in primary care patients with medically unexplained symptoms. Psychosomatic

Medicine, 67(1), 123–129.

Waldinger, M. D. (2003). Rapid ejaculation. In S. B. Levine, C. B. Risen, & S. E. Althof (Eds.), Handbook of

clinical sexuality for mental health professionals (pp. 257–274). New York, NY: Brunner-Routledge.

Image Attributions

Figure 13.16: Adapted from Laumann, Paik, & Rosen, 1999.

Figure 13.17: “caixa” by matt houston is licensed under CC BY-NC-SA 2.0 license (http://creativecommons.org/

licenses/by-nc-sa/2.0/deed.en_CA).

13.6 SOMATOFORM, FACTITIOUS, AND SEXUAL DISORDERS • 586

Long Descriptions

Figure 13.16 long description: Prevalence of sexual dysfunction in men

and women.

Type of Sexual Dysfunction Percentage of men Percentage of women

Low desire 16% 34%

Arousal problem 11% 19%

Lack of orgasm 8% 24%

Rapid orgasm 29% 11%

Pain during sex 3% 14%

[Return to Figure 13.16]

Notes

1. Adapted from American Psychiatric Association, 2000.

587 • INTRODUCTION TO PSYCHOLOGY - 1ST CANADIAN EDITION

13.7 Chapter Summary

More psychologists are involved in the diagnosis and treatment of psychological disorder than in any other aspect

of psychology.

About 10% to 15% of Canadians are estimated to be affected by a psychological disorder during any one year. The

impact of mental illness is particularly strong on people who are poorer, of lower socioeconomic class, and from

disadvantaged ethnic groups.

A psychological disorder is an unusual, distressing, and dysfunctional pattern of thought, emotion, or behaviour.

Psychological disorders are often comorbid, meaning that a given person suffers from more than one disorder.

The stigma of mental disorder affects people while they are ill, while they are healing, and even after they have

healed. But mental illness is not a fault, and it is important to work to help overcome the stigma associated with

disorder.

All psychological disorders are determined by multiple biological, psychological, and social factors.

Psychologists diagnose disorder using the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders (DSM). The DSM

organizes the diagnosis of disorder according to five dimensions (or axes) relating to different aspects of disorder

or disability. The DSM uses categories, and patients with close approximations to the prototype are said to have that

disorder.

One critique of the DSM is that many disorders — for instance, attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD),

autistic disorder, and Asperger’s disorder — are being diagnosed significantly more frequently than they were in

the past.

Anxiety disorders are psychological disturbances marked by irrational fears, often of everyday objects and

situations. They include generalized anxiety disorder (GAD), panic disorder, phobia, obsessive-compulsive disorder

(OCD), and post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD). Anxiety disorders affect about 350,000 Canadians every year.

Dissociative disorders are conditions that involve disruptions or breakdowns of memory, awareness, and identity.

They include dissociative amnesia, dissociative fugue, and dissociative identity disorder.

Mood disorders are psychological disorders in which the person’s mood negatively influences his or her physical,

perceptual, social, and cognitive processes. They include dysthymia, major depressive disorder, and bipolar

disorder. Mood disorders affect about 5% of Canadians every year.

Schizophrenia is a serious psychological disorder marked by delusions, hallucinations, loss of contact with reality,

inappropriate affect, disorganized speech, social withdrawal, and deterioration of adaptive behaviour.

About 350,000 Canadians have schizophrenia.

A personality disorder is a long-lasting but frequently less severe disorder characterized by inflexible patterns

of thinking, feeling, or relating to others that causes problems in personal, social, and work situations. They are

characterized by odd or eccentric behaviour, by dramatic or erratic behaviour, or by anxious or inhibited behaviour.

588

Two of the most important personality disorders are borderline personality disorder (BPD) and antisocial personality

disorder (APD).

Somatization disorder is a psychological disorder in which a person experiences numerous long-lasting but

seemingly unrelated physical ailments that have no identifiable physical cause. Somatization disorders include

conversion disorder, body dysmorphic disorder (BDD), and hypochondriasis.

Patients with factitious disorder fake physical symptoms in large part because they enjoy the attention and treatment

that they receive in the hospital.

Sexual disorders refer to a variety of problems revolving around performing or enjoying sex. Sexual dysfunctions

include problems relating to loss of sexual desire, sexual response or orgasm, and pain during sex.

Gender identity disorder (GID, also called transsexualism) is diagnosed when the individual displays a repeated and

strong desire to be the other sex, a persistent discomfort with one’s sex, and a belief that one was born the wrong

sex, accompanied by significant dysfunction and distress. The classification of GID as a mental disorder has been

challenged because people who suffer from GID do not regard their own cross-gender feelings and behaviours as a

disorder and do not feel that they are distressed or dysfunctional.

A paraphilia is a sexual deviation where sexual arousal is obtained from a consistent pattern of inappropriate

responses to objects or people, and in which the behaviours associated with the feelings are distressing and

dysfunctional.

589 • INTRODUCTION TO PSYCHOLOGY - 1ST CANADIAN EDITION

Modifié le: jeudi 26 mai 2022, 09:54