Read Psychology for Dummies Online

Authors: Adam Cash

Tags: #Psychology, #General, #Body; Mind & Spirit, #Spirituality

Psychology for Dummies (62 page)

BOOK: Psychology for Dummies
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This is only the first half of agoraphobia though. The other part involves the person avoiding these potentially trapping situations and, often, confining themselves to their homes. This symptom can be extremely stressful for the person suffering from panic disorder and for his or her family members as well. What kind of life can you have if your spouse or parent won’t leave the house? Severe marital strain is not uncommon with these patients.

Scared sweaterless

People can worry about or fear all kinds of things. When someone is extremely afraid of a particular thing or situation, even if he or she knows it poses no real danger, we call that a
phobia.
There are different types of phobias. Social phobia is the fear of people. Agoraphobia is the fear of being outdoors or in crowded places. Angoraphobia is fear of sweaters and heavy winter coats. I was just kidding about the last one, but hundreds of phobias are out there. Here are a few notables:

Acrophobia:
Fear of heights

Claustrophobia:
Fear of closed spaces

Nyctophobia:
Fear of the dark

Mysophobia:
Fear of germ contamination

Zoophobia:
Fear of animals or a specific animal

Revealing panic disorder’s causes

There are at least two excellent explanations of panic disorder, David Barlow’s
biopsychosocial approach
and the
cognitive model.

Barlow’s main idea is that panic attacks are the result of an overreactive fear response within the brain under stress. Certain individuals possess a physiological vulnerability in which their nervous systems sometimes overreact. This biological vulnerability is paired with the psychological vulnerability caused by exaggerated beliefs that regard certain bodily sensations and the world, in general, as dangerous and the misperception (hopefully) regarding the dangerousness of the world in general.

The cognitive model (Beck, Emery, & Greenberg, 1985) is very similar to Barlow’s model, but it emphasizes the person’s beliefs more. The basic idea is that panic attacks are the result of a misattribution of normal bodily sensations that leads to increased fear, which in turn exacerbates the sensations, which in turn leads to more misattribution. It’s like a vicious cycle. A person interprets something that he feels as life threatening or dangerous, which makes him worry and intensifies both the feeling and his fear of it.

Treating panic disorder

Panic disorder is treated with both medications and various forms of psycho- therapy. Antidepressant medications known as tricyclics have been used successfully to reduce the occurrence of panic. Benzodiazapines, a class of “relaxing” drugs, also have been used successfully.

Behavior therapy has been highly successful with panic patients. It sounds kind of cruel, but behavior therapy basically involves teaching relaxation techniques and then in small-step increments, exposing patients to situations that formerly triggered panic and teaching them to endure the panic attack until it subsides. It sounds like torture, but it works. Cognitive therapy also has been used to teach sufferers to change their thinking in ways that reduce their tendency to misperceive or misinterpret their bodily sensations and blow them out of proportion. The intent is to change “what if thinking” to “so what thinking” through education regarding both physiological processes and available sources of help, if needed.

Chapter 17
Figuring Out the Criminals with Forensic Psychology
In This Chapter

Calling all experts

Getting theoretical

Investigating the criminal mind

Establishing competence

Providing help behind bars

M any of us seem rather fascinated with crimes and criminals. I’m not basing this statement on any scientific evidence, but have you been to the video store lately? Movies about crimes and those who commit them dominate the shelves. The evening news, primetime television shows, and practically all other forms of popular media keenly focus their camera lenses on crime.

I don’t know why this is. Maybe we focus on crime because of its powerful impact on the lives of everyone involved, from the victim to the perpetrator. Maybe it’s just a morbid curiosity. One thing is for sure though, whether we’re fascinated by it or not, crime affects everyone. Statistics show that one out of three people will be a victim of crime at least once this year. Crime has been a hot topic for politicians because of these appalling crime rates in the United States.

A lot of us are criminals actually. You don’t think so? When was the last time you broke the speed limit? Yeah, I know, big deal. The crimes that hold much of our fascination are a little more exciting, horrific, or scary than barreling down the freeway. I’m thinking about murder, bank robbery, drug dealing, and many of the other crimes usually considered felonies. A
felony
is a major crime, such as murder, arson, or rape, which typically carries a punishment of imprisonment for a year or more. Psychologists also seem to have been caught up in this curiosity about crime. In fact, an entire branch of psychology is devoted to investigating crime and criminals.
Forensic psychology
is the application of psychological knowledge and science to the law and legal issues. In this chapter, I introduce you to the basic aspects of forensic psychology and cover some of the more intriguing areas in greater detail.

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