# 2. Causes of Abnormal Behavior ## Risk Factors and Causes of Abnormal Behavior - A **necessary cause** (X) is a condition that must exist for a disorder (Y) to occur. - A **sufficient cause** of a disorder is a condition that guarantees the occurrence of a disorder. - A **contributory cause** is one that increases the probability of a disorder developing but is neither necessary nor sufficient for the disorder to occur. ### Causes of Abnormal Behavior - **Distal risk factors** are causal factors occurring relatively early in life that may not show their effects for many years. - **Proximal (immediate) risk factors** are factors that operate shortly before the occurrence of the symptoms of a disorder. ![Causes of Abnormal Behavior](https://photo-1303301880.cos.ap-guangzhou.myqcloud.com/2024/05/09/663ca780b05ce.jpg) ### Feedback and Bidirectionality in Abnormal Behavior In the study of abnormal psychology, it can be challenging to determine with certainty which conditions are causes and which are effects due to the complex and bidirectional nature of mental health disorders. ### Diathesis-Stress Models Combination of diathesis and stress to cause disorder. - Diathesis: Relatively distal necessary or contributory cause that is not sufficient to cause disorder - Stress: Response of individual to taxing demands. ![Diathesis-Stress Models](https://photo-1303301880.cos.ap-guangzhou.myqcloud.com/2024/05/09/663ca8f27500c.jpg) ### Protective factors Stronger Resilience with: - Healthy Family environment - Exposure to stressful experiences that are dealt with successfully - Emotional intelligence ## Perspectives to Understand the Causes of Abnormal Behavior ### The Biological Perspective Four categories of biological factors relevant to maladaptive behavior. #### Genetic vulnerabilities Heredity is important predisposing contributory cause for number of disorders. ##### The Relationship of Genotypes to Phenotypes **Genotype:** Total genetic endowment. **Phenotype:** Observed structural and functional characteristics. ##### Methods for Studying Genetic Influences **Traditional methods:** - Family history method - Twin method - Adoption method **More recent methods:** - Linkage analysis - Association studies #### Brain dysfunction and neural plasticity Subtle deficiencies of brain function are rarely implicated in mental disorders. Genetic programs for brain development are not as rigid and deterministic as was once believed. The Developmental Systems Approach ![Bidirectional Influences](https://photo-1303301880.cos.ap-guangzhou.myqcloud.com/2024/05/09/663caab060675.jpg) #### Neuro-transmitter & hormonal abnormalities in brain and CNS **Neurotransmitter imbalances:** - Can result in abnormal behavior - Created in various ways: overproduction, deactivation, abnormally sensitive or insensitive **5 Most studied neurotransmitter:** - Norepinephrine - Dopamine - Serotonin - Glutamate - Gamma aminobutyric acid (GABA) **Hormonal Imbalances** Hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal (HPA) axis: - Messages (CRH) travel from the hypothalamus to the pituitary - Pituitary releases ACTH, which stimulates cortical part of the adrenal gland, produces epinephrine (adrenaline) and cortisol - Cortisol provides negative feedback to hypothalamus and pituitary to decrease their release of CRH and ACTH, which in turn reduces the release of adrenaline and cortisol #### Temperament **Temperament:** Child’s reactivity and characteristic ways of self-regulation. Early temperament is basis from which personality develops. **Five Dimensions of Temperament:** - Fearfulness - Irritability and frustration - Positive affect - Activity level - Attentional persistence and effortful control ### The Psychological Perspective #### Psychodynamic **Freud** theorized that a person’s behavior results from interaction of: - Id (pleasure principle) - Ego (reality principle) - Superego (executive branch) **Newer Psychodynamic Perspectives:** - Ego psychology - Attachment theory - Object-relations theory - Interpersonal perspective #### Behavioral - Classical Conditioning - Operant Conditioning - Generalization and Discrimination - Observational Learning #### Cognitive-Behavioral - **Schema:** Underlying representation of knowledge that guides current processing of information - **Attributions:** Process of assigning causes to things that happen - **Attributional style:** Characteristic way in which individual may tend to assign causes to bad or good events **Cognitive Therapy:** - The way we interpret events and experiences determines our emotional reactions to them. - Clinicians use a variety of techniques designed to alter a client’s negative cognitive biases. ### The Social Perspective Factors with detrimental effects on a child’s socioemotional development. #### Early deprivation or trauma - Depriving essential resources - Institutionalization - Neglect and abuse at home - Separation from parents #### Problems in parenting style A parent–child relationship is always bidirectional: Parents who have various forms of psychopathology tend to have one or more children at heightened risk for a wide range of developmental difficulties. ![parenting style](https://photo-1303301880.cos.ap-guangzhou.myqcloud.com/2024/05/09/663cae380ff2e.jpg) #### Marital discord & divorce **Long-standing marital discord:** - Aggressive behavior - Poor quality relationships **Divorce:** - Insecurity, rejection - Delinquency - Lower educational attainment #### Low Socioeconomic Status and Unemployment In our society, the lower the socioeconomic class, the higher the incidence of mental and physical disorders. - Children and adolescents from lower socioeconomic status (SES) families tend to have more psychological problems. - Studies have repeatedly found unemployment to be associated with enhanced vulnerability to psychopathology. #### Maladaptive peer relation-ships - Peer exclusion or abuse - Proactive and reactive aggression in bullying - Cyberbullying #### Prejudice and Discrimination in Race, Gender, and Ethnicity Increased prevalence of certain mental disorders may be related to: - Prejudice against minority groups and women - Perceived discrimination and self-esteem ### The Cultural Perspective **Cultural context of behavior:** - Universal and Culture-Specific Symptoms of Disorders - Culture: Over-and Undercontrolled Behavior #### Universal and Culture-Specific Symptoms of Disorders **Universality of some disorders:** - Certain psychological symptoms are consistently found among similarly diagnosed clinical groups **Sociocultural factors:** - Which disorders develop - Prevalence, course #### Culture: Over- and Undercontrolled Problem **Undercontrolled problem:** - Agression, disobedience, disrespect - Exhibited by American **Overcontrolled problem:** - Shyness, anxiety, depression - Exhibited by Thai