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Slide 18.1 Carlson, Martin and Buskist, Psychology, 2 nd European edition © Pearson Education Limited 2006 DSM-IV classification scheme for axes I and II
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Slide 18.2 Carlson, Martin and Buskist, Psychology, 2 nd European edition © Pearson Education Limited 2006 DSM-IV classification scheme for axes I and II (continued)
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Slide 18.3 Carlson, Martin and Buskist, Psychology, 2 nd European edition © Pearson Education Limited 2006 William Black’s (1810) list of the causes of insanity
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Slide 18.4 Carlson, Martin and Buskist, Psychology, 2 nd European edition © Pearson Education Limited 2006 The basic assumptions, goals and methods of psychotherapy
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Slide 18.5 Carlson, Martin and Buskist, Psychology, 2 nd European edition © Pearson Education Limited 2006 Effectiveness of psychotherapy
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Slide 18.6 Carlson, Martin and Buskist, Psychology, 2 nd European edition © Pearson Education Limited 2006 ‘Ice pick’ prefrontal lobotomy Source: Adapted with permission from Freeman, W., Proceedings of the Royal Society of Medicine, 1949, 42 (suppl.), 8–12. Reprinted by permission of The Royal Society of Medicine.
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Slide 18.7 Carlson, Martin and Buskist, Psychology, 2 nd European edition © Pearson Education Limited 2006 Drugs commonly used to treat mental disorders
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Slide 18.8 Carlson, Martin and Buskist, Psychology, 2 nd European edition © Pearson Education Limited 2006 Some common phobias
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Slide 18.9 Carlson, Martin and Buskist, Psychology, 2 nd European edition © Pearson Education Limited 2006 Obsessive and compulsive symptoms Source: Rapoport, J.L., The biology of obsessions and compulsions. Scientific American (international edition), 1989 (March), p. 63. Copyright © 1989 by Scientific American, Inc. All rights reserved.
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Slide 18.10 Carlson, Martin and Buskist, Psychology, 2 nd European edition © Pearson Education Limited 2006 Descriptions of various personality disorders Source: Adapted from Carson, R.C., Butcher, J.N. and Mineka, S., Abnormal Psychology and Modern Life (10th edition), p. 317. New York: Harper Collins, 1996.
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Slide 18.11 Carlson, Martin and Buskist, Psychology, 2 nd European edition © Pearson Education Limited 2006 Descriptions of various personality disorders (continued) Source: Adapted from Carson, R.C., Butcher, J.N. and Mineka, S., Abnormal Psychology and Modern Life (10th edition), p. 317. New York: Harper Collins, 1996.
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Slide 18.12 Carlson, Martin and Buskist, Psychology, 2 nd European edition © Pearson Education Limited 2006 Cleckley’s primary characteristics of antisocial personality disorder Source: Cleckley, H., The Mask of Sanity, pp. 337–338. St Louis: C.V. Mosby, 1976. Reprinted with permission.
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Slide 18.13 Carlson, Martin and Buskist, Psychology, 2 nd European edition © Pearson Education Limited 2006 Heritability of schizophrenia
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Slide 18.14 Carlson, Martin and Buskist, Psychology, 2 nd European edition © Pearson Education Limited 2006 Decreases in activation in the prefrontal cortex seen in individuals with mood disorders Source: Drevets, W.C., Neuroimaging and neuropathological studies of depression: Implications for the cognitive-emotional features of mood disorders. Current Opinion in Neurobiology, 2001, 11, 240–249. Copyright 2001, with permission from Elsevier.
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Slide 18.15 Carlson, Martin and Buskist, Psychology, 2 nd European edition © Pearson Education Limited 2006 Some drugs used to treat depression Source: Baldessarini, R.J., Drugs and the treatment of psychiatric disorders: depression and mania. In J.G. Hardman and L.E. Limbird (eds), Goodman and Gilman’s The Pharmacological Basis of Therapeutics (9th edition). New York: McGraw-Hill, 1996. © The McGraw-Hill Companies. Reproduced with permission.
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