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Katie Bowden Scotty Frazier Elaine Matteucci Melissa Ortiz
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Glass, D. J. (2012). Evolutionary clinical psychology, broadly construed: Perspectives on obsessive-compulsive disorder. Journal of Social, Evolutionary, and Cultural Psychology, 6 (3), 292-308.
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http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=44DCWsl bsNM http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=44DCWsl bsNM Anxiety (obsession) and rituals (compulsions)
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CBT: Cognitive Behavioral Therapy ERP: Exposure and response prevention
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Adaptation: trait shaped by natural selection to solve problems in EEA Mismatch: once adaptive, but now maladaptive in novel environments Byproduct: trait is a result of selection of other traits Balancing selection: trait’s benefits offset its costs in particular environments Mutation selection balance: minor mutations take longer to be selected against Lesion
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Symptoms are related to threat-avoidance and once provided fitness benefits Meta-cognition of risk scenarios Benefits for entire group
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Environmental mismatch theory and mental disorders as normal functioning processes? Harmful dysfunction defining a true disorder Aren’t disorders just a by-product of our complex brains and not adaptations of our ancestors? But then how can evolution and natural selection account for how common, harmful, and heritable these disorders are?
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Antagonistic pleiotropy: a gene has both harmful and advantageous effects OCD can serve as a harm-avoidant tendency through balancing selection
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Animal models of OCD paralleled with human exemplar https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bWjxC0 MV8UU https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bWjxC0 MV8UU What about the anxiety/obsessive component? Basal ganglia dysfunction in animals CBT?
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Murphy and Stich: domain-specific modules are malfunctioning Could explain 4 dimensions of OCD as 4 different neural pathways/domains of functioning Feygin et al.: 4 domains are threat-avoidance based
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Life without any level of OCD symptoms at all? OCD sufferers are one extreme of the polygenetic trait, what about the other extreme?
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All research domains of biology and psychology are moving towards becoming evolutionary in nature Does not require strong adaptationism, but might include it
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The article describes a mental disorder as a harmful dysfunction. Do you think this is accurate? Do you think this qualifies OCD as a mental disorder, in either our modern environment or the EEA?
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Broadening this evolutionary approach to other abnormal disorders, what possible adaptations could other disorders have provided to our fitness in the EEA? Or are they mostly by- products? How can we be sure?
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