Tuesday, March 22, 2011
Aaron Beck
Cognitive therapy seeks to help the patient overcome difficulties by identifying and changing dysfunctional thinking, behavior, and emotional responses. This involves helping patients develop skills for modifying beliefs, identifying distorted thinking, relating to others in different ways, and changing behaviors.[1] Treatment is based on collaboration between patient and therapist and on testing beliefs. Therapy may consist of testing the assumptions which one makes and identifying how certain of one's usually-unquestioned thoughts are distorted, unrealistic and unhelpful. Once those thoughts have been challenged, one's feelings about the subject matter of those thoughts are more easily subject to change. Beck initially focused on depression and developed a list of "errors" in thinking that he proposed could maintain depression, including arbitrary inference, selective abstraction, over-generalization, and magnification (of negatives) and minimization (of positives).
Julian Rotter
Rotter suggested that the expected effect or outcome of the behavior has an impact on motivation of people to engage in that behavior. People wish to avoid negative consequences, while desiring positive results or effects. If one expects a positive outcome from a behavior, or thinks there is a high probability of a positive outcome, then they will be more likely to engage in the behavior. The behavior is reinforced, with positive outcomes, leading a person to repeat the behavior. This social learning theory suggests that behavior is influenced by social context or environmental factors, and not psychological factors alone.
Albert Bandura
Social cognitive theory is a learning theory based on the ideas that people learn by watching what others do and that human thought processes are central to understanding personality. While social cognitists agree that there is a fair amount of influence on development generated by learned behavior displayed in the environment in which one grows up, they believe that the individual person (and therefore cognition) is just as important in determining moral development.
Martin Seligman
Learned helplessness theory means a condition of a human being or an animal in which it has learned to behave helplessly, even when the opportunity is restored for it to help itself by avoiding an unpleasant or harmful circumstance to which it has been subjected. Learned helplessness theory is the view that clinical depression and related mental illnesses may result from a perceived absence of control over the outcome of a situation.
Sunday, March 20, 2011
Lobotomist
Tuesday, March 8, 2011
Bipolar
Evan was a child who suffered from the bipolar disorder since he was of a very young age, his symptoms could be seen since he was as young as 1 year old, with his actions and the things he said. One thing that was very intense in this video is how they showed the different expresions that Evan said and how he manifested constantly his desire to commit suicide and his fascination on death, to the point that at approximatelly the age of 6 he wrote a play that was enacted and it had as a main subject death and how the other kids would mourn for the loss of his life. Evan was highly extreme, he had incredible mood swings, when he was normal he was seen as highly carismatic and showed a lot of love, and when he was depressed, he got to the point where he showed his mom the way that he was going to commit suicide. The tragic story on the death of the poor child, was when he was taking his medicines after being diagnosed with bipolar disorder, these causing his moods to flatten out and therefor showing no emotions at all, and he was permitted to leave the medications, this causing a chaotic and tragic suicide. This video helped us comprehend how drastic and life changing having this disorder can be, and how it affected not only him, but all of the people that were related to him in any way, since they had to deal with all of the craziness and incredible mood swings and actions he did during his different phases experienced due to the bipolar disorder.
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