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Clinical Disorder

Clinical Disorder.

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Clinical Disorder

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  1. Clinical Disorder Working Definition of a Clinical Disorder: a __________ of symptoms that significantly _______ an individual’s ability to function, and is characterized by a particular symptom picture with a specifiable onset, course, _______, outcome, and response to treatment, and associated familial, psychosocial, and biological correlates. Onset: age of initial symptoms + how [insidious, rapid] Course: slowing worsening or improving; episodic vs chronic; waxing & waning vs continuous Duration: how long does a particular episode last? Outcome: do you fully recover?

  2. Equifinality – multiple causes, one outcome

  3. Multifinality – one cause, multiple outcomes

  4. The Role of Factor Analysis in Understanding Clinical Disorders

  5. PEER RELATION DIFFICULTIES IRRITABLE TEARFULNESS INATTENTIVE WORRY POOR ACADEMICS HIGH ACTIVITY LEVEL NERVOUS POOR APPETITE POOR CONCENTRATION IMPULSIVE

  6. UNIQUE SYMPTOMS that correlate with one another UNIQUE SYMPTOMS that correlate with one another SHARED SYMPTOMS WORRY INATTENTIVE POOR ACADEMICS IRRITABLE HIGH ACTIVITY LEVEL POOR CONCENTRATION TEARFULNESS IMPULSIVE NERVOUS PEER RELATION DIFFICULTIES

  7. Quantitative vs Qualitative Differences in child disorders [excess/deficit vs qualitative difference in presentation] Externalizing vs Internalizing Disorders ADHD Conduct Disorder ODD Affective Disorders Anxiety Disorders

  8. Pathognomonic Symptoms Conditional Probabilities as a means of understanding Clinical Symptoms: The Role of Sensitivity, Specificity, PPP, and NPP

  9. Base rate Sensitivity: what proportion of children with a particular disorder exhibit a specific symptom? Specificity: what proportion of children without a clinical disorder do not exhibit that same symptom? PPP: what proportion of children with a specific symptom meet full diagnostic for a specific clinical disorder? NPP: what proportion of children without that identical symptom do not meet full diagnostic criteria for that same disorder?

  10. Differential Diagnosis & Conditional Probabilities Meets Dx Doesn’t Meet Dx Symptom Present A E C Symptom Absent F B D Sensitivity = A/B (true positive) Specificity = C/D (true negative) PPP = A/E NPP = C/F

  11. POSITIVE AND NEGATIVE PREDICTIVE POWER ON-TASK RESPONDER ON-TASK NON-RESPONDER Academic RESPONDER A B C D Academic NON- RESPONDER PPP = A/B; GIVEN A POSITIVE RESPONSE IN ACADEMIC EFFICIENCY (B), THE PROBABILTY OF OBTAINING A POSITIVE RESPONSE IN ATTENTION (A). NPP = C/D; GIVEN NO academic improvement (D), THE PROBABILITY OF NO improvement in ATTENTION (C).

  12. Attention To Task .97(.17) .88a(.36) b .79(.60) .60(.72) .80(.45) ACTRS .55(.80) Academic Performance .98(.11) .90(.28) a Positive Predictive Power b Negative Predictive Power .89(.60) .57(.78) .97(.27) .93(.22) Self-Control

  13. The Role of Epidemiology for Understanding Child Psychopathology

  14. What is epidemiology? • Epidemiology is concerned with the ways in which clinical disorders • and diseases occur in human populations, and with factors that • influence these patterns of occurrence. • Three interrelated components of epidemiological research involve: • Assessing the occurrence of new cases (incidence rate) or existing • cases (prevalence rate) of the disorder at a given period of time or • within a specific time period; [note: community vs clinic samples] • 2. Assessing how the disorder is distributed in the population, which • may include information concerning geographic location, gender, • socioeconomic level, and race;and • 3. Identifying factors associated with the variation and distribution • of the disorder to enable etiological hypotheses to be generated.

  15. The Role of Different Variables in Understanding Child Psychopathology

  16. TEMPORAL SEQUENCE UNKNOWN CORRELATIONAL RESEARCH RELATIONSHIP AMONG VARIABLES? IDENTIFYING MARKERS NON CAUSALLY RELATED TEMPORAL SEQUENCE ESTABLISHED- POSSIBLY CAUSAL IDENTIFYING RISK FACTORS FACTORS INFLUENCING THE RELATIONSHIP BETWEEN VARIABLES? MODERATORS/ PROTECTIVE FACTORS NON-CAUSAL, BUT INFORMATIVE IDENTIFYING PROCESS/ MECHANISMS BY WHICH VARIABLES PRODUCE OUTCOMES/MODELS HOW DOES ANTECEDENT EXERT ITS INFLUENCE? MEDIATORS DECREASE PROBABILITY OF OCCURRENCE OR REDUCE CURRENT SYMPTOMS CAN WE CONTROL OR ALTER THE OUTCOME? PREVENTION/ TREATMENT WHAT EFFECT DOES IV HAVE ON DV? EXPERIMENTAL RESEARCH ESTABLISHING CAUSAL RELATIONSHIPS - MODELS

  17. Developmental Psychopathology • A single cause? • Direct vs. indirect effects: Direct effect Mediator C B B A X C Moderator A C B

  18. Developmental Psychopathology • A single cause? • Direct vs. indirect effects: Direct effect Mediator C B B A X C Moderator A C B

  19. Moderators Hinshaw (2007) – moderators of treatment response in ADHD Moderator Treatment Symptom reduction Maternal depression

  20. Mediators Mediator From: Journal of Irreproducible Results B Number of pirates X Global temp. 45000 35000

  21. The Relevance of Historical Influences for Understanding Child Psychopathology and Treatments

  22. Historical Influences • Early explanations of psychopathology • Adult focused • Demonology • Somatogenesis • Nineteenth Century • Classification-Kraeplin • Study of youth still lagged • Some childhood disorders identified • Mental retardation received attention • Progress made on conceptualization of etiology

  23. Historical Influences Sigmund Freud & Psychoanalytic Theory • Some disorders caused by psychological events • Childhood a critical time period • Structures of mind • Id • Ego • Superego • Levels of consciousness • Conscious • Sub or pre-conscious • Unconscious • Psychosexual theory of development • Oral • Anal • Phallic • Latency • Genital • Influence of Darwin (aggressive & sexual drives) [Charles Darwin 1809-1882; Sigmund Freud 1856-1939]

  24. Historical Influences • Behaviorism and Social Learning Theory • Behavior is learned-caused by interactions with the environment • Classical Conditioning • Pavlov • Watson • Law of Effect • Thorndike • Operant Learning • Skinner • Modeling • Bandura

  25. Schematic of Operant Conditioning Relationships Outcome of Conditioning Increase Behavior Decrease Behavior PositiveStimulus PositiveReinforcement (add stimulus) Response Cost (remove stimulus) NegativeStimulus NegativeReinforcement (remove stimulus) Punishment (add stimulus)

  26. Positive Reinforcement – a positively viewed stimulus follows a particular behavior and strengthens or increases the behavior. Negative Reinforcement – a negatively viewed stimulus is removed or avoided and strengthens or increases the behavior (e.g., carrying an umbrella); 2 primary types: avoidance and escape behavior. Punishment – a negatively viewed stimulus is presented or occurs following a behavior and weakens or reduces future occurrences of the behavior (e.g., spanking). Response Cost – a positive stimulus is removed and strengthens or increases a particular behavior. Extinction – behavior is no longer followed by reinforcement and decreases and eventually ceases in frequency.

  27. S-d’s – discriminative stimuli that indicate the likely occurrence of reinforcement. • S-delta’s – stimuli that indicate the unlikely occurrence of reinforcement.

  28. Basic Classical Conditioning Learning UCR: Salivation [unconditioned response becomes a conditioned response] UCS: Food [unconditioned Stimulus] No conditioning required Paired temporally Conditioning required Neutral Stimulus: Bell [becomes a CS or conditioned stimulus after pairing

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