Deck 4: Classification and Assessment of Abnormal Behavior

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Question
The most likely theories for the cause of mental disorders involve

A)biological systems only.
B)psychological systems only.
C)social systems only.
D)interactions involving biological,psychological,and social systems.
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Question
Modern classification systems in psychiatry were introduced

A)by biologists and then adapted by psychiatrists.
B)by clinical psychologists working for the World Health Organization.
C)by Freud before WWII.
D)shortly after WWII.
Question
DSM-5 diagnoses are grouped under 22 primary headings based on

A)presumed causes.
B)biological factors.
C)descriptive similarity.
D)theoretical assumptions.
Question
One advantage of a dimensional system of classification is that it allows scientists to

A)make all-or-none decisions.
B)arrive at a specific diagnosis.
C)record subtle distinctions.
D)go beyond what people say.
Question
A patient was just released from a psychiatric hospital where he has spent the last five years.A social worker spends some time trying to help him prepare for what she calls stigma.What was the focus of these sessions?

A)negative attitudes that result in various forms of discrimination
B)the tendency for most mental patients to cease taking their medications
C)the tendency for the public to provide too much assistance to former mental patients
D)a government effort to assist former mental patients by providing group living arrangements
Question
In the field of mental health,a clinician's decision to assign a diagnosis when a person's behavior meets the specific criteria for a particular type of disorder is important because it tells the clinician

A)that the person's problems are similar to those experienced by others.
B)what caused the person's problems.
C)exactly how the problems can best be treated.
D)that the person's problems are unique.
Question
The current Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of the American Psychiatric Association is also called the

A)DSM-APA
B)DSM-IV-TR
C)DSM-5
D)DSM-TR
Question
Mental disorders are currently classified on the basis of

A)causal mechanisms.
B)biological features.
C)descriptive features.
D)theoretical relatedness.
Question
In the 1950s and 1960s,mental health clinicians using early editions of the DSM who independently evaluated the same client

A)usually arrived at the same diagnosis.
B)frequently disagreed with one another.
C)relied heavily on psychological tests.
D)tended to prefer the term "problems in living."
Question
Currently there are two classification systems for mental disorders used in the world; the DSM,used mostly in North America,and the __________ ,used in most other parts of the world.

A)WHO
B)ICD
C)DSM-TR
D)PCL
Question
In the classification of intellectual ability,psychologists determine how much intelligence a person has on a particular set of tasks; such a classification system is known as

A)archetypal.
B)dimensional.
C)categorical.
D)diagnostic.
Question
A psychologist conducts an interview and administers several psychological tests in order to evaluate the nature of a person's problem and to formulate a treatment plan.What term is used to describe this process?

A)diagnosis
B)assessment
C)validation
D)ego analysis
Question
In the case of Michael presented in your text,which of these is one of the keys that should lead a mental health professional to suspect that Michael suffers from obsessive-compulsive disorder?

A)Michael's symptoms fall into a recognized pattern.
B)There is a significant family history of conflict.
C)Michael expresses a need to be alone.
D)Michael has trouble communicating his thoughts.
Question
Labeling theory is a perspective on mental disorders that focuses on

A)interrater reliability in diagnosis.
B)identification of biological causes of mental disorders.
C)social factors that influence the assignment of a diagnosis.
D)validity of including certain symptoms in criteria for diagnosis.
Question
According to labeling theory,a psychiatric diagnosis serves to

A)identify etiological factors.
B)eliminate bias due to social factors.
C)clarify the nature of a psychiatric disorder.
D)create a social role that perpetuates abnormal behavior.
Question
A classification system that focuses on how much of a given characteristic an individual exhibits is called

A)categorical.
B)measurement based.
C)classificatory.
D)dimensional.
Question
A system that classifies mental disorders on the basis their qualitative differences is known as a

A)class approach.
B)dimensional approach.
C)categorical approach.
D)measurement approach.
Question
What is a diagnosis?

A)an explanation of the etiology of a problem
B)an estimate of the chances of a full recovery
C)a description of behavior as fitting the criteria for a particular type of disorder
D)a mental health professional's estimate of the impact of family conflict on a disorder
Question
Which organizations publish the two most widely recognized diagnostic systems for mental disorder?

A)American Psychiatric Association and World Health Organization
B)American Psychiatric Association and American Psychological Association
C)National Institute of Mental Health and the American Medical Association
D)American Medical Association and the National Association for the Mentally Ill
Question
The development of scientific classification systems proceeds in an orderly fashion over several years from the first steps involving description to later stages involving

A)diagnosis.
B)theory.
C)dimensions.
D)categories.
Question
How are disorders grouped in DSM-5?

A)by similar kinds of symptoms
B)by the length of time the symptoms have been present
C)by similar levels of disturbance in the individual
D)by the number of symptoms an individual is experiencing
Question
A categorical approach assumes that

A)all distinctions among members of different categories are quantitative.
B)all distinctions among members of different categories are qualitative.
C)the question of "how much" of a characteristic that a person displays can be answered.
D)we cannot make "all or none" decisions.
Question
A team of researchers has developed a structured interview to diagnose a new type of personality disorder.A series of trials to check the reliability of the structured interview yields a kappa of .75.How should the researchers view this result?

A)The kappa is so low they decide to abandon the project.
B)The kappa is not at an acceptable level but encouraging for a new instrument that can be improved.
C)Kappa is not the appropriate measure to be used when evaluating the reliability of a new diagnostic category.
D)The kappa is at an acceptable level for well-established diagnostic instruments,so the interview is ready to be used in clinical settings.
Question
The Diagnostic and Statistical Manual is published by

A)the World Health Organization.
B)the American Psychiatric Association.
C)the Center for Disease Control.
D)the American Psychological Society.
Question
One theory to explain ataques de nervios is that it may be a culturally sanctioned way of expressing

A)fear of darkness.
B)disagreement with the cultural group.
C)distress in response to a threat to the family.
D)fear of death.
Question
Which of the following seems to be a key feature of ataques de nervios?

A)delusions
B)hallucinations
C)loss of control
D)a need to sleep for long periods
Question
Two clinical psychologists each interview and diagnose a group of patients.The extent to which they agree on the diagnosis of each patient is called

A)utility.
B)validity.
C)coverage.
D)reliability.
Question
DSM-5 encourages clinicians to consider the influence of cultural factors in both the expression and recognition of symptoms of mental disorders.This is especially challenging when

A)the clinician and the person with the problem do not share the same cultural background.
B)the clinician and the person with the problem share the same cultural background.
C)cultural background does not factor into the diagnostic equation.
D)the clinician and the person with the problem share the same faith.
Question
In DSM-5,clinical disorders are defined largely in terms of

A)compulsive behaviors
B)symptomatic behaviors.
C)necessity of inpatient therapy.
D)comorbidity.
Question
Michael,whose case serves as an example in your textbook,was diagnosed with obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD).Which of the following pointed toward that diagnosis?

A)He performed repetitive counting rituals in response to obsessive thoughts.
B)He considered his obsessive concerns to be logical.
C)His relationships with his friends were unlimited and satisfying.
D)His rituals interfered with his family's routine.
Question
The two principal criteria used to evaluate a classification system like DSM-5 are

A)reactivity and sensitivity.
B)reliability and validity.
C)inclusiveness and disclusiveness.
D)cultural specificity and cultural universality.
Question
When we ask whether a category or diagnosis is useful,we are asking about its

A)kappa.
B)coverage.
C)validity.
D)reliability.
Question
In the DSM,the behavior referred to as ataques de nervios is viewed as an example of

A)paranoid schizophrenia.
B)panic disorder.
C)a culture-free syndrome.
D)a culture-bound syndrome.
Question
A clinician is using DSM-5 to arrive at a diagnosis for Michael,whose case is presented in your text; to justify a diagnosis of obsessive-compulsive disorder,the clinician will have to

A)conduct extensive psychological tests.
B)refer Michael to a physician.
C)compare Michael symptoms to a specific set of criteria.
D)arrange for Michael to undergo a brain scan.
Question
In order to meet the criteria for obsessive-compulsive disorder,a person's compulsive rituals must take more than one hour each day.Moreover,the symptoms cannot be due to drug use or the presence of other disorders.What aspects of the DSM system are illustrated by these diagnostic criteria?

A)reliable and valid criteria
B)primary and secondary criteria
C)inclusion and exclusion criteria
D)etiological diagnosis and assessment
Question
Your text suggests the possibility that the eating disorder known as bulimia could be listed as a culture-bound syndrome; what fact best supports this view?

A)Eating rituals vary between cultures.
B)Bulimia is found primarily in developed Western cultures.
C)Bulimia is a rare condition.
D)The prevalence of eating disorders does not vary between countries.
Question
Oscar has recently lost a loved one; a mental health professional who is trying to be sensitive to the cultural context of Oscar's problem will want to know

A)what Oscar has learned about how grief should be displayed.
B)how depressed Oscar is.
C)whether Oscar suffers from some chemical imbalance.
D)whether Oscar's family has a history of depression.
Question
Culture-bound syndromes in DSM are also known as idioms of distress because they represent

A)different forms of speech.
B)unique manners of expressing emotion.
C)the non-professional term for mental disorders.
D)non-existent or imagined forms of psychopathology.
Question
In DSM,clinical disorders are classified based on

A)axes from I - V.
B)alphabetization.
C)descriptive features and symptoms.
D)they are not classified,because labeling creates problems for individuals.
Question
"Kappa" is a measure of interrater reliability that describes

A)the proportion of time raters agree exactly.
B)the proportion of agreement beyond chance agreement.
C)whether certain diagnoses are used disproportionately.
D)whether a clinician is equally accurate with all diagnoses.
Question
A clinical psychologist is interviewing a client and asks a series of questions.Later the same psychologist interviews another client and asks the same series of questions in the same order.What type of interview is the psychologist using?

A)primary
B)objective
C)projective
D)structured
Question
According to the National Comorbidity Survey,what percentage of people who qualify for a diagnosis of one mental disorder in their lifetime are likely to meet the criteria for two or more disorders?

A)less than 5 percent
B)almost 100 percent
C)a little more than 50 percent
D)no more than 20 percent
Question
A clinician has met with a client who presents symptoms that would meet the criteria for several disorders; according to DSM,the clinician would

A)pick the most severe disorder to diagnose.
B)pick the disorder that appeared first to diagnose.
C)diagnose each disorder that fits the client's symptoms.
D)have to decide which disorder was the most treatable.
Question
The three primary goals that guide most assessment procedures are

A)making predictions,planning treatments,and evaluating treatments.
B)pinpointing etiology,testing etiology,and planning treatments
C)pinpointing etiology,evaluating etiology,and making predictions.
D)deciding on a diagnosis,testing the diagnosis,and pinpointing etiology.
Question
Structured diagnostic interviews are used extensively in conjunction with the DSM-5 classification system.The main advantage of using these tools is

A)some clients are unwilling to provide a rational description of their own problems
B)to reduce the need to establish rapport
C)some clients are unable to provide a rational description of their own problems
D)flexibility
Question
The case of Michael presented in your text illustrates comorbidity because

A)Michael suffers from more than one disorder.
B)Michael suffers from a life-threatening disorder.
C)Michael's disorder resulted from family conflict.
D)Michael shares the disorder with other members of his family.
Question
Paul Meehl has suggested that when clinicians mistakenly pay attention to vague,superficial,or stereotyped statements by clients,and fail to pay to attention to subtler but more important evidence,they are victims of the cognitive error he has labeled the

A)cognitive dissonance effect.
B)unreliability bias.
C)Barnum effect.
D)diagnostic fallibility crisis.
Question
Based on their assessment,clinicians want to generalize,or draw inferences about the person's behavior in the natural environment,but

A)clinicians are unable to generalize accurately.
B)clinicians must rely on specific samples of a person's behavior.
C)only psychophysiological tests allow for such generalizations.
D)only objective tests allow for such generalizations.
Question
If you had to briefly summarize the results of research on diagnostic reliability of mental disorders,which of the following sentences would do the job?

A)"The reliability has increased with few exceptions."
B)"We should not accept the assumption that the diagnostic categories in DSM-5 are used reliably."
C)"The highest reliability is found for the specific examples of each of the major categories."
D)"There is good reliability for personality disorders but lower reliability for other disorders."
Question
Split-half reliability is a measure of a test's

A)validity.
B)internal consistency.
C)interrater consistency.
D)test-retest consistency.
Question
A psychologist wants to obtain a measure of children's attention spans under quiet conditions.She arranges for a group of children to meet individually with a research assistant who reads each child a list of numbers and then asks the child to repeat the numbers in reverse order.A week later the children repeat this task.The psychologist finds that the scores that each child received at week one and at week two tend to be very similar.She concludes that this test has high

A)validity.
B)split-half reliability.
C)interrater reliability.
D)test-retest reliability.
Question
You are part of a team designing a study to see if a given DSM category tends to run in families.Concerned with contributing factors to the onset of a disorder,your team is looking for evidence of __________ validity.

A)genetic
B)test-retest
C)reliable
D)etiological
Question
Videotapes of 10-year-old children are being used to determine if their social interactions are related to the development of schizophrenia in adulthood.What type of validity is the focus of interest here?

A)prognostic
B)predictive
C)concurrent
D)test-retest
Question
What are the most commonly used psychological assessment procedures?

A)IQ tests
B)interviews
C)rating scales
D)personality tests
Question
Your text describes a study of the reliability of diagnoses for several types of mental disorders which concludes that

A)clinicians do not use psychological testing.
B)more categories of mental disorder should be introduced.
C)the diagnostic categories of the DSM are not always used reliably by clinicians.
D)psychiatrists and psychologists fail to cooperate.
Question
In DSM-5,disorders are defined in the terms of

A)relationships with family members.
B)the individual.
C)the individual's place in a chosen culture.
D)the relationship between the client and the therapist.
Question
Which of the following disorders have especially low diagnostic reliability?

A)attention deficit
B)posttraumatic stress
C)autism spectrum
D)generalized anxiety
Question
One goal of nondirective interviews is to

A)incorporate talk therapy.
B)specify in advance the possible etiologies of the client's problems.
C)explain the diagnosis to the client.
D)help people clarify their subjective feelings.
Question
Which of the following is the best word or phrase to explain the validity of an assessment procedure?

A)meaning
B)consistency
C)reliability
D)predictability
Question
What is one of the advantages of structured interviews in assessing clients?

A)Scoring is based on empirical research.
B)Structured interviews do not require training.
C)The interviewer can probe further when necessary.
D)The structured interview has a strict time limit that provides more time for other diagnostic tests.
Question
A client is asked to respond to items such as "How much distress do your obsessive thoughts cause you?" by using numbers from 0 to 4.What type of assessment is being used?

A)rating scale
B)behavioral coding
C)projective testing
D)self-report inventory
Question
A psychologist is reviewing results of the MMPI-2 test administered to a client who was mandated by a judge to seek therapy.The psychologist is concerned that the client may not have answered the questions consistently and honestly.Which part of the MMPI-2 will be of special interest to this psychologist?

A)validity scales
B)actuarial scales
C)projective scales
D)reliability scales
Question
An actuarial procedure of interpretation of psychological tests relies on

A)subjective ratings of clinical interviews.
B)current behavior rather than past behavior.
C)psychoanalytic interpretation of test results.
D)probability statements derived from empirical research.
Question
Self-monitoring refers to

A)clinicians looking out for their own biases.
B)children learning to regulate their own behavior.
C)adult clients keeping records of their own behavior.
D)the importance of the clinician's presence in formal observation.
Question
What is the primary assumption of projective personality tests?

A)Self-report checklists are more efficient than interviews.
B)Visual processing errors often indicate a schizophrenic process.
C)Individuals would project unconscious feelings onto ambiguous stimuli.
D)A person's future goals reveal a lot about motivation,emotion,and personality.
Question
Carol is asked to complete a questionnaire made up of more than 500 true-false items.What test is she taking?

A)Visual Analogue Test
B)Thematic Apperception Test
C)Wechsler Adult Intelligence Test
D)Minnesota Multiphasic Personality Inventory
Question
What is one of the limitations of the MMPI-2 as a personality measure?

A)It relies on subjective scoring.
B)It is limited to use with the normal personality.
C)There is little research on its reliability or validity.
D)People who are acutely psychotic often have difficulty reading and comprehending.
Question
After reviewing the manual for scoring the MMPI-2,Elizabeth decides that the scoring can best be described as

A)reactive.
B)objective.
C)subjective.
D)projective.
Question
Several questions on the MMPI-2 contain questions that almost everyone is likely to answer in the same way; these questions are included to catch unsophisticated attempts to avoid answering honestly and are scored on the

A)D or Deception Scale.
B)L or Lie Scale.
C)T or Truth Scale.
D)O or Obfuscation Scale.
Question
A psychologist administers a series of projective tests to a client.Which major theoretical orientation is most consistent with this psychologist's preference in assessment methods?

A)behavioral
B)biological
C)humanistic
D)psychodynamic
Question
What is one of the limitations of structured interviews?

A)There is no room for clinical judgment.
B)They are based only on open-ended questions.
C)Information provided by the client can be distorted.
D)The interviewer cannot control the course of the interview.
Question
One empirical finding about the MMPI-2 scales is that an individual's scores change over time.This finding could indicate a(n)

A)high level of statistical significance to the scales.
B)individual's temperament.
C)lack of reliability to the scales.
D)high validity concerning the scales.
Question
Reactivity refers to the

A)effects of personal judgment on observers' ratings.
B)tendency for observers to rate less severity over time.
C)tendency for a person to change her behavior when she knows she is being observed.
D)tendency for a person to reveal less in a structured interview than on a questionnaire.
Question
Alice has been experiencing a number of symptoms of anxiety for several months.A psychologist decides to assess her symptoms by using a behavioral coding system.What is Alice likely to be asked to do?

A)evaluate the symbolism of each of her symptoms
B)record the presence of specific symptoms during 30-minute segments throughout the day
C)rate the level of anxiety she feels on a scale ranging from very anxious to not anxious
D)discuss her symptoms while a psychologist checks instruments designed to measure her pulse and breathing
Question
A researcher wants to compare the use of rating scales to behavioral coding systems.After making the comparison,he concludes that behavioral coding systems tend to

A)be less reliable.
B)be more qualitative.
C)require more subjective judgment.
D)require less inference by the observer.
Question
What is the benefit of personality tests in psychological assessment?

A)The same stimuli are used every time the test is given.
B)It is more useful to assess personality than specific behaviors.
C)People are generally unable to describe their own personalities.
D)They do not have to be administered and interpreted by trained clinicians.
Question
An advantage of the MMPI-2 in clinical assessment is that it

A)provides an in-depth measure of a small number of critical dimensions.
B)gives the clinician ample opportunity to ask additional questions.
C)covers a wide range of problems in an efficient manner.
D)allows clinicians to include their own professional judgments.
Question
Projective tests

A)are objectively scored.
B)are used mostly by cognitive behavioral therapists.
C)involve the presentation of stimuli that elicit standardized responses.
D)involve the presentation of ambiguous stimuli.
Question
Ray is suspicious and has the unrelenting delusion that agents of a foreign government are following him with the intention of killing him.If Ray were administered the MMPI-2,you expect that he would have a high score on the scale measuring

A)hysteria.
B)paranoia.
C)ego identity.
D)narrow-mindedness.
Question
Using observation as part of a clinical interview can help the interviewer to

A)clearly understand issues that are hidden in the client's unconscious..
B)understand the client's hidden behaviors not performed in front of the interviewer .
C)both confirm and question the client's self-report.
D)help the client change her self-report.
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Deck 4: Classification and Assessment of Abnormal Behavior
1
The most likely theories for the cause of mental disorders involve

A)biological systems only.
B)psychological systems only.
C)social systems only.
D)interactions involving biological,psychological,and social systems.
interactions involving biological,psychological,and social systems.
2
Modern classification systems in psychiatry were introduced

A)by biologists and then adapted by psychiatrists.
B)by clinical psychologists working for the World Health Organization.
C)by Freud before WWII.
D)shortly after WWII.
shortly after WWII.
3
DSM-5 diagnoses are grouped under 22 primary headings based on

A)presumed causes.
B)biological factors.
C)descriptive similarity.
D)theoretical assumptions.
descriptive similarity.
4
One advantage of a dimensional system of classification is that it allows scientists to

A)make all-or-none decisions.
B)arrive at a specific diagnosis.
C)record subtle distinctions.
D)go beyond what people say.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 114 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
5
A patient was just released from a psychiatric hospital where he has spent the last five years.A social worker spends some time trying to help him prepare for what she calls stigma.What was the focus of these sessions?

A)negative attitudes that result in various forms of discrimination
B)the tendency for most mental patients to cease taking their medications
C)the tendency for the public to provide too much assistance to former mental patients
D)a government effort to assist former mental patients by providing group living arrangements
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 114 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
6
In the field of mental health,a clinician's decision to assign a diagnosis when a person's behavior meets the specific criteria for a particular type of disorder is important because it tells the clinician

A)that the person's problems are similar to those experienced by others.
B)what caused the person's problems.
C)exactly how the problems can best be treated.
D)that the person's problems are unique.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 114 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
7
The current Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of the American Psychiatric Association is also called the

A)DSM-APA
B)DSM-IV-TR
C)DSM-5
D)DSM-TR
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 114 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
8
Mental disorders are currently classified on the basis of

A)causal mechanisms.
B)biological features.
C)descriptive features.
D)theoretical relatedness.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 114 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
9
In the 1950s and 1960s,mental health clinicians using early editions of the DSM who independently evaluated the same client

A)usually arrived at the same diagnosis.
B)frequently disagreed with one another.
C)relied heavily on psychological tests.
D)tended to prefer the term "problems in living."
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 114 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
10
Currently there are two classification systems for mental disorders used in the world; the DSM,used mostly in North America,and the __________ ,used in most other parts of the world.

A)WHO
B)ICD
C)DSM-TR
D)PCL
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 114 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
11
In the classification of intellectual ability,psychologists determine how much intelligence a person has on a particular set of tasks; such a classification system is known as

A)archetypal.
B)dimensional.
C)categorical.
D)diagnostic.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 114 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
12
A psychologist conducts an interview and administers several psychological tests in order to evaluate the nature of a person's problem and to formulate a treatment plan.What term is used to describe this process?

A)diagnosis
B)assessment
C)validation
D)ego analysis
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 114 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
13
In the case of Michael presented in your text,which of these is one of the keys that should lead a mental health professional to suspect that Michael suffers from obsessive-compulsive disorder?

A)Michael's symptoms fall into a recognized pattern.
B)There is a significant family history of conflict.
C)Michael expresses a need to be alone.
D)Michael has trouble communicating his thoughts.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 114 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
14
Labeling theory is a perspective on mental disorders that focuses on

A)interrater reliability in diagnosis.
B)identification of biological causes of mental disorders.
C)social factors that influence the assignment of a diagnosis.
D)validity of including certain symptoms in criteria for diagnosis.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 114 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
15
According to labeling theory,a psychiatric diagnosis serves to

A)identify etiological factors.
B)eliminate bias due to social factors.
C)clarify the nature of a psychiatric disorder.
D)create a social role that perpetuates abnormal behavior.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 114 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
16
A classification system that focuses on how much of a given characteristic an individual exhibits is called

A)categorical.
B)measurement based.
C)classificatory.
D)dimensional.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 114 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
17
A system that classifies mental disorders on the basis their qualitative differences is known as a

A)class approach.
B)dimensional approach.
C)categorical approach.
D)measurement approach.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 114 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
18
What is a diagnosis?

A)an explanation of the etiology of a problem
B)an estimate of the chances of a full recovery
C)a description of behavior as fitting the criteria for a particular type of disorder
D)a mental health professional's estimate of the impact of family conflict on a disorder
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Unlock for access to all 114 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
19
Which organizations publish the two most widely recognized diagnostic systems for mental disorder?

A)American Psychiatric Association and World Health Organization
B)American Psychiatric Association and American Psychological Association
C)National Institute of Mental Health and the American Medical Association
D)American Medical Association and the National Association for the Mentally Ill
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Unlock for access to all 114 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
20
The development of scientific classification systems proceeds in an orderly fashion over several years from the first steps involving description to later stages involving

A)diagnosis.
B)theory.
C)dimensions.
D)categories.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 114 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
21
How are disorders grouped in DSM-5?

A)by similar kinds of symptoms
B)by the length of time the symptoms have been present
C)by similar levels of disturbance in the individual
D)by the number of symptoms an individual is experiencing
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 114 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
22
A categorical approach assumes that

A)all distinctions among members of different categories are quantitative.
B)all distinctions among members of different categories are qualitative.
C)the question of "how much" of a characteristic that a person displays can be answered.
D)we cannot make "all or none" decisions.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 114 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
23
A team of researchers has developed a structured interview to diagnose a new type of personality disorder.A series of trials to check the reliability of the structured interview yields a kappa of .75.How should the researchers view this result?

A)The kappa is so low they decide to abandon the project.
B)The kappa is not at an acceptable level but encouraging for a new instrument that can be improved.
C)Kappa is not the appropriate measure to be used when evaluating the reliability of a new diagnostic category.
D)The kappa is at an acceptable level for well-established diagnostic instruments,so the interview is ready to be used in clinical settings.
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24
The Diagnostic and Statistical Manual is published by

A)the World Health Organization.
B)the American Psychiatric Association.
C)the Center for Disease Control.
D)the American Psychological Society.
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25
One theory to explain ataques de nervios is that it may be a culturally sanctioned way of expressing

A)fear of darkness.
B)disagreement with the cultural group.
C)distress in response to a threat to the family.
D)fear of death.
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26
Which of the following seems to be a key feature of ataques de nervios?

A)delusions
B)hallucinations
C)loss of control
D)a need to sleep for long periods
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27
Two clinical psychologists each interview and diagnose a group of patients.The extent to which they agree on the diagnosis of each patient is called

A)utility.
B)validity.
C)coverage.
D)reliability.
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28
DSM-5 encourages clinicians to consider the influence of cultural factors in both the expression and recognition of symptoms of mental disorders.This is especially challenging when

A)the clinician and the person with the problem do not share the same cultural background.
B)the clinician and the person with the problem share the same cultural background.
C)cultural background does not factor into the diagnostic equation.
D)the clinician and the person with the problem share the same faith.
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29
In DSM-5,clinical disorders are defined largely in terms of

A)compulsive behaviors
B)symptomatic behaviors.
C)necessity of inpatient therapy.
D)comorbidity.
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30
Michael,whose case serves as an example in your textbook,was diagnosed with obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD).Which of the following pointed toward that diagnosis?

A)He performed repetitive counting rituals in response to obsessive thoughts.
B)He considered his obsessive concerns to be logical.
C)His relationships with his friends were unlimited and satisfying.
D)His rituals interfered with his family's routine.
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31
The two principal criteria used to evaluate a classification system like DSM-5 are

A)reactivity and sensitivity.
B)reliability and validity.
C)inclusiveness and disclusiveness.
D)cultural specificity and cultural universality.
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32
When we ask whether a category or diagnosis is useful,we are asking about its

A)kappa.
B)coverage.
C)validity.
D)reliability.
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33
In the DSM,the behavior referred to as ataques de nervios is viewed as an example of

A)paranoid schizophrenia.
B)panic disorder.
C)a culture-free syndrome.
D)a culture-bound syndrome.
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34
A clinician is using DSM-5 to arrive at a diagnosis for Michael,whose case is presented in your text; to justify a diagnosis of obsessive-compulsive disorder,the clinician will have to

A)conduct extensive psychological tests.
B)refer Michael to a physician.
C)compare Michael symptoms to a specific set of criteria.
D)arrange for Michael to undergo a brain scan.
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35
In order to meet the criteria for obsessive-compulsive disorder,a person's compulsive rituals must take more than one hour each day.Moreover,the symptoms cannot be due to drug use or the presence of other disorders.What aspects of the DSM system are illustrated by these diagnostic criteria?

A)reliable and valid criteria
B)primary and secondary criteria
C)inclusion and exclusion criteria
D)etiological diagnosis and assessment
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36
Your text suggests the possibility that the eating disorder known as bulimia could be listed as a culture-bound syndrome; what fact best supports this view?

A)Eating rituals vary between cultures.
B)Bulimia is found primarily in developed Western cultures.
C)Bulimia is a rare condition.
D)The prevalence of eating disorders does not vary between countries.
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37
Oscar has recently lost a loved one; a mental health professional who is trying to be sensitive to the cultural context of Oscar's problem will want to know

A)what Oscar has learned about how grief should be displayed.
B)how depressed Oscar is.
C)whether Oscar suffers from some chemical imbalance.
D)whether Oscar's family has a history of depression.
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38
Culture-bound syndromes in DSM are also known as idioms of distress because they represent

A)different forms of speech.
B)unique manners of expressing emotion.
C)the non-professional term for mental disorders.
D)non-existent or imagined forms of psychopathology.
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39
In DSM,clinical disorders are classified based on

A)axes from I - V.
B)alphabetization.
C)descriptive features and symptoms.
D)they are not classified,because labeling creates problems for individuals.
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40
"Kappa" is a measure of interrater reliability that describes

A)the proportion of time raters agree exactly.
B)the proportion of agreement beyond chance agreement.
C)whether certain diagnoses are used disproportionately.
D)whether a clinician is equally accurate with all diagnoses.
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41
A clinical psychologist is interviewing a client and asks a series of questions.Later the same psychologist interviews another client and asks the same series of questions in the same order.What type of interview is the psychologist using?

A)primary
B)objective
C)projective
D)structured
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42
According to the National Comorbidity Survey,what percentage of people who qualify for a diagnosis of one mental disorder in their lifetime are likely to meet the criteria for two or more disorders?

A)less than 5 percent
B)almost 100 percent
C)a little more than 50 percent
D)no more than 20 percent
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43
A clinician has met with a client who presents symptoms that would meet the criteria for several disorders; according to DSM,the clinician would

A)pick the most severe disorder to diagnose.
B)pick the disorder that appeared first to diagnose.
C)diagnose each disorder that fits the client's symptoms.
D)have to decide which disorder was the most treatable.
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44
The three primary goals that guide most assessment procedures are

A)making predictions,planning treatments,and evaluating treatments.
B)pinpointing etiology,testing etiology,and planning treatments
C)pinpointing etiology,evaluating etiology,and making predictions.
D)deciding on a diagnosis,testing the diagnosis,and pinpointing etiology.
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45
Structured diagnostic interviews are used extensively in conjunction with the DSM-5 classification system.The main advantage of using these tools is

A)some clients are unwilling to provide a rational description of their own problems
B)to reduce the need to establish rapport
C)some clients are unable to provide a rational description of their own problems
D)flexibility
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46
The case of Michael presented in your text illustrates comorbidity because

A)Michael suffers from more than one disorder.
B)Michael suffers from a life-threatening disorder.
C)Michael's disorder resulted from family conflict.
D)Michael shares the disorder with other members of his family.
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47
Paul Meehl has suggested that when clinicians mistakenly pay attention to vague,superficial,or stereotyped statements by clients,and fail to pay to attention to subtler but more important evidence,they are victims of the cognitive error he has labeled the

A)cognitive dissonance effect.
B)unreliability bias.
C)Barnum effect.
D)diagnostic fallibility crisis.
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48
Based on their assessment,clinicians want to generalize,or draw inferences about the person's behavior in the natural environment,but

A)clinicians are unable to generalize accurately.
B)clinicians must rely on specific samples of a person's behavior.
C)only psychophysiological tests allow for such generalizations.
D)only objective tests allow for such generalizations.
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49
If you had to briefly summarize the results of research on diagnostic reliability of mental disorders,which of the following sentences would do the job?

A)"The reliability has increased with few exceptions."
B)"We should not accept the assumption that the diagnostic categories in DSM-5 are used reliably."
C)"The highest reliability is found for the specific examples of each of the major categories."
D)"There is good reliability for personality disorders but lower reliability for other disorders."
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50
Split-half reliability is a measure of a test's

A)validity.
B)internal consistency.
C)interrater consistency.
D)test-retest consistency.
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51
A psychologist wants to obtain a measure of children's attention spans under quiet conditions.She arranges for a group of children to meet individually with a research assistant who reads each child a list of numbers and then asks the child to repeat the numbers in reverse order.A week later the children repeat this task.The psychologist finds that the scores that each child received at week one and at week two tend to be very similar.She concludes that this test has high

A)validity.
B)split-half reliability.
C)interrater reliability.
D)test-retest reliability.
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52
You are part of a team designing a study to see if a given DSM category tends to run in families.Concerned with contributing factors to the onset of a disorder,your team is looking for evidence of __________ validity.

A)genetic
B)test-retest
C)reliable
D)etiological
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53
Videotapes of 10-year-old children are being used to determine if their social interactions are related to the development of schizophrenia in adulthood.What type of validity is the focus of interest here?

A)prognostic
B)predictive
C)concurrent
D)test-retest
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54
What are the most commonly used psychological assessment procedures?

A)IQ tests
B)interviews
C)rating scales
D)personality tests
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55
Your text describes a study of the reliability of diagnoses for several types of mental disorders which concludes that

A)clinicians do not use psychological testing.
B)more categories of mental disorder should be introduced.
C)the diagnostic categories of the DSM are not always used reliably by clinicians.
D)psychiatrists and psychologists fail to cooperate.
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56
In DSM-5,disorders are defined in the terms of

A)relationships with family members.
B)the individual.
C)the individual's place in a chosen culture.
D)the relationship between the client and the therapist.
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57
Which of the following disorders have especially low diagnostic reliability?

A)attention deficit
B)posttraumatic stress
C)autism spectrum
D)generalized anxiety
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58
One goal of nondirective interviews is to

A)incorporate talk therapy.
B)specify in advance the possible etiologies of the client's problems.
C)explain the diagnosis to the client.
D)help people clarify their subjective feelings.
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59
Which of the following is the best word or phrase to explain the validity of an assessment procedure?

A)meaning
B)consistency
C)reliability
D)predictability
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60
What is one of the advantages of structured interviews in assessing clients?

A)Scoring is based on empirical research.
B)Structured interviews do not require training.
C)The interviewer can probe further when necessary.
D)The structured interview has a strict time limit that provides more time for other diagnostic tests.
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61
A client is asked to respond to items such as "How much distress do your obsessive thoughts cause you?" by using numbers from 0 to 4.What type of assessment is being used?

A)rating scale
B)behavioral coding
C)projective testing
D)self-report inventory
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62
A psychologist is reviewing results of the MMPI-2 test administered to a client who was mandated by a judge to seek therapy.The psychologist is concerned that the client may not have answered the questions consistently and honestly.Which part of the MMPI-2 will be of special interest to this psychologist?

A)validity scales
B)actuarial scales
C)projective scales
D)reliability scales
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63
An actuarial procedure of interpretation of psychological tests relies on

A)subjective ratings of clinical interviews.
B)current behavior rather than past behavior.
C)psychoanalytic interpretation of test results.
D)probability statements derived from empirical research.
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64
Self-monitoring refers to

A)clinicians looking out for their own biases.
B)children learning to regulate their own behavior.
C)adult clients keeping records of their own behavior.
D)the importance of the clinician's presence in formal observation.
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65
What is the primary assumption of projective personality tests?

A)Self-report checklists are more efficient than interviews.
B)Visual processing errors often indicate a schizophrenic process.
C)Individuals would project unconscious feelings onto ambiguous stimuli.
D)A person's future goals reveal a lot about motivation,emotion,and personality.
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66
Carol is asked to complete a questionnaire made up of more than 500 true-false items.What test is she taking?

A)Visual Analogue Test
B)Thematic Apperception Test
C)Wechsler Adult Intelligence Test
D)Minnesota Multiphasic Personality Inventory
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67
What is one of the limitations of the MMPI-2 as a personality measure?

A)It relies on subjective scoring.
B)It is limited to use with the normal personality.
C)There is little research on its reliability or validity.
D)People who are acutely psychotic often have difficulty reading and comprehending.
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68
After reviewing the manual for scoring the MMPI-2,Elizabeth decides that the scoring can best be described as

A)reactive.
B)objective.
C)subjective.
D)projective.
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69
Several questions on the MMPI-2 contain questions that almost everyone is likely to answer in the same way; these questions are included to catch unsophisticated attempts to avoid answering honestly and are scored on the

A)D or Deception Scale.
B)L or Lie Scale.
C)T or Truth Scale.
D)O or Obfuscation Scale.
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70
A psychologist administers a series of projective tests to a client.Which major theoretical orientation is most consistent with this psychologist's preference in assessment methods?

A)behavioral
B)biological
C)humanistic
D)psychodynamic
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71
What is one of the limitations of structured interviews?

A)There is no room for clinical judgment.
B)They are based only on open-ended questions.
C)Information provided by the client can be distorted.
D)The interviewer cannot control the course of the interview.
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72
One empirical finding about the MMPI-2 scales is that an individual's scores change over time.This finding could indicate a(n)

A)high level of statistical significance to the scales.
B)individual's temperament.
C)lack of reliability to the scales.
D)high validity concerning the scales.
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73
Reactivity refers to the

A)effects of personal judgment on observers' ratings.
B)tendency for observers to rate less severity over time.
C)tendency for a person to change her behavior when she knows she is being observed.
D)tendency for a person to reveal less in a structured interview than on a questionnaire.
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74
Alice has been experiencing a number of symptoms of anxiety for several months.A psychologist decides to assess her symptoms by using a behavioral coding system.What is Alice likely to be asked to do?

A)evaluate the symbolism of each of her symptoms
B)record the presence of specific symptoms during 30-minute segments throughout the day
C)rate the level of anxiety she feels on a scale ranging from very anxious to not anxious
D)discuss her symptoms while a psychologist checks instruments designed to measure her pulse and breathing
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75
A researcher wants to compare the use of rating scales to behavioral coding systems.After making the comparison,he concludes that behavioral coding systems tend to

A)be less reliable.
B)be more qualitative.
C)require more subjective judgment.
D)require less inference by the observer.
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76
What is the benefit of personality tests in psychological assessment?

A)The same stimuli are used every time the test is given.
B)It is more useful to assess personality than specific behaviors.
C)People are generally unable to describe their own personalities.
D)They do not have to be administered and interpreted by trained clinicians.
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77
An advantage of the MMPI-2 in clinical assessment is that it

A)provides an in-depth measure of a small number of critical dimensions.
B)gives the clinician ample opportunity to ask additional questions.
C)covers a wide range of problems in an efficient manner.
D)allows clinicians to include their own professional judgments.
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78
Projective tests

A)are objectively scored.
B)are used mostly by cognitive behavioral therapists.
C)involve the presentation of stimuli that elicit standardized responses.
D)involve the presentation of ambiguous stimuli.
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79
Ray is suspicious and has the unrelenting delusion that agents of a foreign government are following him with the intention of killing him.If Ray were administered the MMPI-2,you expect that he would have a high score on the scale measuring

A)hysteria.
B)paranoia.
C)ego identity.
D)narrow-mindedness.
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80
Using observation as part of a clinical interview can help the interviewer to

A)clearly understand issues that are hidden in the client's unconscious..
B)understand the client's hidden behaviors not performed in front of the interviewer .
C)both confirm and question the client's self-report.
D)help the client change her self-report.
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