Deck 5: Anxiety, Obsessive-Compulsive, and Related Disorders

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Question
What type of psychotherapist would tell a patient being treated for a cleaning compulsion to resist the urge to mop the bathroom floor for a week?

A) psychodynamic
B) cognitive
C) biological
D) behavioral
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Question
In which kind of study would a researcher determine how many and which relatives of a person with a disorder have the same disorder?

A) twin study
B) adoption study
C) family pedigree study
D) generational extraction study
Question
Which psychological perspective believes that people develop their compulsions as a result of random coincidence?

A) psychodynamic
B) cognitive
C) behavioral
D) sociocultural
Question
Which phrase is NOT used by cognitive researchers to describe people who suffer from obsessive-compulsive disorder?

A) a higher rate of depression
B) high standards of conduct and morality
C) lack of a sense of responsibility
D) a belief in perfect control over all of their thoughts and actions
Question
The cognitive perspective of panic disorder suggests that its sufferers:

A) are predisposed to paranoia.
B) may be overly sensitive to bodily sensation and misinterpret them.
C) are neurotic.
D) lack ego strength.
Question
What disorder may also develop along with panic disorder?

A) agoraphobia
B) mitral valve prolapse
C) headaches
D) heart disease
Question
Abnormal functioning in which areas of the brain has been linked to obsessive-compulsive disorder?

A) hypothalamus and parietal lobe
B) occipital lobe and association cortex
C) orbitofrontal cortex and the caudate nuclei
D) cerebellum and brain stem
Question
To qualify for a DSM-5 diagnosis of generalized anxiety disorder, the excessive or ongoing anxiety or worry must last for at least:

A) six weeks.
B) three months.
C) three weeks.
D) six months.
Question
The most common theme of obsessive thoughts is:

A) violence.
B) orderliness.
C) dirt or contamination.
D) sexuality.
Question
This type of therapy tries to help clients suffering from anxiety by providing empathy and genuine acceptance.

A) self-instruction training
B) client-centered therapy
C) relaxation training
D) objects relations therapy
Question
The _____ perspective suggests that one way of acquiring a fear reaction that may turn into a phobia is through modeling-that is, through observation and imitation.

A) psychodynamic
B) cognitive
C) behavioral
D) sociocultural
Question
What suggestion is shared by both the metacognitive theory and the avoidance theory of generalized anxiety disorder?

A) that the only reasonable solution to generalized anxiety disorder is the use of medication
B) that the defense mechanism of reaction formation is at play in this illness
C) that generalized anxiety disorder is a function of emotional abuse during childhood
D) that worrying serves some sort of "positive" function for the sufferer
Question
Women are _____ as likely as men to experience panic disorder.

A) two and one-half times
B) three times
C) one and one-half times
D) four times
Question
In which behavioral technique is the exposure vicarious?

A) modeling
B) desensitization
C) flooding
D) rational-emotive therapy
Question
Which qualifiers are used to describe a person's social anxiety disorder?

A) narrow or broad
B) acquired or lifelong
C) situational or generalized
D) specific or agoraphobic
Question
One study of persons with anxiety disorders found that _____ percent actually suffered from multiple disorders.

A) 3
B) 81
C) 24
D) 57
Question
A fear hierarchy is:

A) the result of therapeutic "flooding."
B) a social order based on bravery.
C) a rating scale for panic attacks.
D) a list of feared objects or situations.
Question
Which neurotransmitter system may be irregular in people suffering from panic disorder?

A) serotonin
B) dopamine
C) GABA
D) norepinephrine
Question
Which type of drugs has been most helpful in treating obsessive-compulsive disorder?

A) benzodiazepines
B) antidepressants that affect the serotonin system
C) antidepressants that affect the norepinephrine system
D) No drugs have proven effective to treat obsessive-compulsive disorder.
Question
Obsessive-compulsive disorder usually begins by:

A) childhood.
B) early middle age.
C) young adulthood..
D) adolescence.
Question
The distress experienced by people with _____ is sometimes described as free-floating anxiety.

A) generalized anxiety disorder
B) neurotic anxiety
C) obsessive-compulsive disorder
D) agoraphobia
Question
According to Sigmund Freud, children experience _____ when they are repeatedly prevented from expressing their id impulses.

A) realistic anxiety
B) neurotic anxiety
C) moral anxiety
D) situation anxiety
Question
What perspective maintains that generalized anxiety disorder develops as a result of exposure to threatening environments?

A) psychodynamic
B) humanistic
C) behavioral
D) sociocultural
Question
According to psychodynamic theorists, what three defense mechanisms are involved in obsessive-compulsive disorder?

A) repression, suppression, and sublimation
B) depression, repression, and suppression
C) isolation, undoing, and reaction formation
D) reaction formation, acting out, and projection
Question
The most widely applied method of biofeedback for the treatment of anxiety disorders is the:

A) EKG.
B) EEG.
C) EMG.
D) ECT.
Question
Fear of venturing into public places is known as:

A) acrophobia.
B) agoraphobia.
C) ophidiophobia.
D) kenophobia.
Question
The idea that human beings are "prepared" to acquire some phobias and not others flows from a _____ perspective.

A) behavioral
B) biological
C) behavioral-evolutionary
D) cognitive
Question
Which disorder appears to have the same prevalence in women and in men?

A) specific phobia
B) obsessive-compulsive disorder
C) social anxiety disorder
D) panic disorder
Question
Which is NOT a behavioral technique used in social skills training?

A) exposure
B) modeling
C) feedback
D) rehearsal
Question
In _____, researchers produce panic in subjects or clients by administering drugs or by instructing them to breathe, exercise, or simply think in certain ways.

A) physical exertion trials
B) randomized hyperbaric simulations
C) cardiopulmonary labor analysis
D) biological challenge tests
Question
According to humanistic theorists, people develop generalized anxiety disorder when:

A) their defense mechanisms break down.
B) they are discriminated against.
C) they repeatedly deny their true thoughts, emotions, and behaviors.
D) they have learned to be anxious.
Question
_____ are a family of antianxiety drugs that includes diazepam (Valium) and alprazolam (Xanax).

A) Beta blockers
B) Benzodiazepines
C) Sedatives
D) Barbiturates
Question
Which has DSM-5 NOT categorized as an obsessive-compulsive-related disorder?

A) somatic symptom disorder
B) excoriation disorder
C) body dysmorphic disorder
D) hoarding disorder
Question
According to the biological perspective, malfunctioning of which neurotransmitter system contributes to generalized anxiety disorder?

A) serotonin
B) acetylcholine
C) dopamine
D) GABA
Question
Whose technique of rational-emotive therapy involves practitioners pointing out clients' irrational assumptions and suggesting more appropriate assumptions?

A) Carl Rogers
B) Albert Ellis
C) Aaron Beck
D) Carl Jung
Question
What percentage of Americans suffer from an anxiety disorder each year?

A) 42 percent
B) 10 percent
C) 18 percent
D) 28 percent
Question
Which is NOT a type of anxiety disorder?

A) bipolar disorder
B) panic disorder
C) social anxiety disorder
D) phobias
Question
A treatment package called a stress-management program that is used to treat generalized anxiety disorder would NOT include:

A) cognitive techniques.
B) relaxation training.
C) antianxiety medication.
D) biofeedback.
Question
In _____, the therapist confronts the feared object or situation while the person suffering from the phobia observes.

A) modeling
B) social skills training
C) systematic desensitization
D) flooding
Question
Which is NOT a major behavioral approach to treating specific phobias?

A) systematic desensitization
B) flooding
C) generalization
D) modeling
Question
People with one anxiety disorder are MOST likely to:

A) experience another anxiety disorder, too.
B) experience only that one anxiety disorder.
C) experience another type of psychiatric disorder as well.
D) experience hallucinations.
Question
A person who is restless, keyed up, and on edge for no apparent reason is experiencing:

A) free-floating anxiety.
B) specific anxiety.
C) fearful anxiety.
D) obsessions.
Question
"Phobic and generalized anxiety disorders arise when people stop looking at themselves honestly and with acceptance and instead deny and distort their true thoughts, emotions, and behavior." This explanation for anxiety disorders would MOST likely be offered by:

A) behaviorists.
B) cognitive theorists.
C) sociocultural theorists.
D) humanistic theorists.
Question
Psychodynamic and humanistic therapies have in common:

A) their understanding of how generalized anxiety develops and can be treated.
B) their lack of strong support from controlled studies.
C) their reliance on a rather harsh, confrontational therapeutic style.
D) their use of multidisciplinary therapists who work exclusively in group settings.
Question
Fear differs from anxiety in that:

A) fear is to a specific threat and anxiety is more general.
B) anxiety is more likely to lead to aggression than is fear.
C) anxiety is to an interpersonal threat and fear is to an inanimate threat.
D) anxiety is an immediate response; fear is more vague.
Question
How strong is the evidence supporting the usefulness of client-centered therapy for those with generalized anxiety disorder?

A) not very strong: case reports of client-centered therapy's usefulness are not strongly supported by controlled studies
B) not very strong: controlled studies of client-centered therapy's usefulness are not strongly supported by case reports
C) very strong in both case reports and controlled studies
D) very weak in both case reports and controlled studies
Question
If a person criticized everything he did, looking for flaws, and never could measure up to his personal standards, he would be exhibiting what Rogers called:

A) empathy.
B) unconditional positive regard.
C) conditions of worth.
D) moral anxiety.
Question
Generalized anxiety disorder is MORE common:

A) in African Americans than in white Americans.
B) in men than in women.
C) years after traumatic events, rather than immediately after those events.
D) in wealthy people than in poor people.
Question
The MOST common mental disorders in the United States are:

A) mood disorders.
B) anxiety disorders.
C) personality disorders.
D) sexual disorders.
Question
Which theory states that people develop generalized anxiety disorders because they failed to receive unconditional positive regard as children and evaluate themselves with conditions of worth?

A) Pavlov's conditioning theory
B) Freud's psychoanalytic theory
C) Rogers's client-centered theory
D) Ellis's rational-emotive theory
Question
Which theoretical position explains the origin of anxiety disorders as the overrun of defense mechanisms by neurotic or moral anxiety?

A) the behavioral approach
B) the humanistic approach
C) the sociocultural approach
D) the psychodynamic approach
Question
According to DSM-5, one must demonstrate which set of symptoms to be diagnosed with generalized anxiety disorder?

A) excessive worry for two months, edginess, sleep changes, distress
B) excessive worry for six months, edginess, sleep changes, distress
C) excessive worry for four months, edginess, sleep changes, distress
D) excessive worry for five months, edginess, sleep changes, distress
Question
Someone interested in the effects of social change, poverty, and race on the risk for generalized anxiety disorders probably represents the _____ perspective.

A) sociocultural
B) psychodynamic
C) humanistic-existential
D) cognitive
Question
One limitation of the sociocultural approach to understanding generalized anxiety disorders is that it cannot explain:

A) the paradox that as poverty gets worse, generalized anxiety declines.
B) the relationship between race, poverty, and job opportunity.
C) why everyone who experiences danger doesn't experience generalized anxiety.
D) the differences in generalized anxiety in countries around the world.
Question
According to Freud, children who are prevented from expressing id impulses-making mud pies, playing war, and exploring their genitals-are at risk for developing:

A) realistic anxiety.
B) neurotic anxiety.
C) moral anxiety.
D) existential anxiety.
Question
According to Freud, children who are punished or threatened for expressing their id impulses may develop:

A) realistic anxiety.
B) neurotic anxiety.
C) moral anxiety.
D) existential anxiety.
Question
"Who wouldn't be afraid all the time? We have the bomb, overpopulation, AIDS, and violent crime everywhere. It is difficult to get a good job unless you understand all that complicated computer junk." This complaint is consistent with a _____ explanation of generalized anxiety disorder.

A) behavioral
B) humanistic
C) sociocultural
D) psychodynamic
Question
Leila always feels threatened and anxious-imagining something awful is about to happen. She is able to work and care for her family, although not as well as she would like. Leila is probably experiencing:

A) a generalized anxiety disorder.
B) a hormonal imbalance.
C) no specific problem; she just likes to worry.
D) a specific fear response.
Question
According to Freud, a generalized anxiety disorder is MOST likely to result when:

A) a person does not dream, and thus has no outlet for anxiety.
B) defense mechanisms are too weak to cope with anxiety.
C) a person never has a chance to experience trauma.
D) defense mechanisms are too strong.
Question
Which is an anxiety disorder?

A) schizophrenia
B) bipolar disorder
C) major depression
D) obsessive-compulsive disorder
Question
Cognitive therapists believe that generalized anxiety disorder is induced by:

A) maladaptive assumptions.
B) lack of empathy.
C) interpersonal loss.
D) overactive id impulses.
Question
The most appropriate motto for someone with generalized anxiety disorder is:

A) "Better safe than sorry."
B) "Life's a gamble; give it your best shot."
C) "When you reach the mountaintop, it's hard to come back down."
D) "Nothing ventured, nothing gained."
Question
The biological understanding of generalized anxiety is supported by the finding that:

A) relatives of people with generalized anxiety are more likely to have it than nonrelatives are.
B) distant relatives of those with generalized anxiety are more likely to have it than close relatives are.
C) relatives share not only biological characteristics but also similar environments.
D) identical twins have more similar environments than fraternal twins.
Question
Until recently, the evidence that generalized anxiety disorder is related to biological factors came largely from:

A) drug studies.
B) clinical interviews.
C) family pedigree studies.
D) neurological studies.
Question
Mindfulness-based cognitive therapy:

A) has not received much support in therapy applications.
B) has received support in therapy applications, but its usefulness is limited to treating generalized anxiety disorder.
C) has received support in therapy applications for a wide range of disorders, including generalized anxiety disorder.
D) is so new that no one is sure of its treatment applicability.
Question
Which is the BEST description of the "avoidance theory" of generalized anxiety disorder?

A) Worrying serves to reduce bodily arousal.
B) Worry interferes with our ability to cope with life.
C) Worrying keeps the focus on emotions, not cognitions.
D) Worrying is an uncontrollable part of life.
Question
Benzodiazepines are believed to be effective in treating generalized anxiety disorder because they mimic the effect of _____ at certain receptor sites in the brain.

A) GABA
B) dopamine
C) acetylcholine
D) serotonin
Question
If a person lives in a city, owns a home, and pays taxes, that person is LEAST likely to experience which event next year?

A) a house fire
B) an IRS audit
C) a violent crime
D) a cancer diagnosis
Question
The therapy for generalized anxiety disorder developed by Albert Ellis is called:

A) behavior modification.
B) rational-emotive therapy.
C) self-instruction training.
D) stress inoculation training.
Question
According to "intolerance of uncertainty theory," those with generalized anxiety disorder are:

A) likely to have difficulty tolerating the knowledge that a negative event may occur.
B) likely to underestimate the chances that any positive event will occur.
C) only able to tolerate uncertainty in mildly threatening events.
D) only able to tolerate uncertainty in severely threatening events.
Question
"Your worries? They're only thoughts. Don't try to stop them, but recognize that they're thoughts, and don't let them upset you so much." This statement MOST likely would come from someone using which form of therapy for generalized anxiety disorder?

A) rational-emotive therapy
B) mindfulness-based cognitive therapy
C) intolerance of uncertainty therapy
D) biofeedback
Question
Maura believes that it is a dire necessity for her to be loved or approved by everyone and that it is catastrophic if things are not the way she wants them. She is displaying basic:

A) existential anxiety.
B) irrational assumptions.
C) moral anxiety.
D) conditions of worth.
Question
A person who believes that one should be thoroughly competent and adequate and achieve in all possible aspects is displaying:

A) meta-worry.
B) irrational assumptions.
C) compulsion.
D) conditions of worth.
Question
A person who believes that it is awful and catastrophic when things are not the way he or she would like them to be is displaying:

A) meta-worry.
B) irrational assumptions.
C) compulsion.
D) conditions of worth.
Question
If a therapist gave a client homework that required the client to challenge his faulty assumptions and replace them with healthier ones, the therapist would be using:

A) cognitive-existential therapy.
B) client-centered therapy.
C) rational-emotive therapy.
D) interpersonal-physiotherapy.
Question
In terms of cognitive theories explaining generalized anxiety disorder, a good deal of research supports:

A) only metacognitive theory.
B) only intolerance of uncertainty theory.
C) neither metacognitive theory nor intolerance of uncertainty theory.
D) both metacognitive theory and intolerance of uncertainty theory.
Question
Which statement is MOST accurate?

A) Anxiety is related to low levels of GABA.
B) Long-term anxiety causes poor GABA reception.
C) High GABA reception causes long-term anxiety.
D) Neurotransmitter deficiencies cause long-term anxiety and poor GABA reception.
Question
Teaching people to accept their worries and live in the present moment-mindfulness therapy-is MOST consistent with which theoretical approach?

A) psychodynamic
B) biological
C) cognitive
D) behavioral
Question
Which is an example of a meta-worry?

A) worry about all possible signs of danger
B) worry about not worrying enough
C) thinking about worrying
D) worrying about worrying
Question
Research on the cognitive explanation for the development of generalized anxiety shows that people with generalized anxiety symptoms:

A) respond more fearfully to predictable than to unpredictable events.
B) fail to pay attention to threatening cues.
C) are more likely to have fast and strong physical reactions to stress.
D) show little physiological arousal to stress.
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Deck 5: Anxiety, Obsessive-Compulsive, and Related Disorders
1
What type of psychotherapist would tell a patient being treated for a cleaning compulsion to resist the urge to mop the bathroom floor for a week?

A) psychodynamic
B) cognitive
C) biological
D) behavioral
behavioral
2
In which kind of study would a researcher determine how many and which relatives of a person with a disorder have the same disorder?

A) twin study
B) adoption study
C) family pedigree study
D) generational extraction study
family pedigree study
3
Which psychological perspective believes that people develop their compulsions as a result of random coincidence?

A) psychodynamic
B) cognitive
C) behavioral
D) sociocultural
behavioral
4
Which phrase is NOT used by cognitive researchers to describe people who suffer from obsessive-compulsive disorder?

A) a higher rate of depression
B) high standards of conduct and morality
C) lack of a sense of responsibility
D) a belief in perfect control over all of their thoughts and actions
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 243 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
5
The cognitive perspective of panic disorder suggests that its sufferers:

A) are predisposed to paranoia.
B) may be overly sensitive to bodily sensation and misinterpret them.
C) are neurotic.
D) lack ego strength.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 243 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
6
What disorder may also develop along with panic disorder?

A) agoraphobia
B) mitral valve prolapse
C) headaches
D) heart disease
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 243 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
7
Abnormal functioning in which areas of the brain has been linked to obsessive-compulsive disorder?

A) hypothalamus and parietal lobe
B) occipital lobe and association cortex
C) orbitofrontal cortex and the caudate nuclei
D) cerebellum and brain stem
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 243 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
8
To qualify for a DSM-5 diagnosis of generalized anxiety disorder, the excessive or ongoing anxiety or worry must last for at least:

A) six weeks.
B) three months.
C) three weeks.
D) six months.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 243 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
9
The most common theme of obsessive thoughts is:

A) violence.
B) orderliness.
C) dirt or contamination.
D) sexuality.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 243 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
10
This type of therapy tries to help clients suffering from anxiety by providing empathy and genuine acceptance.

A) self-instruction training
B) client-centered therapy
C) relaxation training
D) objects relations therapy
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 243 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
11
The _____ perspective suggests that one way of acquiring a fear reaction that may turn into a phobia is through modeling-that is, through observation and imitation.

A) psychodynamic
B) cognitive
C) behavioral
D) sociocultural
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 243 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
12
What suggestion is shared by both the metacognitive theory and the avoidance theory of generalized anxiety disorder?

A) that the only reasonable solution to generalized anxiety disorder is the use of medication
B) that the defense mechanism of reaction formation is at play in this illness
C) that generalized anxiety disorder is a function of emotional abuse during childhood
D) that worrying serves some sort of "positive" function for the sufferer
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 243 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
13
Women are _____ as likely as men to experience panic disorder.

A) two and one-half times
B) three times
C) one and one-half times
D) four times
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 243 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
14
In which behavioral technique is the exposure vicarious?

A) modeling
B) desensitization
C) flooding
D) rational-emotive therapy
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 243 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
15
Which qualifiers are used to describe a person's social anxiety disorder?

A) narrow or broad
B) acquired or lifelong
C) situational or generalized
D) specific or agoraphobic
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 243 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
16
One study of persons with anxiety disorders found that _____ percent actually suffered from multiple disorders.

A) 3
B) 81
C) 24
D) 57
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 243 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
17
A fear hierarchy is:

A) the result of therapeutic "flooding."
B) a social order based on bravery.
C) a rating scale for panic attacks.
D) a list of feared objects or situations.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 243 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
18
Which neurotransmitter system may be irregular in people suffering from panic disorder?

A) serotonin
B) dopamine
C) GABA
D) norepinephrine
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 243 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
19
Which type of drugs has been most helpful in treating obsessive-compulsive disorder?

A) benzodiazepines
B) antidepressants that affect the serotonin system
C) antidepressants that affect the norepinephrine system
D) No drugs have proven effective to treat obsessive-compulsive disorder.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 243 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
20
Obsessive-compulsive disorder usually begins by:

A) childhood.
B) early middle age.
C) young adulthood..
D) adolescence.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 243 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
21
The distress experienced by people with _____ is sometimes described as free-floating anxiety.

A) generalized anxiety disorder
B) neurotic anxiety
C) obsessive-compulsive disorder
D) agoraphobia
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 243 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
22
According to Sigmund Freud, children experience _____ when they are repeatedly prevented from expressing their id impulses.

A) realistic anxiety
B) neurotic anxiety
C) moral anxiety
D) situation anxiety
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 243 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
23
What perspective maintains that generalized anxiety disorder develops as a result of exposure to threatening environments?

A) psychodynamic
B) humanistic
C) behavioral
D) sociocultural
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 243 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
24
According to psychodynamic theorists, what three defense mechanisms are involved in obsessive-compulsive disorder?

A) repression, suppression, and sublimation
B) depression, repression, and suppression
C) isolation, undoing, and reaction formation
D) reaction formation, acting out, and projection
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 243 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
25
The most widely applied method of biofeedback for the treatment of anxiety disorders is the:

A) EKG.
B) EEG.
C) EMG.
D) ECT.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 243 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
26
Fear of venturing into public places is known as:

A) acrophobia.
B) agoraphobia.
C) ophidiophobia.
D) kenophobia.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 243 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
27
The idea that human beings are "prepared" to acquire some phobias and not others flows from a _____ perspective.

A) behavioral
B) biological
C) behavioral-evolutionary
D) cognitive
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 243 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
28
Which disorder appears to have the same prevalence in women and in men?

A) specific phobia
B) obsessive-compulsive disorder
C) social anxiety disorder
D) panic disorder
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 243 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
29
Which is NOT a behavioral technique used in social skills training?

A) exposure
B) modeling
C) feedback
D) rehearsal
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 243 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
30
In _____, researchers produce panic in subjects or clients by administering drugs or by instructing them to breathe, exercise, or simply think in certain ways.

A) physical exertion trials
B) randomized hyperbaric simulations
C) cardiopulmonary labor analysis
D) biological challenge tests
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 243 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
31
According to humanistic theorists, people develop generalized anxiety disorder when:

A) their defense mechanisms break down.
B) they are discriminated against.
C) they repeatedly deny their true thoughts, emotions, and behaviors.
D) they have learned to be anxious.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 243 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
32
_____ are a family of antianxiety drugs that includes diazepam (Valium) and alprazolam (Xanax).

A) Beta blockers
B) Benzodiazepines
C) Sedatives
D) Barbiturates
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 243 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
33
Which has DSM-5 NOT categorized as an obsessive-compulsive-related disorder?

A) somatic symptom disorder
B) excoriation disorder
C) body dysmorphic disorder
D) hoarding disorder
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 243 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
34
According to the biological perspective, malfunctioning of which neurotransmitter system contributes to generalized anxiety disorder?

A) serotonin
B) acetylcholine
C) dopamine
D) GABA
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 243 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
35
Whose technique of rational-emotive therapy involves practitioners pointing out clients' irrational assumptions and suggesting more appropriate assumptions?

A) Carl Rogers
B) Albert Ellis
C) Aaron Beck
D) Carl Jung
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 243 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
36
What percentage of Americans suffer from an anxiety disorder each year?

A) 42 percent
B) 10 percent
C) 18 percent
D) 28 percent
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 243 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
37
Which is NOT a type of anxiety disorder?

A) bipolar disorder
B) panic disorder
C) social anxiety disorder
D) phobias
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 243 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
38
A treatment package called a stress-management program that is used to treat generalized anxiety disorder would NOT include:

A) cognitive techniques.
B) relaxation training.
C) antianxiety medication.
D) biofeedback.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 243 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
39
In _____, the therapist confronts the feared object or situation while the person suffering from the phobia observes.

A) modeling
B) social skills training
C) systematic desensitization
D) flooding
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40
Which is NOT a major behavioral approach to treating specific phobias?

A) systematic desensitization
B) flooding
C) generalization
D) modeling
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41
People with one anxiety disorder are MOST likely to:

A) experience another anxiety disorder, too.
B) experience only that one anxiety disorder.
C) experience another type of psychiatric disorder as well.
D) experience hallucinations.
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42
A person who is restless, keyed up, and on edge for no apparent reason is experiencing:

A) free-floating anxiety.
B) specific anxiety.
C) fearful anxiety.
D) obsessions.
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43
"Phobic and generalized anxiety disorders arise when people stop looking at themselves honestly and with acceptance and instead deny and distort their true thoughts, emotions, and behavior." This explanation for anxiety disorders would MOST likely be offered by:

A) behaviorists.
B) cognitive theorists.
C) sociocultural theorists.
D) humanistic theorists.
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44
Psychodynamic and humanistic therapies have in common:

A) their understanding of how generalized anxiety develops and can be treated.
B) their lack of strong support from controlled studies.
C) their reliance on a rather harsh, confrontational therapeutic style.
D) their use of multidisciplinary therapists who work exclusively in group settings.
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45
Fear differs from anxiety in that:

A) fear is to a specific threat and anxiety is more general.
B) anxiety is more likely to lead to aggression than is fear.
C) anxiety is to an interpersonal threat and fear is to an inanimate threat.
D) anxiety is an immediate response; fear is more vague.
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46
How strong is the evidence supporting the usefulness of client-centered therapy for those with generalized anxiety disorder?

A) not very strong: case reports of client-centered therapy's usefulness are not strongly supported by controlled studies
B) not very strong: controlled studies of client-centered therapy's usefulness are not strongly supported by case reports
C) very strong in both case reports and controlled studies
D) very weak in both case reports and controlled studies
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47
If a person criticized everything he did, looking for flaws, and never could measure up to his personal standards, he would be exhibiting what Rogers called:

A) empathy.
B) unconditional positive regard.
C) conditions of worth.
D) moral anxiety.
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48
Generalized anxiety disorder is MORE common:

A) in African Americans than in white Americans.
B) in men than in women.
C) years after traumatic events, rather than immediately after those events.
D) in wealthy people than in poor people.
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49
The MOST common mental disorders in the United States are:

A) mood disorders.
B) anxiety disorders.
C) personality disorders.
D) sexual disorders.
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50
Which theory states that people develop generalized anxiety disorders because they failed to receive unconditional positive regard as children and evaluate themselves with conditions of worth?

A) Pavlov's conditioning theory
B) Freud's psychoanalytic theory
C) Rogers's client-centered theory
D) Ellis's rational-emotive theory
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51
Which theoretical position explains the origin of anxiety disorders as the overrun of defense mechanisms by neurotic or moral anxiety?

A) the behavioral approach
B) the humanistic approach
C) the sociocultural approach
D) the psychodynamic approach
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52
According to DSM-5, one must demonstrate which set of symptoms to be diagnosed with generalized anxiety disorder?

A) excessive worry for two months, edginess, sleep changes, distress
B) excessive worry for six months, edginess, sleep changes, distress
C) excessive worry for four months, edginess, sleep changes, distress
D) excessive worry for five months, edginess, sleep changes, distress
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53
Someone interested in the effects of social change, poverty, and race on the risk for generalized anxiety disorders probably represents the _____ perspective.

A) sociocultural
B) psychodynamic
C) humanistic-existential
D) cognitive
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54
One limitation of the sociocultural approach to understanding generalized anxiety disorders is that it cannot explain:

A) the paradox that as poverty gets worse, generalized anxiety declines.
B) the relationship between race, poverty, and job opportunity.
C) why everyone who experiences danger doesn't experience generalized anxiety.
D) the differences in generalized anxiety in countries around the world.
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55
According to Freud, children who are prevented from expressing id impulses-making mud pies, playing war, and exploring their genitals-are at risk for developing:

A) realistic anxiety.
B) neurotic anxiety.
C) moral anxiety.
D) existential anxiety.
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56
According to Freud, children who are punished or threatened for expressing their id impulses may develop:

A) realistic anxiety.
B) neurotic anxiety.
C) moral anxiety.
D) existential anxiety.
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57
"Who wouldn't be afraid all the time? We have the bomb, overpopulation, AIDS, and violent crime everywhere. It is difficult to get a good job unless you understand all that complicated computer junk." This complaint is consistent with a _____ explanation of generalized anxiety disorder.

A) behavioral
B) humanistic
C) sociocultural
D) psychodynamic
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58
Leila always feels threatened and anxious-imagining something awful is about to happen. She is able to work and care for her family, although not as well as she would like. Leila is probably experiencing:

A) a generalized anxiety disorder.
B) a hormonal imbalance.
C) no specific problem; she just likes to worry.
D) a specific fear response.
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59
According to Freud, a generalized anxiety disorder is MOST likely to result when:

A) a person does not dream, and thus has no outlet for anxiety.
B) defense mechanisms are too weak to cope with anxiety.
C) a person never has a chance to experience trauma.
D) defense mechanisms are too strong.
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60
Which is an anxiety disorder?

A) schizophrenia
B) bipolar disorder
C) major depression
D) obsessive-compulsive disorder
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61
Cognitive therapists believe that generalized anxiety disorder is induced by:

A) maladaptive assumptions.
B) lack of empathy.
C) interpersonal loss.
D) overactive id impulses.
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62
The most appropriate motto for someone with generalized anxiety disorder is:

A) "Better safe than sorry."
B) "Life's a gamble; give it your best shot."
C) "When you reach the mountaintop, it's hard to come back down."
D) "Nothing ventured, nothing gained."
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63
The biological understanding of generalized anxiety is supported by the finding that:

A) relatives of people with generalized anxiety are more likely to have it than nonrelatives are.
B) distant relatives of those with generalized anxiety are more likely to have it than close relatives are.
C) relatives share not only biological characteristics but also similar environments.
D) identical twins have more similar environments than fraternal twins.
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64
Until recently, the evidence that generalized anxiety disorder is related to biological factors came largely from:

A) drug studies.
B) clinical interviews.
C) family pedigree studies.
D) neurological studies.
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65
Mindfulness-based cognitive therapy:

A) has not received much support in therapy applications.
B) has received support in therapy applications, but its usefulness is limited to treating generalized anxiety disorder.
C) has received support in therapy applications for a wide range of disorders, including generalized anxiety disorder.
D) is so new that no one is sure of its treatment applicability.
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66
Which is the BEST description of the "avoidance theory" of generalized anxiety disorder?

A) Worrying serves to reduce bodily arousal.
B) Worry interferes with our ability to cope with life.
C) Worrying keeps the focus on emotions, not cognitions.
D) Worrying is an uncontrollable part of life.
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67
Benzodiazepines are believed to be effective in treating generalized anxiety disorder because they mimic the effect of _____ at certain receptor sites in the brain.

A) GABA
B) dopamine
C) acetylcholine
D) serotonin
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68
If a person lives in a city, owns a home, and pays taxes, that person is LEAST likely to experience which event next year?

A) a house fire
B) an IRS audit
C) a violent crime
D) a cancer diagnosis
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69
The therapy for generalized anxiety disorder developed by Albert Ellis is called:

A) behavior modification.
B) rational-emotive therapy.
C) self-instruction training.
D) stress inoculation training.
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70
According to "intolerance of uncertainty theory," those with generalized anxiety disorder are:

A) likely to have difficulty tolerating the knowledge that a negative event may occur.
B) likely to underestimate the chances that any positive event will occur.
C) only able to tolerate uncertainty in mildly threatening events.
D) only able to tolerate uncertainty in severely threatening events.
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71
"Your worries? They're only thoughts. Don't try to stop them, but recognize that they're thoughts, and don't let them upset you so much." This statement MOST likely would come from someone using which form of therapy for generalized anxiety disorder?

A) rational-emotive therapy
B) mindfulness-based cognitive therapy
C) intolerance of uncertainty therapy
D) biofeedback
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72
Maura believes that it is a dire necessity for her to be loved or approved by everyone and that it is catastrophic if things are not the way she wants them. She is displaying basic:

A) existential anxiety.
B) irrational assumptions.
C) moral anxiety.
D) conditions of worth.
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73
A person who believes that one should be thoroughly competent and adequate and achieve in all possible aspects is displaying:

A) meta-worry.
B) irrational assumptions.
C) compulsion.
D) conditions of worth.
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74
A person who believes that it is awful and catastrophic when things are not the way he or she would like them to be is displaying:

A) meta-worry.
B) irrational assumptions.
C) compulsion.
D) conditions of worth.
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75
If a therapist gave a client homework that required the client to challenge his faulty assumptions and replace them with healthier ones, the therapist would be using:

A) cognitive-existential therapy.
B) client-centered therapy.
C) rational-emotive therapy.
D) interpersonal-physiotherapy.
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76
In terms of cognitive theories explaining generalized anxiety disorder, a good deal of research supports:

A) only metacognitive theory.
B) only intolerance of uncertainty theory.
C) neither metacognitive theory nor intolerance of uncertainty theory.
D) both metacognitive theory and intolerance of uncertainty theory.
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77
Which statement is MOST accurate?

A) Anxiety is related to low levels of GABA.
B) Long-term anxiety causes poor GABA reception.
C) High GABA reception causes long-term anxiety.
D) Neurotransmitter deficiencies cause long-term anxiety and poor GABA reception.
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78
Teaching people to accept their worries and live in the present moment-mindfulness therapy-is MOST consistent with which theoretical approach?

A) psychodynamic
B) biological
C) cognitive
D) behavioral
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79
Which is an example of a meta-worry?

A) worry about all possible signs of danger
B) worry about not worrying enough
C) thinking about worrying
D) worrying about worrying
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80
Research on the cognitive explanation for the development of generalized anxiety shows that people with generalized anxiety symptoms:

A) respond more fearfully to predictable than to unpredictable events.
B) fail to pay attention to threatening cues.
C) are more likely to have fast and strong physical reactions to stress.
D) show little physiological arousal to stress.
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Unlock Deck
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