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Mental Health, Mental Illness and Psychopathology

Here are my self made quizzes. Hope it helps in testing your knowledge!
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Abnormal Psychology (PSY 213A)

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Academic year: 2022/2023
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Don Honorio Ventura Technological State University

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Mental Health, Mental Illness and Psychopathology

  1. Sue is certifiably not a major football fan, yet during the World Cup, she observes each and every round of her nation playing. She is extremely glad when they win however encounters negative influence when they lose. What hypothesis best depicts her sentiments? a. social constructivism b. schema hypothesis c. social character hypothesis d. role hypothesis Answer: C

  2. At the point when Helen goes to work, she puts on her uniform and takes her firearm from the locked bureau. From that point on, she deals with the day as a certain, solid and dedicated cop. At the point when she returns home in the nights and on the ends of the week, she focusses on being a mother, being quiet and warm and answerable for her kids. What hypothesis best portrays this change? a. role hypothesis b. dramaturgical similarity c. social personality hypothesis d. identity framing hypothesis Answer: A

  3. What have humanistic and phenomenological approaches been condemned for? a. focussing a lot on intellectual cycles engaged with shaping view of oneself b. missing the more extensive social and social settings that impact encounters and personalities c. neglecting to incorporate individual encounters and insights that impact how we structure our personality d. focussing a lot on previous encounters and how they will quite often shape our view of character Answer: B

  4. For what reason are constructions portrayed as alternate ways? a. because individuals utilize them when there isn't sufficient data free b. because they furnish us with a speedy method for joining new data into previously existing perspectives about the world c. because they are viewed as a method for taking part in friendly communication when very little time is free d. because they mean a fast method for putting away information in long haul memory Answer: B

  5. What number of characters do we accept individuals have? a. only one single one that is fixed over the life expectancy b. many various ones relying upon the setting an individual is in c. both of the above are conceivable d. depends on people groups' ways of life as they decide our characters Answer: B

  6. What are oblivious guard instruments? a. defending our own personality when we feel it compromised by others b. defending our social in-bunch from dangers from out-gatherings c. coping components that diminish tension created by dangers from negative driving forces that we don't know about d. coping with present dangers from out-bunch individuals by unwittingly commending one's own personality Answer: C

  7. What is the best way to describe schemas? a. ways of organizing concepts or knowledge about the world, which then affect how we adopt new knowledge or use new knowledge to accommodate new experiences automatically b. a way of storing information c. the way in which people perceive and process the world in order to make sense of it d. a way of organizing and structuring social categories Reply: A

  8. Tom is a 30-year-old financial specialist who, in his available energy, outside of the workplace and just when he isn't with associates, likes to get into ladies' garments and make-up and acts in an exceptionally female manner. What sexual orientation character does Tom no doubt perform inside his workplace? a. one of a lady b. one of a man c. a blend between the two d. there is no such thing as sex personality, as Tom is organically a man, that is the way he acts around work settings Answer: B

  9. Pondering web-based media, what could no doubt mean a danger to self-personality? a. setting your profile to private b. revealing data about your old neighborhood c. changing your profile picture d. being labeled in an image Answer: D

  10. How individuals in all probability make a symbol for an internet based computer game? a. chose a symbol that precisely takes after our social character b. chose a symbol that is totally unique to our social character c. chose a symbol that looks like an augmentation of our social personality d. chose a symbol that takes after the social personality of somebody we envy Answer: C

  11. The investigation of mental trouble is known as a. psychosomatics b. psychoanalytics c. psychopathology d. psychodynamics Answer: C

  12. The term 'unusual brain research' alludes to which of the accompanying? a. the mental investigation of individuals who are essentially odd b. psychological research did utilizing exceptionally whimsical techniques c. psychology connecting with abnormal examples of considerations, sentiments and practices d. the more dark spaces of brain research that connect with points, for example, what sheep think about Answer: C

  13. Intellectual social treatment (CBT) regularly focusses on which of the accompanying? a. repressed recollections b. genetic inclination to psychological instability c. traumatic occurrences in youth d. problematic perspectives Answer: D

  14. As per Kirkbride et al. (2012), the predominance of schizophrenia in the UK is a. 15 in 1, b. 15 in 10, c. 15 in 100, d. 15 in 1,000, Answer: C

  15. Which one of these isn't a way to deal with mental mediations? a. motivational meeting b. humanistic treatment c. cognitive social treatment d. group treatment Answer: D

  16. As per Freud's psychoanalytic hypothesis, what is the job of the superego? a. establishes the guidelines and denials, letting us know the best thing to do utilizing responsibility to abrogate our id driving forces b. mediates between the ridiculous id and the outside genuine world c. it works out reasonable ways of fulfilling the id's requests d. it requests quick fulfillment Answer: A

  17. Who is psychodynamic treatment generally gainful for? a. clients whose self-appreciation is steady b. clients whose relational intense subject matters are generally conspicuous c. clients whose self-appreciation is steady and customers whose relational intense subject matters are generally conspicuous d. clients who don't show intrapsychic struggle Answer: B

  18. Which of coming up next isn't a point of intellectual conduct treatment? a. learning not to have meddling considerations b. to foster reasonable reasoning and methods of acting to decrease mental trouble c. aiding customers in tackling genuine issues d. to utilize intellectual, conduct and passionate guideline to change troubling effect Answer: A

  19. What is Socratic addressing? a. a type of exchange that assists an individual with finding and go to recently disregarded data and to direct disclosure of the specialist rather than translation from the person b. a type of exchange that assists an individual with finding and go to recently went to data and to direct revelation of the individual rather than understanding from the specialist c. a type of exchange that assists an individual with finding and go to recently ignored data and to direct revelation of the individual rather than translation from the specialist d. a type of discourse that assists an individual with finding and go to recently went to data and to direct revelation of the specialist rather than translation from the person Answer: C

  20. What are the four conditions connecting with individual focused treatment? a. organismic esteeming processes, the impacts of others and the climate, states of worth, the locus of assessment b. the locus of assessment, genuine positive respect, states of worth, organismic esteeming processes c. the locus of assessment, unequivocal positive respect, states of worth, the impacts of others and the climate d. organismic esteeming processes, the impacts of others and the climate, states of worth, unqualified positive respect Answer: A

  21. Which of coming up next isn't recorded by Burke, Arkowitz and Mechola (2003) as being treatable with inspirational meeting: a. substance-related problems b. smoking end c. diabetes d. obsessive-habitual turmoil Answer: D

  22. What is the capacity of tricyclic prescriptions? a. they further develop temperament and gloom b. they block the reuptake of specific synthetics like dopamine, noradrenaline and serotonin c. they further develop disposition and despondency, and they block the reuptake of specific synthetics like dopamine, noradrenaline and serotonin d. they specifically block the reuptake of serotonin Answer: C

  23. What voltage is commonly passed across the cerebrum during electroconvulsive treatment? a. 200 volts b. 120 volts c. 175 volts d. 225 volts Answer: D

  24. How are the symptoms of electroconvulsive treatment (ECT) decreased? a. ECT is directed on one side of the mind b. the method is rehashed less times each week during various meetings c. the number of meetings is decreased d. ECT is regulated on the two sides of the mind Answer: A

  25. What are the heritability paces of the weight file? a. 20%–30% b. 50%–70% c. 40%–70% d. 10%–20% Answer: C

  26. What is neuralgia? a. a torment with no conspicuous actual injury b. a sharp agony along a nerve pathway c. a torment with no conspicuous actual injury and a sharp aggravation along a nerve pathway d. a consuming agony Answer: B

  27. What were McGowan et al's. (1998) discoveries when they investigated the individual and mental variables impacting the experience of agony? a. in ladies with pelvic agony, there is a connection between's their uneasiness and the strength of their torment b. in men with pelvic torment, there is a connection between's their tension and the strength of agony c. women are more upset by low-level torment that endures a few days d. women found postsurgical torment more extraordinary than men Answer: A

  28. Models based substance examination (CBCA) endeavors to evaluate honesty in which of the accompanying ways? a. searching for explicit words in an assertion b. looking at the microexpressions of an individual giving an assertion c. examining the quality and content of an assertion by a normalized strategy d. considering the foundation and training of the individual who offered the expression Answer: C

  29. What normal elements will more often than not recognize when somebody is being underhanded? a. fewer body developments, taking more time to react, turning away eye to eye connection b. increased body developments, more stops, turning away eye to eye connection c. eye contact, diminished pitch, more stops d. decreased pitch, less body developments, eye to eye connection Answer: A

  30. The polygraph a. detects untruths or duplicity b. has been for around 25 years now c. measures and records physiological reactions d. is acceptable in court Reply: C

  31. Who proposes three unmistakable sorts of bogus admission? a. Rothwell et al. (2006) b. Kassin and Wrightsman (1985) c. Wells and Olson (2003) d. Knight and Prentky (1990) Answer: B

  32. Which of coming up next isn't proposed as a component that could improve the probability of somebody giving a bogus admission? a. drug abuse b. a feeling of remorse c. hyperactivity or consideration problems d. negative or horrible life occasions Answer: B

  33. Knight and Prentky (1990) describe attackers into four fundamental sorts as indicated by their inspiration. These are a. opportunistic, unavoidably irate, sexual, malevolent b. opportunistic, unavoidably irate, sexual, focused c. regressed, pernicious, shrewd, unavoidably furious d. none of these Answer: A

  34. Ward and Keenan (1999) set forward five understood speculations as being unmistakable in grown-up attackers. Characterize qualification and perilous world. a. offending is credited to outside factors/negative perspectives on ladies are risky and work with hurt towards them b. men's requirements are fulfilled on need/negative perspectives on ladies are perilous and work with hurt towards them c. men's necessities are satisfied on need/ladies are seen as dismissing, by which the wrongdoer can fight back and affirm his predominance d. offending is ascribed to outer elements/ladies are seen as dismissing, by which the wrongdoer can fight back and affirm his strength Answer: C

  35. Which one of these assertions characterizes voyeurism in the DSM-5: American Psychiatric Association (2013)? a. adults who have sexual longing for juvenile kids b. recurrent exceptional sexual excitement from watching a clueless individual who is stripped, while participating in sexual movement c. urges must be available for a time of a year d. recurrent extreme physically stimulating dreams, sexual desires or practices including presenting one's privates to a clueless individual Answer: B

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Mental Health, Mental Illness and Psychopathology

Course: Abnormal Psychology (PSY 213A)

73 Documents
Students shared 73 documents in this course
Was this document helpful?
Mental Health, Mental Illness and Psychopathology
1. Sue is certifiably not a major football fan, yet during the World Cup, she observes each and every round of
her nation playing. She is extremely glad when they win however encounters negative influence when they
lose. What hypothesis best depicts her sentiments?
a. social constructivism
b. schema hypothesis
c. social character hypothesis
d. role hypothesis
Answer: C
2. At the point when Helen goes to work, she puts on her uniform and takes her firearm from the locked
bureau. From that point on, she deals with the day as a certain, solid and dedicated cop. At the point when
she returns home in the nights and on the ends of the week, she focusses on being a mother, being quiet and
warm and answerable for her kids. What hypothesis best portrays this change?
a. role hypothesis
b. dramaturgical similarity
c. social personality hypothesis
d. identity framing hypothesis
Answer: A
3. What have humanistic and phenomenological approaches been condemned for?
a. focussing a lot on intellectual cycles engaged with shaping view of oneself
b. missing the more extensive social and social settings that impact encounters and personalities
c. neglecting to incorporate individual encounters and insights that impact how we structure our personality
d. focussing a lot on previous encounters and how they will quite often shape our view of character
Answer: B
4. For what reason are constructions portrayed as alternate ways?
a. because individuals utilize them when there isn't sufficient data free
b. because they furnish us with a speedy method for joining new data into previously existing perspectives
about the world
c. because they are viewed as a method for taking part in friendly communication when very little time is free
d. because they mean a fast method for putting away information in long haul memory
Answer: B
5. What number of characters do we accept individuals have?
a. only one single one that is fixed over the life expectancy
b. many various ones relying upon the setting an individual is in
c. both of the above are conceivable
d. depends on people groups' ways of life as they decide our characters
Answer: B
6. What are oblivious guard instruments?
a. defending our own personality when we feel it compromised by others
b. defending our social in-bunch from dangers from out-gatherings
c. coping components that diminish tension created by dangers from negative driving forces that we don't
know about
d. coping with present dangers from out-bunch individuals by unwittingly commending one's own personality
Answer: C