Zusammenfassung der Ressource
The Biological Approach
- Selye's GAS Model
- GAS Model
- General - Same response to all stressors
- Adaptation - Healthiest way for body to cope
- Syndrome - Several Symptoms
- Stage 1 - Alarm
- >Stressor is recognised
>Hypothalamus triggers adrenaline
>Adrenaline rush
- Stage 2 - Resistance
- >Body begins to adapt
>Resources gradually deplete
>Body appears to be coping, but it
isn't
- Stage 3 - Exhaustion
- >Body can't maintain normal functioning
>Immune system fails (cortisol slows down)
>Development of stress related illnesses
- Selye's Research
with Rats
- Selye worked in a hospital
and noticed generalised
set of symptoms in the
patients
- He then gave a rat a noxious
agent, and they too showed a
generalised response
regardless of the stressor
- AIMS AND CONTEXT
- Rats were exposed to various
noxious agents (cutting of the
spinal cord, cold, doses of
diverse drugs)
- PROCEDURES
- FINDINGS AND CONCLUSIONS
- 6-48 hours
- PHYSIOLOGICAL TRIAD
>enlargement of the adrenal glands
>ulcers in the digestive system
>shrinkage of the immune system
- 48 hours - 1 month
- If treatment was
continued internal
organs returned to
normal functioning
- 1-3 months
- Lost resistance,
physiological triad
demonstrated again
- These results support the
DOCTRINE OF NON-SPECIFITY
in that the body has the same
stress response to all stressors
- Assumptions
- Behaviour can be explained in terms of different areas of the brain
- Different parts of the brain have
certain specialised functions
- Hypothalamus integrates
ANS which is important in
stress and emotion
- Occipital lobe = vision
Frontal lobe = motor
movement and thinking
- Behaviour can be explained in terms of hormones
- Biochemical substances produced in glands
- Circulate the blood
and target organs
- High levels of
testosterone could
cause aggression
- adrenal glands = adrenaline
- Strengths and Weaknesses
- Weaknesses
- Nature rather than
nurture
- Focusses on nature/ignores
environmental factors
- Belives schizophrenia is to
do with neurotransmitters
rather than with how
patients feel
- Reductionist
- Reduces complex behaviours
to a set of simple
explanations
- Stress is only down to
adrenaline
- Lose an understanding of the
thing we intend to study, may
prevent us reaching a true
understanding
- R.D Laing (1965) incomplete
explanation as it ignores the
experience
- Strengths
- Scientific Approach
- Hormones and
neurotransmitters are easily
measurable, so scientists can
conduct scientific research
- Psychosurgery - whether the
parts of the brain have an
effect on aggression
Chemotherapy - link between
drugs and production of
neurotransmitters
- All of these, conduct objective,
controlled research and
demonstrates causal
relationships
- Successful Applications
- Selye's research with rats
has enabled us to gain a
better understanding of
stress and illness; used in
hospitals today
- Capsulotomy - 67%
recovery rates (Cosgrove
and Rauch 2001)
- Bipolar - 60% reported
improvement (Viguera et al
2000)
- Chemotherapy
- The use of treating mental disorders
with prescriptive drugs
- Antipsychotic Drugs
- Used to treat mental disorders
such as schizophrenia
- Typical Antipsychotics
- Combat positive symptoms
of schizophrenia by
blocking dopamine, by
binding to the receptors
- Atypical Antipsychotics
- Temporarily occupy dopamine
receptors then rapidy detatch
allowing normal transmission
- Less side effects
- If parts of the dopamine system become
overactive, they seem to play a part in producing
hallucinations, delusions and thought disorder.
- Effectiveness of Chemotherapy
- easy to use and reduces
sympstoms of mental disorders
- However, can have side effects
- Hill (1986) 30% of P's reported
uncontrollable movements when
using antipsychotics
- Ferguson (2005) P's are 20%
more likely to commit suicide when
taking antidepressants
- Placebos are used to test the
effectiveness of a drug; whether it's
pharmacological or psychological
- Kahn (1986) 250 P's over 8
weeks reported BZs were
more effective than placebos
- However, many studies have been carried
out where there hasn't been a significant
difference between placebos and drugs
- Antidepressant Drugs
- Depression is
caused by low levels
of serotonin in
synapses
- In a normal brain, neurotransmitters
are released from nerve endings. To
terminate, they are reabsorbed or
digested by enzymes
- Anti D's work by reducing the
absorbtion rate, or blocking the
enzyme that breaks down serotonin
- SSRIs such as Prozac block the
mechanism that absorbs serotonin
- More serotonin = Better moods
- Antianxiety Drugs
- BZs
- Slow down the activity of the CNS
by enhancing GABA for anxiety relief
- 40% of neurons react to GABA.
Reacts to GABA receptors which
increases the flow of Chloride Ions
- Chloride Ions hog the
neurotransmitters, slowing down the
activity, hence creating relaxation
- BBs
- Reduce the activity of adrenaline
and noradrenaline, part of the
SNS' reaction to stress
- Less stress on the heart,
blood pressure drops, more
relaxed, less anxious
- Bind to receptors which are
aroused by the SNS, so it's
harder to stimulate
- Methodology
- Twin Studies
- Assumes that genes influence behaviour
- Reared Apart
- Some twins reared together have the same
environment, so seperating them will help us
distinguish between genes and environment
- Bouchard and McGue found 72%
concordance rate for twins reared
apart
- Reared Together
- Bouchard and McGue (1981) studied IQs of MZ and DZ twins
- MZ - 86% concordance rates
- DZ - 60% concordance rate
- Strengths
- MZ twins share 100% of genes,
so they make perfect P's when
studing the effect of genes on
behaviour
- Comparing MZ twins reared
together and apart has allowed
psychologists to make assumptions
about the importance of genes and
environment
- Weaknesses
- MZ and DZ twins often have the
exact same upbringing, therefore
we cannot distinguish between
genes and environment
- Some twins that are reared
apart often grow up in similar
environments
- Brain Scanning
- EEG
- 1950's
- Electrodes are placed
on the scalp, and
activity in the brain is
recorded
- Dement and Kleitman (1957) saw slower brain
waves when Ps were aleep (REM). Ps that were
woken up during REM were more likely to remember
their dream
- CAT
- X-Rays produce a model
of the brain. Dye is used
as a contrast material
- High quality
x-rays
- Useful at
identifying tumours
- More radiation
which could be
harmful
- Pregnant women
- MRI
- Magnetic field causes
brain to emit signals
- Maguire et al (2000) demonstrated
that taxi drivers have larger
hippocampi (spatial memories) than
non-taxi drivers
- Detailed images
- Less harmful
than CAT scans
- Time
consuming and
uncomfortable
- fMRI gives both
anatomical and
functional images of
the brain
- PET
- Sugar, most active
parts absorb sugar
- Raine et al (1997) used PET
scans on murders and found
more activity in parts of the
brain linked with aggression
- Costly
- Radioactive so
can only be used
a few times
- Less precise
than MRIs
- Only scan to
reveal chemical
information
- Show the brain
in action
- Assumes that behaviour can be explained
in terms of activity of the brain and nervous
system