Psychology 202
Exam 4 Study Guide
Schizophrenia (Chapter 15)
- Emil Kraepelin, dementia praecox, Eugene Bleuler
- Positive symptoms
- Delusions: persecutory & grandiose
- Hallucinations: auditory, visual
- Relative activity in Broca’s and Wernicke’s areas during hallucinations (McGuire et al. study presented in class)
- Thought disorders
- Disorganized/catatonic behavior
- Negative symptoms
- Flattened emotional response
- Poverty of speech
- Lack of initiative and persistence (avolition)
- Anhedonia
- Social withdrawal
- Distinction between and prognosis for Type I and Type II schizophrenia (presented in class)
- Lifetime prevalence
- Evidence regarding heritability
- Dopamine hypothesis
- 3 pieces of evidence supporting (from text or lecture)
- Possible role of mesolimbic system and nucleus accumbens
- 2 pieces of evidence contradicting (from lecture)
- Mesocortical system and prefrontal cortex (from lecture)
- Hypofrontality
- Clozapine and chlorpromazine (including specific dopamine receptor sites of action)
- Brain abnormalities
- Ventricle size
- Hippocampal neuron organization (from lecture)
- 2 Possible environmental correlates of schizophrenia, seasonality effect
Affective Disorders (Chapter 15)
- Basic symptoms of Unipolar (Major Depression, Dysthymia. Seasonal affective disorder) and Bipolar (Bipolar, Cyclothymia) Depression
- Lifetime Prevalence of Major Depression and gender ratio
- Heritability: Concordance rates for “any affective disorder”
- Type of depression with strongest genetic contribution (presented in lecture)
- Three drug treatments for depression and respective sites of action/neurotransmitters affected
- Two additional physiological treatments for depression: lithium and ECT
- Monoamine hypothesis
- Tryptophan depletion procedure (Delgado 1990) and who it affects
- Brain abnormalities: amygdala, subgenual ACC (note relevant controversy), ventricular size (lecture) and hemispheric activation differences (lecture)
- Role of the 5-HT (serotonin) transporter in depression
- Sleep abnormalitiesin depression
- Impact of REM sleep deprivation and total sleep deprivation on depression
Drug Abuse (Chapter 16)
- Substance abuse vs. substance dependence
- Tolerance symptoms vs. withdrawal symptoms
- Physical dependence vs. psychicdependence
- Examples of how classical and operant conditioning can be used to explain drug abuse/dependence
- Importance of the mesolimbic system and nucleus accumbens
- Behavioral effects and neurotransmitters affected by the following drugs
- Opiates: endorphins
- Cocaine and amphetamines: dopamine
- Nicotine: ACh, conditioned place preference
- Alcohol and barbiturates: NMDA and GABAA receptors,
- Cannabis: THC receptors, hippocampus
- Heritability
- Steady vs. binge drinkers
- Treatments for drug abuse (for each of the drugs below, be able to briefly describe its site(s) of action)
- Opiate addiction: methadone maintenance therapy & buprenorphine
- Cocaine and amphetamine addiction: note general lack of effective treatments, discuss problems of either blocking or stimulating dopamine receptors, interesting results of the Carrera et al. (1995) “immunization” study
- Nicotine addiction: varenicline, bupropion, rimonabant, & nicotine gum/patches
- Alcohol addiction: naltrexone, acamprosate