A. a defendant is unable to understand the nature and purpose of legal proceedings
B. a person cannot be held responsible for his or her actions because of mental illness
C. a person has a chronic mental illness that is not responsive to treatment
D. an individual is dangerous to themselves or to others
Abnormal Psychology
Abnormal Psychology
A. be mainic
B. be insane.
C. be depressed
D. neurotic
A. the deliberate faking of physical illness
B. apparent physical illness caused by psychological factors
C. not acknowledge the presence of a real mental or physical illness
D. a tendency to misinterpret minor bodily changes as being indicative of serious illness
A. depression.
B. schizophrenia.
C. compulsions.
D. antisocial personality disorder.
A. generalized anxiety disorder.
B. post-traumatic stress disorder.
C. phobias.
D. antisocial personality disorder.
A. bipolar disorder
B. conversion disorder
C. multiple personality disorder
D. generalized anxiety disorder
A. Opedical complex
B. Unconscious
C. Superego
D. Object relations
A. Countertransference
B. Resistance
C. Free association
D. Transference
A. You get an average bowling score in one game and a superb score in the next game.
B. You get an average bowling score in one game and a very low score in the next game.
C. You get an average bowling score in one game and another average score in the next game.
D. You get a terrible bowling score in one game and an average score in the next game.
A. Contemporary models focus more on interpersonal relationships than on intrapsychic conflict.
B. Contemporary models focus on the unconscious internal desires and motivations of the child.
C. Contemporary models focus on how the child negotiates his/her unconscious internal desires and motivations as s/he progresses through the early relationship with his/her parents.
D. None of the above.