Cognitive Etiology
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Transcript of Cognitive Etiology
Cognitive EtiologyMajor Depressive disorder
Key conceptThe way we think, influences the way we feel and therefore can cause mood disorders.
What types of cognitions lead to major depressive disorder?Faulty attributions-”My boyfriend didn’t call me
because he doesn’t love me”Cognitive distortions-”My life is terrible because I
missed the bus this morning”Irrational beliefs-”My work must be perfect”. “My
essay did not get a level 7, I must be stupid”
Attributional Theory of Depression (Abramson et al 1978)Main Ideas:An attribution is an explanation of why something
happens.
Depression results from the types of attributions people make-the explanations they give their own behaviour and situation.
Theory in detailDepressed people view failure in the following ways:Causes are internal (blaming themselves not the
situation).Situations are stable (showing extreme pessimism
about the future).Failure as global (not specific to one situation). In other words ‘its me, its going to last forever and
everything I do will go wrong’.This type of attribution leads to feelings of helplessness
thus depression.
EvidenceMetalsky et al 1987 Students who did badly on a Psychology exam.
Two days after those that attributed their failure to internal, stable and global causes continued to be depressed. Students who made different attributions did not (I wasn’t feeling well, difficult etc).
Evidence(+) Plausible and supported by a large body of
evidence.(-) Does the attribution precede or follow
depression? Most researchers believe it precedes it. Sexual abuse in childhood, overprotective parents and harsh discipline has all been linked. Rose et al 1994.
(-) Evidence from humans is from college based laboratory experiments. Artificial and unrepresentative.
(-) Much evidence comes from answers to the Attributional Style Questionnaire. Forces people into this kind of thinking.
Aaron Beck’s 1967 cognitive theory of depression.The theory in general:Depressed people think differently about
themselves and the world around them. They have a depressive way of viewing and representing the world.
It is based on schema processing where stored schemas about the self interfere with information processing. Schemas influence the way people make sense of experiences.
People have negative cognitive schemas-depressogenic schemas
SpecificallySeeing the self in negative terms can lead to errors in thinking. For example:Arbitrary inference- drawing conclusions
without evidence, particularly about the self.Selective abstraction-forming conclusions from
an isolated detail while ignoring contradictory evidence.
Overgeneralizations-drawing conclusions from a particular event and applying it generally.
Arbitrary Inference
A person draws the wrong conclusion- even when there is no evidence to support these wrong conclusions
Can you think of an example?
Selective Abstraction
A person focuses on small negative details and ignores the bigger picture
Can you think of an example?
Overgeneralisation
A person draws global conclusions about himself/herself based on one single event
Can you think of an example?
The Negative Cognitive triadNegative thoughts and errors in thinking can produce a negative cognitive triangle. Negative view of:
the selfthe worldthe future
The Negative Cognitive Triad
themselves
The world The future
negative views about:
How do people form depressogenic schemas?Use p55 of the PDF study guide to find out
EvidenceBoury et al (2001)Lewinshohn et al (2001)Use p55 of the PDF study guide to outline the
above studies:
EvidenceA prospective study Alloy et al (1999)Use p154 of the textbook:What is a prospective study?AimMethodFindings
Evaluation of Beck(+) Supported by plenty of evidence. Research
indicates that depressed people have more negative thoughts about themselves, the world and the future. They are more likely to make the errors identified.
( ?? ) Does negative thinking precede and contribute to the onset OR follow and maintain depression?
What does the evidence tell us?
EvaluationDo some independent research to find out
what the Beck Depression Inventory is.
TreatmentIf depression is caused by cognitive style,
how should it be treated?
More EvaluationTherapies based on the cognitive explanation
have been very effectiveHowever, we have to be aware of the Treatment
Etiology Fallacy.This when people assume that the success of a
treatment reveals the cause of the disorder.