for
Nietzel • Speltz
McCauley • Bernstein
Abnormal Psychology
Prepared by
Susan K. Fuhr
Weber State University
Allyn and Bacon
Boston • London • Toronto • Sydney • Tokyo • Singapore
,Copyright © 1998 by Allyn & Bacon
A Viacom Company
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All rights reserved. The contents, or parts thereof, may be reproduced for use with Abnormal
Psychology by Michael T. Nietzel, Matthew L. Speltz, Elizabeth A. McCauley, and Douglas A.
Bernstein, provided such reproductions bear copyright notice, but may not be reproduced in any
form for any other purpose without written permission from the copyright owner.
ISBN 0-205-26283-X
Printed in the United States of America
10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 02 01 00 99 98 97
, TABLE OF CONTENTS
Preface
Chapter 1 ABNORMAL BEHAVIOR: PAST AND PRESENT PERSPECTIVES 1
Chapter 2 ASSESSMENT AND DIAGNOSIS 33
Chapter 3 DISORDERS OF INFANCY, CHILDHOOD, and ADOLESCENCE 58
Chapter 4 DEVELOPMENTAL DISORDERS AND LEARNING DISABILITIES 85
Chapter 5 STRESS, SLEEP, AND ADJUSTMENT DISORDERS 110
Chapter 6 PSYCHOLOGICAL FACTORS AND HEALTH 134
Chapter 7 ANXIETY DISORDERS 155
Chapter 8 DISSOCIATIVE AND SOMATOFORM DISORDERS 181
Chapter 9 MOOD DISORDERS AND SUICIDE 205
Chapter 10 SCHIZOPHRENIA 238
Chapter 11 COGNITIVE DISORDERS 263
Chapter 12 PERSONALITY DISORDERS 281
Chapter 13 SUBSTANCE-RELATED DISORDERS 309
Chapter 14 SEXUAL AND GENDER IDENTITY DISORDERS 339
Chapter 15 BIOLOGICAL TREATMENT OF MENTAL DISORDERS 365
Chapter 16 PSYCHOTHERAPY 385
Chapter 17 ALTERNATIVES TO INDIVIDUAL PSYCHOTHERAPY 410
Chapter 18 LEGAL AND ETHICAL ISSUES IN MENTAL DISORDERS 431
,Preface
Given the popularity of the undergraduate course in abnormal psychology as well as the
exigencies imposed by large class sizes in most colleges and universities, many
instructors employ multiple choice exams as a primary means of evaluating student
learning. I have tried to produce a diverse array of such questions, along with a few
short answer/essay items at the end of each chapter. I hope you find them useful as you
create exams for your course.
Each item is presented with several descriptive qualifiers, listed just below the item
number. For instance, here is an item from Chapter 7:
7. 6 Dr. Seshachari is treating a client who is diagnosed with one of the most common
Ans. C anxiety disorders. Which of the following would this be?
App a. generalized anxiety
p. 217
b. panic disorder
E
* c. social phobia
d. obsessive-compulsive disorder
7. 6 > chapter number. item number
Ans. C > correct answer
App > type of item: APPLIED (App), CONCEPTUAL (Con), FACTUAL (Fac)
p. 217 > page reference for answer
E > item difficulty: EASY (E), MODERATE (M), CHALLENGING (C)1
* indicates item is found in the student Practice Tests (20 per chapter)
Each chapter has at least 65% Applied items and roughly 15% Conceptual and 15%
Factual. I would very much appreciate your feedback and suggestions as you use these
items. Please contact me by email: sfuhr@weber. edu.
I would like to express my thanks to the several individuals without whose aid and
support this project would not have come to fruition. To Doug Bernstein, thank you for
recommending me and providing all-important social support via the electronic highway.
And hearty thanks to Sue Gleason, my stalwart, always reassuring editor who's been a
pleasure to work with. About 250 items in this bank were written, and my own writing
reviewed, by some of Weber State University's brightest and best students: Danny May,
Bryce Warren, Shayne Palmer, Angie Wehr, and Todd Woodward. And Amanda
Allman, of Illinois, was a saving grace toward the end of the project, writing several
items for the last three chapters. Thanks Amanda. And now that I've written, rewritten,
and edited the last item, I can tell my long-neglected spouse that I'll soon be back to
normal (whatever that is!).
Susan K. Fuhr, Ph. D.
Weber State University
Ogden, Utah 84408-1202
I encourage you to bear in mind that because this is a new testbank for a new text, these difficulty levels
are rationally based and await empirical item analysis. Your own choices for class coverage and
emphases will affect the accuracy of these recommended levels.
, Chapter 1
ABNORMAL BEHAVIOR: PAST AND PRESENT PERSPECTIVES
1. 1 Which facet of your text's definition of "abnormal behavior" is universally
Ans. D accepted?
Fac a. individual disturbance of behavior or physical functioning
p. 4 b. psychological distress or impaired functioning
E c. a kind of disturbance that is unexpected in the culture
d. None of the above apply.
1. 2 If you were a citizen of ancient Egypt, what would you be most likely to cite
Ans. C as the cause of Nelson McGrath's behavior?
App a. weakness of character
p. 5 b. bodily illness
E c. evil
d. irrational thoughts & perceptions
1. 3 Evidence from cultures around 3500 to 3000 B. C. suggests that a
Ans. D model would have been used to explain abnormal behavior.
Fac a. medical
p. 5 b. humanistic
E c. rationalistic
d. demonological
1. 4 How might an early Mesopotamian individual be treated if she or he
Ans. C demonstrated bizarre actions, strange speech, and extremely unusual beliefs?
App a. bloodletting with leeches
p. 5 b. confinement to an asylum
M c. trephining
d. a special diet to restore bodily imbalances
1. 5 Ancient Chinese and Hebrew civilizations employed several methods in the
Ans. B treatment of abnormal individuals. Which approach, however, was NOT
Fac common?
p. 5 a. exercise and special diet
M b. special care in asylums
c. faith healing
d. concoctions to poison spirits and demons
1. 6 The movie "An American Werewolf in London" reflects a belief in which of
Ans. A the following?
App a. lycanthropy
p. 5 b. hysteria
E c. tarantism
d. stigmata diaboli
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,1. 7 In your historical review of early approaches to understanding abnormality, to
Ans. D whom would you credit the birth of the medical tradition?
App a. Roman philosophers
p. 5 b. Islamic scholars
E c. Egyptian healers
d. Greek physicians
1. 8 If you assert that humans are primarily rational beings who gain knowledge
Ans. C through reasoning and recollection to discover universal truths, to whom do
Con you clearly owe an intellectual debt?
p. 5 a. Hippocrates
M b. Avicenna
* c. Plato
d. Descartes
1. 9 Marc considers himself an empirical scientist of psychology, gathering and
Ans. C evaluating information from perceptual experiences. Which Greek philosopher
Con set forth the intellectual foundation for Marc's perspective?
p. 5 a. Plato
M b. Hippocrates
c. Aristotle
d. Galen
1. 10 Which humorous Greek is considered the father of medicine?
Ans. B a. Galen
Fac b. Hippocrates
p. 5 c. Epictetus
E d. Aristotle
1. 11 An ancient Greek was diagnosed as suffering from melancholia. This
Ans. A individual was probably given a special diet as well as purgatives in order to
App treat an imbalance of
p. 5 a. black bile.
E b. phlegm.
c. yellow bile.
d. blood.
1. 12 Which of the following descriptive terms would best reflect Hippocrates'
Ans. C approach to abnormality?
Con a. madness
p. 5 b. evil
E c. illness
d. sinfulness
1. 13 You are Galen's medical assistant. What aspect of human psychology would
Ans. D you be studying?
App a. rational thinking processes
p. 6 b. social behavior
M c. intelligence
d. temperament
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,1. 14 What sort of intervention would Epictetus most likely recommend for a
Ans. A disordered individual?
Fac a. a talking cure
p. 6 b. laxatives and purgatives
E c. prayer and faith healing
d. commitment to a restful asylum
1. 15 "It's not what your boyfriend said to you that's upset you; it's the way you
Ans. B interpreted his comments that is bothering you. " Which of the following
Con philosophers would most heartily agree?
p. 6 a. Aristotle
M b. Epictetus
c. Avicenna
d. St. Vitus
1. 16 Stacy is a graduate student in clinical psychology and is learning the tools and
Ans. D techniques of psychotherapy. Her belief that these verbally-based methods will
App help her future clients is most similar to the view of the treatment
p. 6 of disorders.
M a. European Middle Ages'
b. ancient Hebrews'
c. ancient Egyptians'
d. classical Greek and Romans'
1. 17 Aaron lives in a feudal society, marked by frequent wars and economic crises.
Ans. C He also believes that abnormality is the work of the Devil. What is the most
App likely year that Aaron is alive in Western Europe?
p. 6 a. 120 B. C.
C b. 410A. D.
c. 755A. D.
d. 1480 A. D.
1. 18 A magical potion made up of eye of newt, heart of a cat, and the ovary of a
Ans. C goat killed on a Saturday midnight would probably be offered to a psychotic
App person during what historical age?
p. 6 a. Renaissance
M b. classical Greco-Roman
c. early European Middle Ages
d. late Islamic Middle Ages
1. 19 The text The Canon of Medicine provided a bridge between the philosophy of
Ans. A and the of the Renaissance.
Con a. Aristotle; science *
p. 6 b. Plato; rationalistic theology
M c. Socrates; medical practices
d. Hippocrates; science
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,1. 20 Although the rationalistic, naturalistic philosophy of the Greeks was lost during
Ans. D the Dark Ages of Europe, where were their works preserved?
Fac a. China
p. 6 b. Spain
E c. Indonesia
d. Islam
1. 21 What commonality exists between the work of Greek physicians, Islamic
Ans. B physicians, and the monasteries of Europe?
Con a. They emphasized a supernatural approach to understanding causes of
p. 6 abnormality.
C b. They provided sanctuaries for disordered individuals.
c. They pioneered psychological treatment methods that spurred the
development of Renaissance asylums.
d. They combined magic, common sense, and herbal remedies to treat
disordered individuals.
1. 22 When and to whom would you credit the first use of hospitals for the
Ans. B specialized treatment of mental disorders?
Fac a. 4th century Roman physicians
p. 6 b. 8th century Islamic physicians
E c. 12th century European monks
d. 16th century Renaissance physicians
1. 23 Whether caused by naturalistic or demonic forces, if you joined a group of
Ans. A people jumping and dancing, tearing off clothing, and frolicking in the streets,
App what form of madness would you be displaying?
p. 7 a. tarantism
E b. Dance de Diaboli
c. folie en masse
d. lycanthropy
1. 24 If you consulted the Malleus Maleficarum in the late 1400's, what was your
Ans. B goal?
App a. reconciliation of the teachings of the church and the values of humanism
p. 7 b. the detection, exposure, and purging of witches
E c. potions and incantations for the treatment of disordered individuals in
asylums
d. an understanding of the physical, mechanical workings of the human body
1. 25 Which of the following represents a strong backlash to the increasing influence
Ans. D of the secular world in the early years of the Renaissance?
Fac a. The Canon of Faith
p. 7 b. Paracelsus' study of abnormal behavior
E c. greater value placed on humanism
d. Malleus Maleficarum
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, 1. 26 Which item does not belong with the other three?
Ans. A a. moral treatment
Con b. advent of humanism
p. 7 c. advent of the printing press
C d. Copernicus' cosmology
1. 27 You live in a time in which books are becoming more readily available,
Ans. D heretics are saying that the sun is the center of the universe, and humankind is
App becoming a topic of study worthy in its own right. With whom are you living?
p. 7 a. Plato and Hippocrates
M b. Avicenna and Galen
* c. Tuke and Pinel
d. Copernicus and Paracelsus
1. 28 Which of the following represents the correct order of predominant themes
Ans. C from the Greeks to the Middle Ages to the Renaissance?
Con a. theological > psychological > rational
p. 5-7 b. psychological > rational > theological
M c. rational > theological > psychological
d. supernatural > theological > psychological
1. 29 "I think, therefore I am. " The author of this phrase asserted that human mental
Ans. A activity could be thought of in mechanical, physical terms. Who was he?
Con a. Descartes
p. 7 b. Epictetus
M c. Copernicus
d. Chiarugi
1. 30 You are a modem student in a field of study whose first member risked the
Ans. D wrath of the church by condemning the practices in the Malleus Maleficarum.
App In what field are you studying?
p. 7 a. clinical psychology
M b. family medicine
c. philosophy
d. psychiatry
1. 31 If you were a mentally disordered person in the 16th century, to whom would
Ans. A you mm for humane help?
App a. Weyer
p. 7 b. Tuke
M c. Sprenger
d. Pinel
1. 32 The word "bedlam" derives its meaning from
Ans. B a. the strange "magical" treatments carried out in early monastery asylums.
Fac b. the deplorable conditions found in prison-like Renaissance hospitals for the
p. 7 insane
E c. the name of the city in which the first mental hospital was founded.
d. the early bedrest treatment used for acutely disturbed patients in asylums.
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