Phobic disorders are frequently grouped into three different categories. List these three categories (categories, not individual phobias such as "fear of heights"), and provide a description of the characteristics associated with each. Discuss briefly behavioral theories that explain how phobic disorders may be acquired
What will be an ideal response?
The three different phobic disorders are specific phobia, social anxiety disorder, and agoraphobia. Specific phobia is the unrealistic and excessive fear of a specific animal, object, or situation. Common examples include fear of needles, flying, elevators, bugs, dentists, and snakes. An individual with a specific phobia experiences anticipatory anxiety when aware of an impending situation that may force a confrontation with the feared object. When the individual is actually exposed to the feared object, there is almost always an intense and immediate anxiety response. Social anxiety disorder is persistent fear of being in a social situation in which one is exposed to scrutiny by others and a related fear of acting in a way that will be humiliating or embarrassing or where social disapproval may occur. Examples of social phobias include irrational reactions to eating in public places, using public restrooms, public speaking, or attending social gatherings. Like the specific phobic, the social anxiety disorder is characterized by marked anxiety when anticipating the phobic situation and thus usually avoids such situations that interfere with his or her daily functioning. Agoraphobia is a marked fear of being alone or of being in public places where escape is difficult or where help is not readily available in the event of a panic attack. Often individuals with agoraphobia experience intense fear in shopping malls, in crowds, or in tunnels, bridges, or public vehicles. The primary characteristic of agoraphobia is severe phobic anxiety and phobic avoidance of the feared situation. Many agoraphobic individuals are housebound as a result of their avoidance and only venture forth when accompanied by a close and trusted companion.
Behavioral theories may be used to explain the acquisition and maintenance of phobic behaviors. Specifically, classical conditioning may explain the acquisition of phobias through association. Observational learning theory also may explain the development of phobic behavior through exposure to the fear responses exhibited by others. According to the negative information perspective, fears are acquired from sources such as the media that present negative information about objects, situations, or groups, suggesting that they should be feared. The cognitive-behavioral perspective attributes fears to cognitive distortions and catastrophic thinking.
You might also like to view...
Primary reinforcers are more ____ than secondary reinforcers
a. ?socially related b. ?trivially oriented c. ?intrinsically pleasurable d. ?learned from experience
Methylphenidate (Ritalin) produces its stimulant effects by a. promoting dopamine synthesis
b. promoting dopamine release. c. inhibiting the reuptake of dopamine. d. activating dopamine receptors.
Researchers must be careful to include participants in their studies who represent the entire possible distribution of performance on both the test and the criterion to avoid
a. practice effects. b. multicultural bias. c. restriction of range. d. criterion contamination
Animals that maintain their core temperature through internal metabolic activity are known as
A. endotherms. B. ectotherms. C. mesotherms. D. cold-blooded animals.