release of dsm-5 dsm-iv versus dsm-5. release of dsm-5 dsm-iv versus dsm-5

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Release of DSM-5 DSM-IV versus DSM-5 DSM-IV versus DSM-5

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Page 1: Release of DSM-5 DSM-IV versus DSM-5. Release of DSM-5  DSM-IV versus DSM-5

Release of DSM-5

DSM-IV versus DSM-5DSM-IV versus DSM-5

Page 2: Release of DSM-5 DSM-IV versus DSM-5. Release of DSM-5  DSM-IV versus DSM-5

Release of DSM-5

http://www.appi.org/Pages/DSM.aspx

DSM-IV versus DSM-5DSM-IV versus DSM-5

Page 3: Release of DSM-5 DSM-IV versus DSM-5. Release of DSM-5  DSM-IV versus DSM-5

Release of DSM-5

DSM-IV versus DSM-5DSM-IV versus DSM-5

Page 4: Release of DSM-5 DSM-IV versus DSM-5. Release of DSM-5  DSM-IV versus DSM-5

Release of DSM-5

DSM-IV versus DSM-5DSM-IV versus DSM-5

Page 5: Release of DSM-5 DSM-IV versus DSM-5. Release of DSM-5  DSM-IV versus DSM-5

DSM-IV versus DSM-5DSM-IV versus DSM-5 Schizophrenia and Other Psychotic

Disorders– Schizophrenia

paranoid typedisorganized typecatatonic typeundifferentiated type

– Schizophreniform Disorder– Schizoaffective Disorder– Delusional Disorder– Brief Psychotic Disorder

Schizophrenia Spectrum and Other Psychotic Disorders– Schizophrenia– Schizophreniform Disorder– Schizoaffective Disorder– Delusional Disorder– Brief Psychotic Disorder– Schizotypal (Personality)

Disorder

Page 6: Release of DSM-5 DSM-IV versus DSM-5. Release of DSM-5  DSM-IV versus DSM-5

DSM-IV versus DSM-5DSM-IV versus DSM-5 Mood Disorders

– Depressive DisordersMajor Depressive

DisorderDysthymic Disorder

– Bipolar DisordersBipolar I DisorderBipolar II DisorderCyclothymic Disorder

Depressive Disorders– Disruptive Mood

Dysregulation Disorder– Major Depressive Dis.,

Single & Recurrent Episodes– Persistent Depressive

Disorder (Dysthymia)

Bipolar and Related Disorders– Bipolar I Disorder– Bipolar II Disorder– Cyclothymic Disorder

Page 7: Release of DSM-5 DSM-IV versus DSM-5. Release of DSM-5  DSM-IV versus DSM-5

DSM-IV versus DSM-5DSM-IV versus DSM-5 Anxiety Disorders

– Panic Disorder– Agoraphobia– Specific Phobia (Simple Phobia)– Social Phobia (Social Anxiety

Disorder)– Obsessive-Compulsive Disorder– Post-traumatic Stress Disorder– Acute Stress Disorder– Generalized Anxiety Disorder

Anxiety Disorders– Separation Anxiety Disorder– Selective Mutism– Specific Phobia– Social Anxiety Disorder

(Social Phobia)– Panic Disorder– Panic Attack (Specifier)– Agoraphobia– Generalized Anxiety Disorder

Obsessive-Compulsive and Related Disorders

Traumatic and Stressor Related Disorders

Page 8: Release of DSM-5 DSM-IV versus DSM-5. Release of DSM-5  DSM-IV versus DSM-5

DSM-IV versus DSM-5DSM-IV versus DSM-5 Anxiety Disorders

– Panic Disorder– Agoraphobia– Specific Phobia (Simple Phobia)– Social Phobia (Social Anxiety

Disorder)– Obsessive-Compulsive Disorder– Post-traumatic Stress Disorder– Acute Stress Disorder– Generalized Anxiety Disorder

Anxiety Disorders Obsessive-Compulsive and Related

Disorders– Obsessive-Compulsive Disorder– Body Dysmorphic Disorder– Hoarding Disorder– Trichotillomania (Hair-Pulling

Disorder)– Excoriation (Skin-Picking)

Disorder Traumatic and Stressor Related

Disorders

Page 9: Release of DSM-5 DSM-IV versus DSM-5. Release of DSM-5  DSM-IV versus DSM-5

DSM-IV versus DSM-5DSM-IV versus DSM-5 Anxiety Disorders

– Panic Disorder– Agoraphobia– Specific Phobia (Simple Phobia)– Social Phobia (Social Anxiety

Disorder)– Obsessive-Compulsive Disorder– Post-traumatic Stress Disorder– Acute Stress Disorder– Generalized Anxiety Disorder

Anxiety Disorders Obsessive-Compulsive and Related

Disorders Traumatic and Stressor Related

Disorders– Reactive Attachment Disorder– Disinhibited Social – Engagement Disorder– Posttraumatic Stress Disorder– Acute Stress Disorder– Adjustment Disorders

Page 10: Release of DSM-5 DSM-IV versus DSM-5. Release of DSM-5  DSM-IV versus DSM-5

DSM-IV versus DSM-5DSM-IV versus DSM-5Somatoform Disorders

– Somatization Disorder– Conversion Disorder– Hypochondriasis– Body Dysmorphic

Disorder– Pain Disorder

Somatic Symptom and Related Disorders– Somatic Symptom Disorder– Illness Anxiety Disorder– Conversion Disorder– Factitious Disorder

Page 11: Release of DSM-5 DSM-IV versus DSM-5. Release of DSM-5  DSM-IV versus DSM-5

DSM-IV versus DSM-5DSM-IV versus DSM-5Dissociative Disorders

– Dissociative Amnesia– Dissociative Fugue– Dissociative Identity

Disorder– Depersonalization

Disorder

Dissociative Disorders– Dissociative Identity

Disorder– Dissociative Amnesia– Depersonalization/

Derealization Disorder

Page 12: Release of DSM-5 DSM-IV versus DSM-5. Release of DSM-5  DSM-IV versus DSM-5

DSM-IV versus DSM-5DSM-IV versus DSM-5Eating Disorders

– Anorexia Nervosa– Bulimia Nervosa– Eating Disorder NOS

Feeding and Eating Disorders– Pica– Rumination Disorder– Avoidant/Restrictive Food

Intake Disorder– Anorexia Nervosa– Bulimia Nervosa– Binge-Eating Disorder

Page 13: Release of DSM-5 DSM-IV versus DSM-5. Release of DSM-5  DSM-IV versus DSM-5

DSM-IV versus DSM-5DSM-IV versus DSM-5 Disorders Usually First Evident in

Infancy, Childhood, or Adolescence– Mental Retardation– Learning Disorders – Motor Skills Disorder– Pervasive Developmental Disorders– Disruptive Behavior and Attention-Deficit Disorders– Feeding and Eating Disorders of Infancy or Early

Childhood– Tic Disorders– Communication Disorders– Elimination Disorders– Other Disorders of Infancy, Childhood, or

Adolescence

Neurodevelopmental Disorders Intellectual disabilities Communication Disorders Autism Spectrum Disorder Attention-Deficit/ Hyperactivity

Disorder Specific Learning Disorder Motor disorders Other Neurodevelopmental Disorders

Page 14: Release of DSM-5 DSM-IV versus DSM-5. Release of DSM-5  DSM-IV versus DSM-5

DSM-IV versus DSM-5DSM-IV versus DSM-5Delirium, Dementia,

Amnestic, And Other Cognitive Disorders– Deliria– Dementias– Amnestic Disorders– Cognitive Disorder NOS

Neurocognitive Disorders– Delirium– Major & Mild Neurocognitive Disorders Due To…

Alzheimer’s Disease Frontotemporal lobar degeneration Lewy Body Disease Vascular Disease Traumatic brain injury Substance/Medication Use HIV Infection Prion Disease Parkinson’s Disease Huntington’s Disease Another Medical Condition

Page 15: Release of DSM-5 DSM-IV versus DSM-5. Release of DSM-5  DSM-IV versus DSM-5

DSM-IV versus DSM-5DSM-IV versus DSM-5 Personality Disorders

– Paranoid Personality Disorder– Schizoid Personality Disorder– Schizotypal Personality Disorder– Antisocial Personality Disorder– Borderline Personality Disorder– Histrionic Personality Disorder– Narcissistic Personality Disorder– Avoidant Personality Disorder– Dependent Personality Disorder– Obsessive-Compulsive Personality

Disorder

Personality Disorders– General Personality Disorders– Cluster A Personality Disorders

Paranoid Schizoid Schizotypal

– Cluster B Personality Disorders Antisocial Borderline Histrionic Narcissistic

– Cluster C Personality Disorders Avoidant Dependent Obsessive-Compulsive

Page 16: Release of DSM-5 DSM-IV versus DSM-5. Release of DSM-5  DSM-IV versus DSM-5

Changes in the Acorn Book

http://teachinghighschoolpsychology.blogspot.com/2013/05/changes-in-new-ap-psych-course.html

DSM-IV versus DSM-5DSM-IV versus DSM-5

Page 17: Release of DSM-5 DSM-IV versus DSM-5. Release of DSM-5  DSM-IV versus DSM-5

XII. Abnormal Behavior (7–9%) 2013In this portion of the course, students examine the nature of common challenges to adaptive functioning. This section emphasizes formal conventions that guide psychologists’ judgments about diagnosis and problem severity.

AP students in psychology should be able to do the following:•Describe contemporary and historical conceptions of what constitutes psychological disorders.•Recognize the use of the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders (DSM) published by the American Psychiatric Association as the primary reference for making diagnostic judgments.•Discuss the major diagnostic categories, including anxiety and somatoform disorders, mood disorders, schizophrenia, organic disturbance, personality disorders, and dissociative disorders and their corresponding symptoms.

•Evaluate the strengths and limitations of various approaches to explaining psychological disorders: medical model, psychoanalytic, humanistic, cognitive, biological, and sociocultural.•Identify the positive and negative consequences of diagnostic labels (e.g., the Rosenhan study).•Discuss the intersection between psychology and the legal system (e.g., confidentiality, insanity defense)

Page 18: Release of DSM-5 DSM-IV versus DSM-5. Release of DSM-5  DSM-IV versus DSM-5

XII. Abnormal Behavior (7–9%) 2014In this portion of the course, students examine the nature of common challenges to adaptive functioning. This section emphasizes formal conventions that guide psychologists’ judgments about diagnosis and problem severity.

AP students in psychology should be able to do the following:•Describe contemporary and historical conceptions of what constitutes psychological disorders.•Recognize the use of the most recent version of the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders (DSM) published by the American Psychiatric Association as the primary reference for making diagnostic judgments.•Discuss the major diagnostic categories, including anxiety disorders, bipolar and related disorders, depressive disorders, dissociative disorders, feeding and eating disorders, neurodevelopmental disorders, neurocognitive disorders, obsessive-compulsive and related disorders, personality disorders, schizophrenia spectrum and other psychotic disorders, somatic symptom and related disorders, and trauma- and stressor-related disorders and their corresponding symptoms.•Evaluate the strengths and limitations of various approaches to explaining psychological disorders: medical model, psychoanalytic, humanistic, cognitive, biological, and sociocultural.•Identify the positive and negative consequences of diagnostic labels (e.g., the Rosenhan study).•Discuss the intersection between psychology and the legal system (e.g., confidentiality, insanity defense)

Page 19: Release of DSM-5 DSM-IV versus DSM-5. Release of DSM-5  DSM-IV versus DSM-5

XII. Abnormal Behavior (7–9%) 2013

AP students in psychology should be able to do the following:•Discuss the major diagnostic categories, including anxiety and somatoform disorders, mood disorders, schizophrenia, organic disturbance, personality disorders, and dissociative disorders and their corresponding symptoms.

XII. Abnormal Behavior (7–9%) 2014

AP students in psychology should be able to do the following:•Discuss the major diagnostic categories, including anxiety disorders, bipolar and related disorders, depressive disorders, dissociative disorders, feeding and eating disorders, neurodevelopmental disorders, neurocognitive disorders, obsessive-compulsive and related disorders, personality disorders, schizophrenia spectrum and other psychotic disorders, somatic symptom and related disorders, and trauma- and stressor-related disorders and their corresponding symptoms.

Page 20: Release of DSM-5 DSM-IV versus DSM-5. Release of DSM-5  DSM-IV versus DSM-5

2014XII. Abnormal Behavior (7–9%)A.Definitions of AbnormalB.Theories of PsychopathologyC.Diagnosis of PsychopathologyD.Types of Disorders

1. Anxiety2. Bipolar and Related3. Depressive4. Dissociative5. Feeding and Eating6. Neurodevelopmental7. Neurocognitive8. Obsessive-Compulsive and

Related9. Personality10. Schizophrenia Spectrum and

Other Psychotic11. Somatic Symptom and Related12. Trauma- and Stressor-Related

2013XII. Abnormal Behavior (7–9%)A.Definitions of AbnormalB.Theories of PsychopathologyC.Diagnosis of PsychopathologyD.Types of Disorders

1. Anxiety2. Somatoform3. Mood4. Schizophrenic5. Organic6. Personality7. Dissociative