Psychology2016

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566 CHAPTER 14


found in individuals with a history of neglect or physical, emotional, or sexual abuse,
in brain areas associated with mood, regulation of emotional behaviors, and attention
(Lim et al., 2014). One recent investigation across different psychological disorders
found variations in gray matter loss in several brain regions. Think back to the cov-
erage of different brain areas in Chapter Two. In addition to the reductions found in
the dorsal anterior cingulate and bilateral insular cortex across disorders, there was
greater loss in the hippocampus and amygdala in depressed individuals (Goodkind,
et al., 2015). Another investigation has found that baseline thickness of cortical gray
matter in the right medial orbitofrontal and right precentral areas of the frontal lobe,
the left anterior cingulate, and bilateral areas of insular cortex predicted future onset
of major depression in a group of 33 adolescent females (Foland-Ross et al., 2015). For
subcortical structures, researchers have found smaller volumes in the caudate, part of
the basal ganglia, for individuals with major depressive disorder (MDD) and bipolar
disorder (BD) as compared to controls, but individuals with MDD had greater vol-
ume in the ventral diencephalon, an area that includes the hypothalamus, than both
controls and individuals with BD (Sacchet et al., 2015). Functional neuroimaging has
also found dysfunction in many of these brain areas, with some being more active
and others less active as compared to controls, and to complicate it even further, the
direction of altered activity may be different in youth than in adults with depression
(Miller et al., 2015; Su et al., 2014).
Genes also play a part in these disorders. The fact that the more severe mood dis-
orders are not a reaction to some outside source of stress or anxiety but rather seem to
come from within the person’s own body, together with the tendency of mood disorders
to appear in genetically related individuals at a higher rate, suggests rather strongly that
inheritance may play a significant part in these disorders (Barondes, 1998; Farmer, 1996).
It is possible that some mood disorders share a common gene, but actual rates vary. For
example, genetic risks are higher in bipolar disorder as compared to unipolar depression
(Hyman & Cohen, 2013; McMahon et al., 2010). More than 65 percent of people with
bipolar disorder have at least one close relative with either bipolar disorder or major
depression (Craddock et al., 2005; National Institute of Mental Health Genetics Work-
group, 1998; Sullivan et al., 2000). Twin studies have shown that if one identical twin
has either major depression or bipolar disorder, the chances that the other twin will also
develop a mood disorder are about 40 to 70 percent (Muller-Oerlinghausen et al., 2002).

psychodynamic: depression is repressed anger originally aimed at parents

behavioral: depression is linked to learned helplessness
social cognitive: distorted thinking and negative, self-defeating thoughts
biological: variation in neurotransmitter systems (e.g., serotonin, norepinephrine,

major depressive disorder: deeply depressed mood; most commonly diagnosed mood disorder,
twice as common in women
bipolar disorders: experience of mood from normal to manic, possibly with episodes of depression,
or the experience of normal mood interrupted by episodes of depression and
hypomania

causes

Disorders of Mood
(involve a disturbance
in mood or emotion;
can be mild or severe)

Concept Map L.O. 14.9, 14.10


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