The hormone __________ is the hormone produced by the stomach that stimulates appetite.
Fill in the blanks with correct word
Question 2Can a person who has an actual medical condition be diagnosed with pain disorder? Why or why not?
What will be an ideal response?
Question 3Which basic personality traits from the five-factor model seem most important in the development of dependent personality disorder?
a. High neuroticism and high agreeableness
b. High introversion and low conscientiousness
c. High fantasy proneness and low neuroticism
d. High excitement seeking and low openness to feelings
Question 4A sophisticated prospective study of the role of stressful life events in bipolar disorder by Ellicott, Hammen, and colleagues found that
a. low levels of stress protected an individual against manic episodes.
b. stress did not play a lesser role with the occurrence of more episodes.
c. high levels of stress were not associated with the occurrence of manic or depressive episodes.
d. low levels of stress protected an individual against depressive episodes.
Question 5Opium and heroin
a. were originally used by physicians as pain relievers.
b. have always been two of the most abused illegal drugs.
c. induce euphoria but do not reduce pain.
d. control pain only if they are used to cause unconsciousness.
Question 6Hallucinations are
a. sensory experiences with no basis in reality.
b. only seen in schizophrenia.
c. necessary for a diagnosis of schizophrenia.
d. disturbances in the content of thought.
Question 7For adolescents with anorexia nervosa, the best studied family therapy approach is known as the __________ model.
Fill in the blanks with correct word
Question 8Among psychoanalysts in the 1930s and 1940s, homosexuality was first seen as ________ but later was seen as ________.
a. a form of criminal behavior; defense against heterosexual urges
b. a severe form of psychological disability; a normal variant of sexual behavior
c. a result of highly pathological parent-child relationships; a conscious effort to gain attention
d. a variation of sexual function; a pathological escape from heterosexuality