psy101ch131415part2
Across
- 3. disorder in which the person does not fully resolve the conflict in a particular psychosexual stage, resulting in personality traits and behavior associated with that earlier stage.
- 4. psychological defense mechanism in which the person refuses to consciously remember a threatening or unacceptable event, instead pushing those events into the unconscious mind.
- 5. in psychoanalysis, the tendency for a patient or client to project positive or negative feelings for important people from the past onto the therapist.
- 8. disorder in which panic attacks occur more than once or repeatedly, and cause persistent worry or changes in behavior.
- 9. The textbook illustrates how to pronounce Carl Jung’s last name phonetically in chapter 13 in parentheses after they introduce him. What is the textbook’s suggestion?
- 11. Disorder with fear of interacting with others or being in social situations that might lead to a negative evaluation.
- 13. redirecting feelings from a threatening target to a less threatening one.
- 14. form of therapy or treatment during which a small group of clients with similar concerns meet together with a therapist to address their issues.
- 15. the “third force” perspective in psychology that focuses on those aspects of personality that make people uniquely human, such as subjective feelings and freedom of choice.
Down
- 1. action therapies based on the principles of classical and operant conditioning and aimed at changing disordered behavior without concern for the original causes of such behavior.
- 2. drugs used to treat psychotic symptoms such as delusions, hallucinations, and other bizarre behavior.
- 6. part of the personality that develops out of a need to deal with reality; mostly conscious, rational, and logical.
- 7. part of the superego that produces guilt, depending on how acceptable behavior is.
- 10. having the quality of excessive excitement, energy, and elation or irritability.
- 12. dimension of personality in which people tend to withdraw from excessive stimulation.