Myocardial infarction A heart attack, which occurs when the blood supply to part of the heart is cut off. If the blood flow to the heart is not restored, that part of the heart will die, causing disability or death. Narrative In qualitative research, the analysis of usually textual accounts of individuals who are the focus of research, and the detailed description of the findings of this research as distinct from the numerical findings of quantitative research.
Natural reinforcer In learning theory, a reinforcer which occurs naturally e. Can act as an unconditioned stimulus, giving rise to an unconditioned response, in classical conditioning, for example. Negative affectivity A tendency to experience persistent and pervasive negative mood and negative self-concept. As distinct from positive affect. Negative reinforcement In learning theory, the increase in the frequency of a response or behaviour resulting from the removal of an aversive event immediately after the response or behaviour is performed.
As distinct from positive reinforcement. Neurobiological model In addiction, the view that addictive behaviours have a biological basis, with learning processes and the resulting changes in the central nervous system thought to play a central role in the maintenance of these behaviours. Neuroimmune system Comprised of the immune system and those components of the central and peripheral nervous system that modulate immune response. Neurological models In pain, the view that subjective experiences of pain can be understood in terms of activity in the central and peripheral nervous system.
Neuropathic pain Pain that originates from damage to a nerve or the nervous system.
As distinct from primary gain and tertiary gain. Schizophrenia A mental illness in which the person suffers from distorted thinking, hallucinations and a reduced ability to feel normal emotions. For example, heavy drinkers appear to demonstrate attentional bias towards alcohol-related cues compared to neutral cues. As distinct from psychological dependence. The person pushes a button and a machine delivers a dose of pain medicine into the bloodstream through a vein. Behavioural support In therapeutic interventions, the use of motivational counselling, group therapy and other therapies which do not include a pharmacological component. It is a chronic and progressive mental illness similar in many respects to substance use disorders.
Nicotine replacement therapy Pharmaceutical products used in smoking cessation which work by replacing the nicotine usually consumed in cigarette smoke, via patches, gum, lozenges, or other delivery devices. These roughly double the chances of successfully stopping smoking.
Nociception Activity in specific nerve pathways resulting from tissue damage which is felt subjectively as pain. Objectification The mechanism by which unfamiliar or abstract events are changed into concrete realities and may result in the use of metaphor in everyday language to explain and understand abstract concepts. Objectivity The extent to which a measurement is impartial and impervious to influence by the participant or experimenter in a research study. Observational In research study design, a method of collecting data which does not involve an experimental manipulation.
Case-control and cohort studies may both be observational in nature. Ontologizing The processes in which physical characteristics are attributed to some concept or idea or how the immaterial becomes materialized.
Operant conditioning The learning process by which behaviours that result in positive outcomes or the removal of negative outcomes increase in frequency, and those that result in negative outcomes decrease in frequency. Opioids are similar to opiates such as morphine and codeine. Outcome expectancies Beliefs that undertaking a particular behaviour will result in an anticipated outcome.
Outpatients A patient who visits a healthcare facility for diagnosis or treatment without spending the night. Sometimes called a day patient. Pain An unpleasant sensation, either related to tissue damage or defined in terms of such damage, that can range from mild, localized discomfort to agony.
Pain has both physical and emotional components. Parkinson's disease A progressive nervous disease occurring in later life, associated with the destruction of brain cells that produce dopamine, and characterized by muscular tremours, slowing of movement, partial facial paralysis, distortions of gait and posture, and physical weakness.
Passive smoking The inhalation of tobacco smoke produced by someone else — a consequence of exposure to environmental tobacco smoke. Pathological gambling An impulse control disorder associated with gambling. It is a chronic and progressive mental illness similar in many respects to substance use disorders. Often cited as an example of a behavioural addiction. Patient controlled analgesia A system that allows people to control the amount of pain medication that they receive. The person pushes a button and a machine delivers a dose of pain medicine into the bloodstream through a vein.
Perceived barriers Beliefs related to the likely barriers to undertaking a recommended course of action in response to a health threat.
Perceived behavioural control Beliefs that relate to how much control a person thinks they have over a certain behaviour. Perceived benefits Beliefs related to the likely positive consequences associated with undertaking a healthy behaviour. Perceived severity Beliefs about the severity of the consequences of becoming ill or not undertaking a behaviour on one's health. Personality An area of psychology that is about individual differences and what makes us unique as human beings by emphasizing how psychological systems i.
Personification The perceived connection between a concept and some person or group e. Skinner and behaviourism in order to provide for the concept a concrete existence. Persuasion processes Attitude formation or change process. Occurs usually after exposure to arguments or other information about the attitude object.
Phantom limb pain Pain or discomfort felt by an amputee in the area of the missing limb. Phenotype The observable physical or behavioural characteristics of an organism, as determined by both genetic and environmental influences. Physical dependence An adaptive physiological state that occurs over time with regular drug use and results in a withdrawal syndrome when drug use is stopped; usually occurs with tolerance. As distinct from psychological dependence. Placebo effect The beneficial effect in a patient following a particular treatment that arises from the patient's expectations concerning the treatment, rather than any active properties of the treatment itself.
Polymorphic Occurring in multiple forms. In genetics, refers to the fact that certain genes may exist in multiple forms, sometimes resulting in differences in function. Positive affect Broad term describing elevated mood, happiness and other positive emotional states. As distinct from negative affect. Positive imagery A therapeutic intervention which involves the maintenance of positive thoughts and mental images.
Positive reinforcement In learning theory, the increase in the frequency of a response or behaviour resulting from the acquisition of a positive event or outcome immediately after the response or behaviour is performed. As distinct from negative reinforcement. Precaution adoption process model Weinstein's model that identifies seven stages that people progress through in a defined sequence from being unaware of a potential health threat to the maintenance of behaviour designed to remove this threat, and processes that are influential for transition from one stage to the next.
Prevalence The proportion of individuals in a population having a disease. Primary gain The relief of emotional conflict and distress by the patient which can be achieved by ascribing emotional conflict e. As distinct from secondary gain and tertiary gain. Problem drinking Pattern of drinking that is potentially harmful and association with lifestyle factors, but has not yet resulted in a diagnosis of alcohol dependence.
Problem gambling Participation in any form of gambling to the extent that it creates any negative consequences to the gambler, their family, place of employment, or others. Related to pathological gambling. Prohibition A law forbidding the sale of alcoholic beverages, established in in the USA and later repealed. Prospective In research study design, where one or more groups cohorts of individuals who have not yet had the outcome of interest are monitored for the number of such events which occur over time.
Prototypes Those cases of an event which are used to compare an unfamiliar event against. If the unfamiliar object is similar to the prototype it is assigned the characteristics of the prototype. If the unfamiliar is dissimilar to the prototype it is adjusted so as to fit the characteristics of the prototype. Psychological dependence A compulsion to use a drug for its pleasurable effects see positive reinforcement or for its removal of unpleasant effects or moods see negative reinforcement.
As distinct from physical dependence. Psychometric The design, administration and interpretation of quantitative tests for the measurement of psychological variables such as intelligence, aptitude and personality traits. Psychoneuroimmunology The branch of psychology concerned with the study of the interaction of psychological, behavioural, neural and endocrine factors and the functioning of the immune system.
Psychophysiology The branch of psychology that is concerned with the biological and physiological bases of psychological processes. Psychosocial risk factors Those psychological and social factors such as belief sets and behaviours that put an individual at an increased risk of experience of suffering a negative health outcome. Psychosomatic medicine A view that considers that psychological causes can not only be the consequences of an illness but may also be the cause of physical illness.
Public health The approach to medicine that is concerned with the health of the community as a whole as opposed to individual patient health. Quality of life The overall enjoyment of life, including an individual's sense of well being and ability to perform various tasks, as well as simple longevity. Randomization A method based on chance by which study participants are assigned to a treatment group. Randomization minimizes the differences among groups by equally distributing people with particular characteristics among all the trial arms.
Randomized clinical trial A study in which the participants are assigned by chance to separate groups that compare different treatments; neither the researchers nor the participants can choose which group. Using randomization to [Page ] assign people to groups means that the groups will be similar and that the treatments they receive can be compared objectively. Relapse The return of signs and symptoms of a disease after a patient has enjoyed a remission.
This can include behavioural symptoms, such as an abstinent smoker relapsing to regular cigarette consumption. Relative risk ratio The calculation of the likelihood of a certain event occurring equally for two population groups. A relative risk ratio of 1 means that the event is equally likely in both groups; a ratio of above one that the event is more likely in the first group; and a risk ratio below 1 that the event is less likely in the first group. Relaxation A therapeutic intervention using simple relaxation and breathing exercises to enable an individual to relax.
Reliability The extent to which a measurement instrument yields consistent, stable and uniform results over repeated observations or measurements under the same conditions each time. Freedom from measurement error. Replacement therapy In addiction, the use of pharmaceutical grade drugs e. Response efficacy A component of protection motivation theory that refers to personal beliefs that self-protective action will decrease the arousal experienced as a result of a health threat. Retrospective A study looking back in time, so the outcomes have occurred to the participants before the study commences.
Case-control studies are always retrospective, cohort studies can be, and randomized clinical trials are never retrospective. Risk factor A characteristic of personal behaviour, lifestyle or inherited factor that is associated with the experience of health-related outcomes. Schizophrenia A mental illness in which the person suffers from distorted thinking, hallucinations and a reduced ability to feel normal emotions. Secondary gain The acquisition of often unanticipated positive outcomes by the patient, such as personal attention and service, monetary gains, disability [Page ] benefits, and release from unpleasant responsibilities, resulting from an organic illness.
As distinct from primary gain and tertiary gain. Self-efficacy Beliefs about the perceived degree to which people have control over outcomes associated with doing a particular behaviour, or how confident a person is in their ability to perform a certain action and attain anticipated outcomes. Self-empowerment approach A health promotion perspective that argues for the emphasis in activities to be on self-empowerment derived by engagement and involvement with health-related activities at an individual or community based level.
Self-monitoring The process of maintaining an awareness of one's own actions and intentions. Self-regulation The process by which an individual monitors their behaviour, emotions and thoughts to maintain an equilibrium in psychological and physical functioning. Self-regulation model of illness cognition and behaviour Outline of the process by which people monitor and respond to changes in experience behaviour, thinking and emotion by utilising the illness representations and emotional representations derived from an illness experience to generate coping responses aimed at re-establishing healthy equilibrium.
The system involves appraisal of the effectiveness of the coping responses applied for re-establishing equilibrium. Sexually transmitted disease Any disease e. Sexually transmitted infection An infection that can be transferred from one person to another through sexual contact. Single blind In research study design, the condition whereby either the research participant or the researcher are blind to the specific experimental condition to which the participant has been allocated.
Single photon emission computed tomography A type of neuroimaging using nuclear imaging that shows how blood flows to tissues and organs. Social cognition models Models which emphasize the way in which our cognitions, thoughts and emotions are affected by the immediate social context, and in turn how these affect social behaviour through learning processes. Social Cognitive Theory A widely used approach that emphasizes the role social modelling, or vicarious learning, on human motivation, thinking and behaviour.
Motivation and behaviour are regulated through reasoned pre-actional thinking and behavioural change is determined by a sense of personal control over the environment. Social constructionism An approach that argues that as social experiences are forever changing, we can only examine how the world appears at the time at which we are looking at it, and that knowledge and experience of the social world is created or constructed by language, culture and history.
Reality is argued to be socially constructed through interactions in the social world. Social context The social context or social environment is the set of social positions and social roles which an individual participates in and interacts with. Social inequalities The observation that there are real differences in the health status of individuals according to socio-demographic characteristics. Social learning theory The argument that social behaviour is learned by observing and imitating the behaviours of others and also by receiving reinforcement for their own social behaviours.
Behaviour is shaped by perceived outcome expectancies and self-efficacy beliefs related to an event. Social model In disability, the argument that barriers, prejudice and exclusion by society purposely or inadvertently are the ultimate factors defining disability, rather than any inherent characteristics of the individual.
Social representations The values, thoughts, knowledge and images that a collective share in which a person's own identity is found in the collectivity of others and own experience. Socio-economic status A broad term that is used to describe factors about a person's lifestyle including occupation, income and education. Spinothalamic tract The sensory pathway in the body that transmits pain, temperature, itch and touch information from the peripheral nervous system to the central nervous system. Stress-health relationship The effects of subjective stress and the resulting stress reaction on psychological and physical health, in particular as a consequence on long-term exposure to stressors.
Stress management Interventions designed to reduce the impact of stressors in the workplace and environment more generally. These can have an individual focus, aimed at increasing an individual's ability to cope with stressors. Stress reaction Any physiological or psychological reaction to physical, mental or emotional stress that disturbs the organism's homeostasis. Stressor Internal or external factors or stimuli that produce stress.
These can be physical, biological, environmental or psychological. They share the capacity to elicit a common stress reaction.
Subfertility A state of reduced fertility, resulting in a less than normal capacity for reproduction. Subjective norm Beliefs we have about how other people we perceive as being important to us would like us to behave normative beliefs and the value we hold about behaving that way in line with other's wishes motivation to comply. Substance In addiction, any agent with psychoactive properties which has the potential to be abused because of physical dependence or psychological dependence liability. Superiority In research study design, the attempt to demonstrate that the effects of a medication are superior to a placebo medication.
As distinct from equivalence trials. Tension-reduction hypothesis In addiction, the hypothesis that substance use is maintained in part by negative reinforcement processes related to the ability of the substance to reduce subjective tension and stress. Tertiary gain The acquisition of often unanticipated positive outcomes by the caregiver , such as gratitude, monetary gains, disability benefits, resulting from an organic illness in the patient for whom he or she is caring.
Conceptual Consumption. Annual Review of Psychology. Vol. ( Volume publication date 10 January ) First published online as a Review in . The Annual Review of Psychology, in publication since , covers the significant developments in the field of psychology, Concepts and Categories: A Cognitive Neuropsychological Perspective .. Marketing and Consumer Behavior.
As distinct from primary gain and secondary gain. Textual accounts In qualitative research, written or transcripted interview material used as the object of study for analysis.
Thematic methods In qualitative research, the identification of themes for examples in interview exchanges , which may be used to guide the development of theoretical perspectives and, in some cases, subsequent data collection see Grounded Theory. Theory of planned behaviour Ajzen's extension of the theory of reasoned action.
States that the immediate antecedent of actual behaviour is behavioural intention. Behavioural intention is predicted by perceived behavioural control, attitude and subjective norm. Theory of reasoned action Fishbein and Ajzen's theory that proposes that the immediate antecedent of actual behaviour is behavioural intention. Behavioural intention is predicted by attitude and subjective norm.
Terror management theory An approach to the study of the effects of fear appeals.
When people are reminded of their own mortality they use proximal defensive strategies like denial or distancing. After delay when thoughts of one's own mortality are accessible but not in focal attention, distal defence strategies such as bolstering self-esteem will be used. Threat appraisal A component of protection motivation theory that proposes that the inhibition of maladaptive responses is dependent upon the perceived severity of a threat and perceived vulnerability to the threat.
Tobacco Leaves of the tobacco plant, of the genus Nicotiana, dried and prepared for smoking or oral ingestion. Transtheoretical model Prochaska and DiClemente's model that proposes five stages through which a person progresses in sequence from not thinking about undertaking a behaviour change, through the decision to change to maintenance of the change. Developed from an amalgamation of a number of key psychological and psychotherapeutic theories of processes in change.
Triple blind In research study design, the condition whereby the research participant, the researcher and a third-party e. Tumour A mass of abnormally growing cells that serve no useful bodily function. Tumours can be either benign or malignant. Type A behaviour A constellation of factors including competitiveness, achievement-orientated behaviour, impatience, being easily annoyed, hostility and anger, trying to achieve too much in too little time and a vigorous speech pattern that has been used to study the aetiology of various health outcomes e.
It was first described as an important risk factor in coronary disease in the s by Friedman. Type C personality A personality type characterized by the personal attributes of cooperation, appeasement, compliance, passivity, stoicism, unassertiveness, being self-sacrificing and the inhibition of negative emotions.
Suggested as a risk factor in cancer. Type D personality type A personality type characterized by inhibition of expression of negative emotions and avoidance of social interaction so as to avoid feelings of disapproval. Unconditioned response In classical conditioning, the unconditioned response is the unlearned i. Unconditioned stimulus In classical conditioning, a stimulus that evokes an unconditioned response. Volition phase A post-intentional stage proposed by the health action process approach which describes factors that are important for translating intention into action such as specific types of efficacy beliefs and planning processes.
Withdrawal symptoms Abnormal physical or psychological symptoms that follow the abrupt discontinuation of a drug that has the capability of producing physical dependence. CQ Press Your definitive resource for politics, policy and people. Back Institutional Login Please choose from an option shown below. Need help logging in? Email Please log in from an authenticated institution or log into your member profile to access the email feature.
Health Psychology Defining Health Psychology and: Epidemiology of Health and Illness Chapter 2: Study Design Research Methods and Measurement and: Cross-Sectional Research Methods and Measurement and: Longitudinal Research Methods and Measurement and: Experimental Research Methods and Measurement and: Qualitative Research Methods and Measurement and: Implementation Intentions Social Cognitive Models and: Transtheoretical Model of Behaviour Change Chapter 4: Molecular Genetics Biological and Physiological Models and: Psychoneuroimmunology Biological and Physiological Models and: Dispositional Optimism Individual Differences and Habit and: Unrealistic Optimism Individual Differences and Habit and: Locus of Control Individual Differences and Habit and: Self-Efficacy Individual Differences and Habit and: Habit Individual Differences and Habit and: Personality Type and Health Chapter 6: Discourse and Illness Chapter 7: Cancer Acute and Chronic Illness and: Hospitalization and Surgery Acute and Chronic Illness and: Pain Theories Pain and: Neurological Models Pain and: Behavioural Models Pain and: Endogenous Opioids Pain and: Acute Pain Pain and: Chronic Pain Chapter 9: Addictive Behaviours Addictive Behaviours and: Disease Models Addictive Behaviours and: Neurobiological Models Addictive Behaviours and: Social and Behavioural Models Addictive Behaviours and: Alcohol Addictive Behaviours and: Tobacco Addictive Behaviours and: Behavioural Addictions Chapter Health Promotion Health Promotion and Intervention and: Persuasion Processes Health Promotion and Intervention and: Fear Appeals Health Promotion and Intervention and: View Copyright Page [Page iv].
Albery, June [Page vi]. We thank Wiley-Blackwell Publishing for granting us permission to use extracts from the following articles: Neoplasms New growth or tumour which may be benign or malignant. Stages of change model see transtheoretical model Stress-health relationship The effects of subjective stress and the resulting stress reaction on psychological and physical health, in particular as a consequence on long-term exposure to stressors.
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British Journal of Psychology , 84 , 39— Journal of Applied Social Psychology , 31 , — British Journal of Psychology , 88 , 39— British Journal of Psychology , 84 , — Journal of Experimental Social Psychology , 19 , — Social Science and Medicine , 31 , — The Journal of Business Anthropology is an Open Access journal which publishes the results of anthropological research in business organizations and business situations of all kinds.
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