1. Course Description:
In this course, we want to deeply discuss and review literature regarding to
Major Depression Disorders, Anxiety Disorders (including of OCD), Eating
Disorders,PTSD, Impulsive Control Disorders and Personality Disorders. The
purposes of the course are to understand new appoach of psychopathology and
build up your own psychopathological knowlege.

Teaching method:Discussion, Reading, Presentation.

Syllabus:

1. Orientation
2. Transdiagnostic approaches
3. Major Depression: Etiology and Comorbidity
4. Major Depression: Evidenced-based treatments
5. Anxiety Disorders (including of OCD) : Etiology and Comorbidity
6. Anxiety Disorders (including of OCD) : Evidenced-based treatments
7. Eating Disorders: Etiology and Comorbidity
8. Eating Disorders: Evidenced-based treatments
9. Mid-term Exam
10. PTSD: Etiology and Comorbidity
11. PTSD: Evidenced-based treatments
12. Impuslive Control Disorders: Etiology and Comorbidity
13. Impuslive Control Disorders: Evidenced-based Treatments
14. Personality Disorders: Etiology and Comorbidity
15. Personality Disorders: Evidenced-based Treatments
16. Final-term Exam

Presentations: Literature review, Discussion and Practice.

Scoring:

Attendance: 20%
Presentations in class: 40%
Final Report: 40%

References:

Main Reference: Harvey, A. G., Watkins, E., & Mansell, W. (2004). Cognitive
behavioural processes across psychological disorders: A transdiagnostic approach
to research and treatment. Oxford University Press, USA.

1.Scarella, T. M., Boland, R. J., & Barsky, A. J. (2019). Illness anxiety
disorder: psychopathology, epidemiology, clinical characteristics, and
treatment. Psychosomatic medicine, 81(5), 398-407.
2.Foa, E. B., & Kozak, M. J. (2019). Treatment of anxiety disorders:
Implications for psychopathology. In Anxiety and the anxiety disorders (pp. 421-
452). Routledge.
3.Dalgleish, T., Black, M., Johnston, D., & Bevan, A. (2020). Transdiagnostic
approaches to mental health problems: Current status and future directions.
Journal of consulting and clinical psychology, 88(3), 179.
4.Conway, C. R., George, M. S., & Sackeim, H. A. (2017). Toward an evidence-
based, operational definition of treatment-resistant depression: when enough
is
enough. JAMA psychiatry, 74(1), 9-10.
5.Northoff, G. (2016). How do resting state changes in depression translate into
psychopathological symptoms? From ‘Spatiotemporal correspondence’to
‘Spatiotemporal Psychopathology’. Current opinion in psychiatry, 29(1), 18-24.
6.Schottenbauer, M. A., Glass, C. R., Arnkoff, D. B., & Gray, S. H. (2008).
Contributions of psychodynamic approaches to treatment of PTSD and trauma: A
review of the empirical treatment and psychopathology literature. Psychiatry,
71(1), 13-34.
7.A Developmental Psychopathology Model of Childhood Traumatic Stress and
Intersection with Anxiety Disorders.
8. Padín, P. F., González-Rodríguez, R., Verde-Diego, C., & Vázquez-Pérez, R.
(2021). Social media and eating disorder psychopathology: A systematic review.
Cyberpsychology: Journal of Psychosocial Research on Cyberspace, 15(3).
9.Smith, K. E., Mason, T. B., & Lavender, J. M. (2018). Rumination and eating
disorder psychopathology: A meta-analysis. Clinical psychology review, 61, 9-
23.
10.Resmark, G., Herpertz, S., Herpertz-Dahlmann, B., & Zeeck, A. (2019).
Treatment of anorexia nervosa—new evidence-based guidelines. Journal of
clinical
medicine, 8(2), 153.
11.Hay, P. (2020). Current approach to eating disorders: a clinical update.
Internal medicine journal, 50(1), 24-29.