Skip to main content
Intended for healthcare professionals
Restricted access
Research article
First published March 2005

Dimensions of Folk Psychiatry

Abstract

This article presents a social-cognitive model of laypeople's thinking about mental disorder, dubbed “folk psychiatry.” The author proposes that there are 4 dimensions along which laypeople conceptualize mental disorders and that these dimensions have distinct cognitive underpinnings. Pathologizing represents the judgment that a form of behavior or experience is abnormal or deviant and reflects availability and simulation heuristics, internal attribution, and reification. Moralizing—the judgment that individuals are morally accountable for their abnormality—reflects a form of intentional explanation grounded in everyday folk psychology. Medicalizing represents the judgment that abnormality has a somatic basis and reflects an essentialist mode of thinking. Psychologizing—ascribing abnormality to psychological dysfunction—reflects an emergent form of mentalistic explanation that is neither essentialist nor intentional. Implications for psychiatric stigma and for cross-cultural variations in understandings of the psychiatric domain are discussed.

Get full access to this article

View all access and purchase options for this article.

References

Abelson R. P., Dasgupta N., Park J., & Banaji M. R. (1998). Perceptions of the collective other. Personality and Social Psychology Review, 2, 243–250.
Ahn W., Novick L. R., & Kim N. S. (2003). Understanding behavior makes it more normal. Psychonomic Bulletin & Review, 10, 746–752.
Allport G. (1954). The nature of prejudice. Reading, MA: Addison-Wesley.
American Psychiatric Association. (1994). Diagnostic and statistical manual of mental disorders (4th ed.). Washington, DC: Author.
Angermeyer M. C., & Matschinger H. (1996). The effect of personal experience with mental illness on the attitude toward individuals suffering from mental disorders. Social Psychiatry and Psychiatric Epidemiology, 31, 312–326.
Ausubel D. P. (1961). Personality disorder is disease. American Psychologist, 16, 69–74.
Blanton H., & Christie C. (2003). Deviance regulation: A theory of action and identity. Review of General Psychology, 7, 115–149.
Boyer P. (1993). Cognitive aspects of religious symbolism. Cambridge, England: Cambridge University Press.
Brewer M. B., & Harasty A. S. (1996). Seeing groups as entities: The role of perceiver motivation. In Sorrentino R. & Higgins E. T., Handbook of motivation and cognition: Vol. 3. The interpersonal context (pp. 345–370). New York: Guilford Press.
Campbell D. (1958). Common fate, similarity, and other indices of the status of aggregates of persons as social entities. Behavioral Science, 3, 14–25.
Canguilhem G. (1989). The normal and the pathological. New York: Zone Books.
Conrad P., & Schneider J. W. (1980). Deviance and medicalization: From badness to sickness. St. Louis, MO: Mosby.
D'Andrade R. (1995). The development of cognitive anthropology. Cambridge, England: Cambridge University Press.
Fábrega H. Jr. (1997). The evolution of sickness and healing. Berkeley: University of California Press.
Farina A., Fisher J. D., Getter H., & Fischer E. H. (1978). Some consequences of changing people's views regarding the nature of mental illness. Journal of Abnormal Psychology, 87, 272–279.
Gelman S. A., & Hirschfeld L. A. (1999). How biological is essentialism?. In Medin D. L. & Atran S., Folkbiology (pp. 403–446). Cambridge, MA: MIT Press.
Gil-White F. J. (2001). Are ethnic groups biological “species” to the human brain? Essentialism in our conception of some social categories. Current Anthropology, 42, 515–554.
Giosan C., Glovsky V., & Haslam N. (2001). The lay concept of “mental disorder”: A cross-cultural study. Transcultural Psychiatry, 38, 319–334.
Giummarra M. J., & Haslam N. (2003). The lay concept of childhood mental disorder. Child Psychiatry and Human Development, 35(3), 265–280.
Glovsky V., & Haslam N. (2003). Acculturation and changing concepts of mental disorder: Brazilians in the U.S.A. Transcultural Psychiatry, 40, 51–62.
Hamilton D. L., & Sherman S. J. (1996). Perceiving individuals and groups. Psychological Review, 103, 336–355.
Haslam N. (2000). Psychiatric categories as natural kinds: Essentialist thinking about mental disorders. Social Research, 67, 1031–1058.
Haslam N. (2002a). Essentialist thinking about depression: Evidence for polarized beliefs. Psychological Reports, 91, 1253–1254.
Haslam N. (2002b). Kinds of kinds: A conceptual taxonomy of psychiatric categories. Philosophy, Psychiatry, and Psychology, 9, 203–217.
Haslam N., & Ernst D. (2002). Essentialist beliefs about mental disorders. Journal of Social and Clinical Psychology, 21, 628–644.
Haslam N., & Giosan C. (2002). The lay concept of “mental disorder” among American undergraduates. Journal of Clinical Psychology, 58, 479–485.
Haslam N., Rothschild L., & Ernst D. (2000). Essentialist beliefs about social categories. British Journal of Social Psychology, 39, 113–127.
Haslam N., Rothschild L., & Ernst D. (2002). Are essentialist beliefs associated with prejudice? British Journal of Social Psychology, 41, 87–100.
Haslam N., Rothschild L., & Ernst D. (2004). Essentialism and entitativity: Structures of beliefs about the ontology of social categories. In Yzerbyt V., Judd C., & Corneille O., The psychology of group perception (pp. 61–78). Philadelphia: Psychology Press.
Hegarty P., & Pratto F. (2001). Sexual orientation beliefs: Their relationship to anti-gay attitudes and biological determinist arguments. Journal of Homosexuality, 41, 121–136.
Hirschfeld L. A. (1996). Race in the making: Cognition, culture, and the child's construction of human kinds. Cambridge, MA: MIT Press.
Horwitz A. (2002). Creating mental illness. Chicago: University of Chicago Press.
Jorm A. F. (2000). Mental health literacy: Public knowledge and beliefs about mental disorders. British Journal of Psychiatry, 177, 396–401.
Kahneman D., & Tversky A. (1982). The simulation heuristic. In Kahneman D., Slovic P., & Tversky A., Judgment under uncertainty: Heuristics and biases (pp. 201–208). Cambridge, England: Cambridge University Press.
Keil F. C., Levin D. T., Richman B. A., & Gutheil G. (1999). Mechanism and explanation in the development of biological thought: The case of disease. In Medin D. L. & Atran S., Folkbiology (pp. 285–319). Cambridge, MA: MIT Press.
Kelley H. H. (1967). Attribution theory in social psychology. In Levine D., Nebraska Symposium on Motivation (Vol. 15, pp. 192–238). Lincoln: University of Nebraska Press.
Kirmayer L. J., Fletcher C. M., & Boothroyd L. J. (1997). Inuit attitudes toward deviant behavior: A vignette study. Journal of Nervous and Mental Disease, 185, 78–86.
Kripke S. (1980). Naming and necessity. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press.
Kutchins H., & Kirk S. A. (1997). Making us crazy: DSM. The psychiatric bible and the creation of mental disorders. New York: Free Press.
Levi M., & Haslam N. (in press). Lay explanations of mental disorder: A test of the folk psychiatry model. Basic and Applied Social Psychology.
Levy S., Stroessner S. J., & Dweck C. S. (1998). Stereotype formation and endorsement: The role of implicit theories. Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, 74, 1421–1436.
Link B. G., Phelan J. C., Bresnahan M., Stueve A., & Pescosolido B. A. (1999). Public conceptions of mental illness: Labels, causes, dangerousness, and social distance. American Journal of Public Health, 89, 1328–1333.
Luhrmann T. M. (2000). Of two minds: The growing disorder in American psychiatry. New York: Alfred A. Knopf.
Malle B. F. (1999). How people explain behavior: A new theoretical framework. Personality and Social Psychology Review, 3, 23–48.
McHugh P. R., & Slavney P. R. (1998). The perspectives of psychiatry (2nd ed.). Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press.
Mehta S., & Farina A. (1997). Is being “sick” really better? Effect of the disease view of mental disorder on stigma. Journal of Social and Clinical Psychology, 16, 405–419.
Neuberg S. L., & Cottrell C. A. (2002). Intergroup emotions: A biocultural approach. In Mackie D. M. & Smith E. R., From prejudice to intergroup relations: Differentiated reactions to social groups (pp. 265–283). Philadelphia: Psychology Press.
Read J., & Harré N. (2001). The role of biological and genetic causal beliefs in the stigmatization of “mental patients.” Journal of Mental Health, 10, 223–235.
Robbins J. M., & Kirmayer L. J. (1991). Attributions of common somatic symptoms. Psychological Medicine, 21, 1029–1045.
Rosenberg C. (1997). Banishing risk: Continuity and change in the moral management of disease. In Brandt A. M. & Rozin P., Morality and health (pp. 35–51). New York: Routledge.
Rothbart M., & Taylor M. (1992). Category labels and social reality: Do we view social categories as natural kinds?. In Semin G. R. & Fiedler K., Language and social cognition (pp. 11–36). London: Sage.
Scheff T. J. (1999). Being mentally ill: A sociological theory (3rd ed.). New York: Aldine de Gruyter.
Star S. (1955, June). The public's ideas about mental illness. Paper presented at the annual meeting of the National Association for Mental Health, Indianapolis, IN.
Tversky A., & Kahneman D. (1973). Availability: A heuristic for judging frequency and probability. Cognitive Psychology, 5, 207–232.
Walker I., & Read J. (2002). The differential effectiveness of psycho-social and bio-genetic causal explanation in reducing negative attitudes towards “mental illness.” Psychiatry: Interpersonal and Biological Processes, 65, 313–325.
Weiner B., Perry R., & Magnusson J. (1988). An attributional analysis of reactions to stigmas. Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, 55, 738–748.
Yzerbyt V., Rogier A., & Fiske S. T. (1998). Group entitativity and social attribution: On translating situational constraints into stereotypes. Personality and Social Psychology Bulletin, 24, 1090–1104.
Zachar P. (2000). Psychiatric disorders are not natural kinds. Philosophy, Psychiatry, and Psychology, 7, 167–194.

Cite article

Cite article

Cite article

OR

Download to reference manager

If you have citation software installed, you can download article citation data to the citation manager of your choice

Share options

Share

Share this article

Share with email
EMAIL ARTICLE LINK
Share on social media

Share access to this article

Sharing links are not relevant where the article is open access and not available if you do not have a subscription.

For more information view the Sage Journals article sharing page.

Information, rights and permissions

Information

Published In

Article first published: March 2005
Issue published: March 2005

Rights and permissions

© 2005 The American Psychological Association Division 1 (Society for General Psychology).
Request permissions for this article.

Authors

Affiliations

Nick Haslam
Department of Psychology, University of Melbourne, Victoria, Australia

Notes

Nick Haslam, Department of Psychology, University of Melbourne, Parkville, Victoria 3010 Australia [email protected]

Metrics and citations

Metrics

Journals metrics

This article was published in Review of General Psychology.

VIEW ALL JOURNAL METRICS

Article usage*

Total views and downloads: 639

*Article usage tracking started in December 2016


Altmetric

See the impact this article is making through the number of times it’s been read, and the Altmetric Score.
Learn more about the Altmetric Scores



Articles citing this one

Receive email alerts when this article is cited

Web of Science: 0

Crossref: 67

  1. Causal beliefs about mental illness: A scoping review
    Go to citation Crossref Google Scholar
  2. The effect of universal school-based mindfulness on anhedonia and emot...
    Go to citation Crossref Google Scholar
  3. How Metaphor and Political Ideology Shape Lay Theories of Mental Disor...
    Go to citation Crossref Google Scholar
  4. Narratives of Externality, Oppression, and Agency: Perceptions of the ...
    Go to citation Crossref Google Scholar
  5. Ghost Feelings and Distortion: Redefining Dis-Order
    Go to citation Crossref Google Scholar
  6. Chinese international students’ conceptualizations of wellbeing: A pro...
    Go to citation Crossref Google Scholar
  7. ‘The Explanation You Have Been Looking For’: Neurobiology as Promise a...
    Go to citation Crossref Google Scholar
  8. Folk psychiatry. La psichiatria fra immagine scientifica e psichiatria...
    Go to citation Crossref Google Scholar
  9. Burdens in mental health recovery: Causal beliefs and their relation t...
    Go to citation Crossref Google ScholarPub Med
  10. Perceiving Social Pressure not to Feel Negative is Linked to a More Ne...
    Go to citation Crossref Google Scholar
  11. Strengthening University Student Wellbeing: Language and Perceptions o...
    Go to citation Crossref Google Scholar
  12. Progress or Pathology? Differential Diagnosis and Intervention Criteri...
    Go to citation Crossref Google Scholar
  13. Cultural models of normalcy and deviancy
    Go to citation Crossref Google Scholar
  14. Explaining Symptoms in Systemic Therapy. Does Triadic Thinking Come In...
    Go to citation Crossref Google Scholar
  15. An Auti-Sim Intervention: The Role of Pers...
    Go to citation Crossref Google Scholar
  16. Exploring stigma and its effect on access to mental health services in...
    Go to citation Crossref Google Scholar
  17. Worldviews and the construal of suffering from depression
    Go to citation Crossref Google Scholar
  18. The Role of Cultural Values in the Folk Psychiatry Explanatory Framewo...
    Go to citation Crossref Google Scholar
  19. Impact of Conventional Beliefs and Social Stigma on Attitude Towards A...
    Go to citation Crossref Google Scholar
  20. Medical Disease or Moral Defect? Stigma Attribution and Cultural Model...
    Go to citation Crossref Google Scholar
  21. Perceiving social pressure not to feel negative predicts depressive sy...
    Go to citation Crossref Google Scholar
  22. The muddle of medicalization: pathologizing or medicalizing?
    Go to citation Crossref Google Scholar
  23. Understanding Our Own Biology: The Relevance of Auto-Biological Attrib...
    Go to citation Crossref Google Scholar
  24. Common Sense Beliefs about the Central Self, Moral Character, and the ...
    Go to citation Crossref Google Scholar
  25. The Depression Schema: How Labels, Features, and Causal Explanations A...
    Go to citation Crossref Google Scholar
  26. Is Depression a Sin or a Disease? A Critique of Moralizing and Medical...
    Go to citation Crossref Google Scholar
  27. Biogenetic Explanations of Mental Disorder: The Mixed-Blessings Model
    Go to citation Crossref Google Scholar
  28. Stigma and Mental Illness: Developmental Issues and Future Prospects
    Go to citation Crossref Google Scholar
  29. Afflictions
    Go to citation Crossref Google Scholar
  30. Social judgments of behavioral versus substance-related addictions: A ...
    Go to citation Crossref Google Scholar
  31. Essentialism versus Nominalism
    Go to citation Crossref Google Scholar
  32. Stigmatization of People with Pedophilia: Two Comparative Surveys
    Go to citation Crossref Google Scholar
  33. Managing a stigmatized identity—evidence from a longitudinal analysis ...
    Go to citation Crossref Google Scholar
  34. Acting Up and Acting Out: Conduct Disorder and Competing Media Frames
    Go to citation Crossref Google Scholar
  35. Medicalizing versus psychologizing mental illness: what are the implic...
    Go to citation Crossref Google Scholar
  36. Stigmatization of People With Pedophilia: A Blind Spot in Stigma Resea...
    Go to citation Crossref Google Scholar
  37. Normative Influences on Secondary Disturbance: The Role of Social Expe...
    Go to citation Crossref Google Scholar
  38. Measurement of Stigmatization towards Adults with Attention Deficit Hy...
    Go to citation Crossref Google Scholar
  39. Do Clinical Psychologists Extend the Bereavement Exclusion for Major D...
    Go to citation Crossref Google Scholar
  40. Depression in China: Integrating Developmental Psychopathology and Cul...
    Go to citation Crossref Google Scholar
  41. Reliability of the Go/No Go Association Task
    Go to citation Crossref Google Scholar
  42. Mental Health Illiteracy? Perceiving Depression as a Disorder
    Go to citation Crossref Google Scholar
  43. Does Understanding Behavior Make It Seem Normal?
    Go to citation Crossref Google Scholar
  44. Eugenics, genetics, and mental illness stigma in Chinese Americans
    Go to citation Crossref Google Scholar
  45. Thinking about the foundations of psychiatry: an interview with philos...
    Go to citation Crossref Google Scholar
  46. Intuitive expectations and the detection of mental disorder: A cogniti...
    Go to citation Crossref Google Scholar
  47. Causal Attributions of Dementia Among Korean American Immigrants
    Go to citation Crossref Google Scholar
  48. How etiological explanations for depression impact perceptions of stig...
    Go to citation Crossref Google Scholar
  49. Mental Health Clinicians’ Beliefs About the Biological, Psychological,...
    Go to citation Crossref Google Scholar
  50. A Review of: “ The Mask of Shame: Stigma of Mental Illne...
    Go to citation Crossref Google Scholar
  51. Stigma in the workplace: Employer attitudes about people with HIV in B...
    Go to citation Crossref Google Scholar
  52. Public conceptions of schizophrenia in urban Brazil
    Go to citation Crossref Google Scholar
  53. Clients’ experiences of moments of sadness in psychotherapy: A grounde...
    Go to citation Crossref Google Scholar
  54. Human Natures: Psychological Essentialism in Thinking about Difference...
    Go to citation Crossref Google Scholar
  55. Stigma as Related to Mental Disorders
    Go to citation Crossref Google Scholar
  56. Beliefs about the cause, manifestation, and cure of schizophrenia: A c...
    Go to citation Crossref Google Scholar
  57. The Public's Ability to Recognize Alzheimer Disease and Their Beliefs ...
    Go to citation Crossref Google Scholar
  58. Improving the public's understanding and response to mental disorders
    Go to citation Crossref Google Scholar
  59. Why promoting biological ideology increases prejudice against people l...
    Go to citation Crossref Google Scholar
  60. Lay conceptions of mental disorder: The folk psychiatry model
    Go to citation Crossref Google Scholar
  61. Early life experiences and their impact on our understanding of depres...
    Go to citation Crossref Google Scholar
  62. A cross-cultural comparison of British and Chinese beliefs about the c...
    Go to citation Crossref Google Scholar
  63. Predictors of Attitudes Towards Treatments for Bulimia Nervosa
    Go to citation Crossref Google Scholar
  64. Prejudice and schizophrenia: a review of the ‘mental illness is an ill...
    Go to citation Crossref Google Scholar
  65. Structure of beliefs about the helpfulness of interventions for depres...
    Go to citation Crossref Google Scholar
  66. Lay Expectations of Mental Disorder: A Test of the Folk Psychiatry Mod...
    Go to citation Crossref Google Scholar
  67. The Lay Concept of Childhood Mental Disorder
    Go to citation Crossref Google Scholar

Figures and tables

Figures & Media

Tables

View Options

Get access

Access options

If you have access to journal content via a personal subscription, university, library, employer or society, select from the options below:


Alternatively, view purchase options below:

Purchase 24 hour online access to view and download content.

Access journal content via a DeepDyve subscription or find out more about this option.

View options

PDF/ePub

View PDF/ePub

Full Text

View Full Text