[UNF.p.172-5]

© Yoav Levy/Phototake

[UNF.p.175-5]

In hypochondriasis, normal experiences and sensations are often transformed into life-threatening illnesses.

Michael Newman/PhotoEdit

Figure 5.1 Integrative model of causes in hypochondriasis. (Based on Warwick & Salkovskis, 1990.)

[UNF.p.179-5]

In somatization disorder, primary relationships are often with medical caregivers; one's symptoms are one's identity.

Pete Saloutos/Corbis

[UNF.p.184-5]

The seizures and trances that may be symptomatic of conversion disorder are also common in some rural fundamentalist religious groups in the United States.

Donna Binder

[UNF.p.189-5]

In various cultures a child's head or face is manipulated to produce desirable features, as in the addition of rings to lengthen the neck of this Burmese girl.

© P. Senanunsakui/UNEP/Peter Arnold, Inc.

[UNF.p.190-5]

Michael Jackson as a child and as an adult. Many people alter their features through surgery. However, people with body dysmorphic disorder are seldom satisfied with the results.

Fotos International/Hulton Archive/Getty Images

Reuters/Corbis

[UNF.p.194-5]

Robert Clark awoke in a hospital in Yuma, Arizona, with no memory of how he got there. He had apparently arrived by bus from St. Petersburg, Florida. He carried only a little money and pictures that could be of his grandchildren. Despite his memory loss, Clark's cognitive functions were intact, and he had no organic impairment.

AP/Wide World Photos

[UNF.p.198-5]

Chris Sizemore's history of dissociative identity disorder was dramatized in The Three Faces of Eve.

AP/Wide World Photos

[UNF.p.200-5]

A person in a hypnotic trance is suggestible and may become absorbed in a particular experience.

© Jean Pierre Amet/Corbis

Durand 5-1