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States of Consciousness Chapter 5

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Title: States of Consciousness Chapter 5


1
States ofConsciousnessChapter 5
2
Consciousness
  • Awareness or state which a person is awake
  • Could be to
  • Sensory awareness
  • Inner awareness
  • Sense of self that each person experiences

3
Selective Attention
  • Focusing on a particular stimulus
  • What you pay attention to

4
Levels of Consciousness
  • Preconscious level
  • Not in your awareness at the moment but able to
    recall them
  • Example what did you eat for lunch yesterday
  • Unconscious level (Subconscious)
  • Unavailable to awareness
  • Example Being mad at a parent but not really
    knowing why
  • Turns out that parent was not there for you when
    you were sick and you are still upset about it
  • Nonconscious level
  • Things that you will not be aware of
  • Example your finger nails growing (feeling them
    grow)
  • Example your pupils getting smaller

5
Altered States of Consciousness
  • Where a persons sense of self or sense of the
    world changes
  • Examples include
  • When you doze off and no longer conscious of what
    is going on around you
  • When you are asleep
  • If an individual is under the influence of drugs
  • During meditation, hypnosis, sensory deprivation
    or starvation

6
Sleep Dreams
  • Circadian rhythms are
  • Your natural biological rhythms
  • Your natural 24 hour clock
  • Circadian rhythms include
  • body temperature, blood pressure, sleepiness and
    wakefulness

7
Sleep Stages
  • Measuring sleep About every 90 minutes, we pass
    through a cycle of five distinct sleep stages.

Hank Morgan/ Rainbow
8
Awake Alert
During strong mental engagement, the brain
exhibits low amplitude and fast, irregular beta
waves (15-30 cps). An awake person involved in a
conversation shows beta activity.
Beta Waves
9
Stage 1
Click to see an awake brain.
Click dude for alpha Waves.
  • Lightest stage of sleep
  • Kind of awake and kind of asleep
  • Alpha waves
  • Produces mild hallucinations, like a feeling of
    falling or floating.

10
Stage 2
  • Fully asleep
  • Begin to show sleep spindlesshort bursts of
    rapid brain waves.

11
Stage 3 Stage 4
  • Slow wave sleep
  • Deep sleep
  • You produce Delta waves.
  • If awoken you will be very groggy.
  • Vital for restoring bodys growth hormones and
    good overall health.

12
REM Sleep
  • Dream sleep
  • Often called paradoxical sleep.
  • Brain is very active.
  • Body is essentially paralyzed.

13
Stages of Sleep
  • Stage 1
  • lightest stage of sleep
  • Stage 2
  • We spend the most time in stage 2 sleep
  • Stage 3
  • Deep sleep
  • Stage 4
  • Deep Sleep (Deepest stage of sleep)
  • REM sleep
  • Dream sleep

14
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15
Why do we sleep?
We spend one-third of our lives sleeping. We
sleep to help the immune system, to help our
bodies function normally, and to help with
concentration
Jose Luis Pelaez, Inc./ Corbis
16
Sleep Deprivation
  1. Fatigue and subsequent death.
  2. Impaired concentration.
  3. Emotional irritability.
  4. Depressed immune system.
  5. Greater vulnerability.

17
Sleep Theories
  1. Sleep Protects Sleeping in the darkness when
    predators loomed about kept our ancestors out of
    harms way.
  2. Sleep Recuperates Sleep helps restore and repair
    brain tissue.
  3. Sleep Helps Remembering Sleep restores and
    rebuilds our fading memories.
  4. Sleep and Growth During sleep, the pituitary
    gland releases growth hormone. Older people
    release less of this hormone and sleep less.

18
Dreams
19
Freuds Theory of Dreams
  • Dreams are a roadway into our unconscious.
  • Manifest Content (storyline)
  • Latent Content (underlying meaning)

20
Activation-Synthesis Theory
  • Our Cerebral Cortex is trying to interpret random
    electrical activity we have while sleeping.
  • That is why dreams sometimes make no sense.
  • Biological Theory.

21
Information-Processing Theory
  • Dreams are a way to deal with the stresses of
    everyday life.
  • We tend to dream more when we are more stressed.

22
  • Physiological Function theory Dreams provide the
    sleeping brain with periodic stimulation to
    develop and preserve neural pathways. Neural
    networks of newborns are quickly developing
    therefore, they need more sleep.

23
  1. Cognitive Development theory Some researchers
    argue that we dream as a part of brain maturation
    and cognitive development.

All dream researchers believe we need REM sleep.
When deprived of REM sleep and then allowed to
sleep, we show increased REM sleep called REM
Rebound.
24
Dream Theories
Summary
25
Sleep Disorders
26
Insomnia
  • Persistent problems falling asleep
  • Inability to fall asleep or stay asleep

27
Night Terrors
  • Wake up with from a deep sleep.
  • May feel panic
  • May wake up screaming and have no idea why.
  • Not a nightmare.

28
Somnambulism
  • Sleep Walking
  • Most often occurs during the first few hours of
    sleeping and in stage 4 (deep sleep).
  • If you have had night terrors, you are more
    likely to sleep walk when older.

29
Sleep Apnea
  • A person stops breathing during their sleep.
  • Wake up momentarily, gasps for air, then falls
    back asleep.
  • Very common, especially in heavy males.
  • Can be fatal.

30
Narcolepsy
  • Suffer from sleeplessness and may fall asleep at
    unpredictable or inappropriate times.
  • Directly into REM sleep
  • Video
  • Narcoleptic dog

31
Meditation
  • A method some people use to try to narrow their
    consciousness so to get rid of stress

32
Biofeedback
  • Training the body to calm itself down and slow
    down the heart rate using machines

33
Hypnosis
34
Hypnosis
  • Altered state of consciousness where people
    respond to suggestions and behave as though they
    are in a trance

Franz Anton Mesmer
35
  • Posthypnotic suggestion

36
Hypnotic Feats
  • Strength, stamina, and perceptual and memory
    abilities similarly affect those who are
    hypnotized

37
Hypnotic Theories
  • Social influence/Role Theory
  • Divided consciousness/ State Theory
  • Hypnosis is NOT an altered state of
    consciousness.
  • Different people have various state of hypnotic
    suggestibility.
  • A social phenomenon where people want to believe.
  • Work better on people with richer fantasy lives.
  • Hypnosis is an altered state of consciousness.
  • Dramatic health benefits
  • It works for pain best.

38
Facts and Falsehood
  • Those who practice hypnosis agree that its power
    resides in the subjects openness to suggestion.

Can anyone experience hypnosis?
Yes, to some extent.
Can hypnosis enhance recall of forgotten events?
No.
39
Facts and Falsehood
No.
Can hypnosis force people to act against their
will?
Can hypnosis be therapeutic?
Yes.
Yes.
Can hypnosis alleviate pain?
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