Myers PSYCHOLOGY 8th Edition in Modules - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 26
About This Presentation
Title:

Myers PSYCHOLOGY 8th Edition in Modules

Description:

Consciousness: dreams occur ... Night Terrors: Horrific dream images occurring during state IV sleep; followed ... Your friend insists that she rarely has dreams. ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:407
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 27
Provided by: drjulie
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: Myers PSYCHOLOGY 8th Edition in Modules


1
Myers PSYCHOLOGY (8th Edition in Modules)
  • Module 18
  • Waking and Sleeping Rhythms

2
Waking Consciousness
  • Consciousness
  • our awareness of ourselves and our environments

3
Waking Consciousness
  • Selective Attention
  • focusing of consciousness on a particular
    stimulus
  • as in the cocktail party effect (the ability to
    attend selectively to only one voice among many).
  • At the level of conscious awareness, whatever has
    your attention pretty much has your undivided
    attention.
  • Note the change blindness experiment on page
    205 most people did not notice when the person
    giving them directions changed to another person.

4
Sleep and Dreams
  • Biological Rhythms
  • periodic physiological fluctuations
  • Circadian Rhythm
  • the biological clock
  • regular bodily rhythms, such as of wakefulness
    and body temperature, that occur on a 24-hour
    cycle
  • Bright light helps reset our biological clocks

5
Sleep and Dreams
  • Measuring sleep activity

6
Brain Waves and Sleep Stages
  • Alpha Waves
  • slow waves of a relaxed, awake brain
  • Delta Waves
  • large, slow waves of deep sleep
  • Hallucinations
  • false sensory experiences

7
Sleep
  • Fully awake beta waves (small and fast)
  • Just before sleep/drowsiness alpha waves
    (slightly larger and slower)
  • Hypnagogic hallucinations vivid sensory
    phenomena that occur during the onset of sleep.
  • Slow wave sleep Stages 1-4 include slowing of
    body functions.

8
Stages of Sleep
  • Stage 1
  • Brain activity theta waves (even slower than
    alpha)
  • Duration a few minutes
  • Consciousness transition from wakefulness to
    sleep
  • You can quickly regain alertness from this stage
    and may have hypnagogic hallucinations.

9
Sleep Stages II
  • Stage 2
  • Brain activity theta waves (even slower than
    alpha) and sleep spindles brain activity
    continues to slow down considerably delta waves
    begin to emerge
  • Duration twenty or more minutes
  • Consciousness onset of true sleep
  • Breathing becomes rhythmical and slight muscle
    twitches may occur

10
Sleep Stages III
  • Stage 3
  • Brain activitymixture of theta and delta waves
    delta waves are 20-50 of brain wave activity
  • Duration twenty or more minutes
  • Consciousness Sleeper oblivious to the world
    slow-wave sleep
  • further slowing of all body functions

11
Sleep Stages IV
  • Stage IV
  • Brain activity 50-100 delta waves
  • Duration twenty or more minutes
  • Consciousness Sleeper oblivious to the world
    muscle movement still occurs this is the stage
    when sleepwalking will occur Can take more than
    15 minutes to return to normal consciousness
  • heart rate, blood pressure and breathing rate
    drop to their lowest levels

12
Carries EEG shows sleep spindles. Which stage
of sleep is she in?
  • A. stage 1
  • B. stage 2
  • C. stage 3
  • D. REM

13
REM Sleep
  • Brain activity fast, active brain waves
    accompanied by rapid eye movements visual and
    motor neurons in the brain fire repeatedly, just
    as they do during wakefulness
  • Duration five or more minutes
  • Consciousness dreams occur
  • Voluntary muscle movement suppressed though
    muscle twitches may occur heart rate, blood
    pressure, and breathing fluctuate considerably
  • Called paradoxical sleep, because although the
    brain waves look like stage 1 sleep, the body is
    more aroused during REM sleep than during stage 1
    sleep.

14
Patterns of Sleep
  • Throughout the night, the sleeper cycles between
    regular and REM sleep, in 70-120 minute cycles.
  • Stage 2 and REM periods increase in duration
    throughout the night, while stage 3 and 4
    shorten.
  • Over the course of the life span, individuals
    sleep less.
  • Infants sleep about 16 hours a day the average
    72 yr old sleeps about 6 hours.
  • Infants spend half their sleep time in REM
    adults spend less than 25.

15
Sleep Across the Lifespan
16
Stages in a Typical Nights Sleep
17
Stages in a Typical Nights Sleep
18
Sleep Disorders
  • Insomnia Trouble falling asleep or staying
    asleep
  • Narcolepsy Falling asleep in the midst of
    waking activities.
  • Sleep Apnea Stop breathing briefly but
    repeatedly during the night.
  • Sudden Infant Death Syndrome When a baby stops
    breathing and dies during sleep.
  • Nightmares
  • Night Terrors Horrific dream images occurring
    during state IV sleep followed by a rapid
    awakening and an intense feeling of fear. occur
    within 2 or 3 hours of falling asleep, usually
    during Stage 4
  • high arousal-- appearance of being terrified
  • seldom remembered

19
Those who complain of insomnia typically _______
how long it actually takes them to fall asleep
and ________ how long they actually slept.
  • A. underestimate overestimate
  • B. overestimate underestimate
  • C. underestimate underestimate
  • D. overestimate overestimate

20
Preventing SIDS
  • Put baby to sleep on his/her back
  • Do not allow anyone to smoke around your baby or
    in your babys home/surroundings.
  • Do not place ANY blankets, toys or pillows in
    babys crib/cradle until he/she is at least one
    year old.
  • Keep the temperature between 63 and 68 degrees.
    Make every effort to keep baby free from
    infection and treat illness immediately
  • Use a firm mattress. Do not use a hand-me-down
    mattress.
  • Get proper prenatal care and nutrition

21
Sleep Deprivation
  • Effects of Sleep Loss
  • fatigue
  • impaired concentration
  • depressed immune system
  • greater vulnerability to accidents

22
Sleep Deprivation
23
Dreams Freud
  • Dreams
  • sequence of images, emotions, and thoughts
    passing through a sleeping persons mind
  • hallucinatory imagery
  • discontinuities
  • incongruities
  • delusional acceptance of the content
  • difficulties remembering

24
Your friend insists that she rarely has dreams.
What is the most likely explanation for this
situation?
  • A. She probably has dreams every night, but
    only rarely remembers her dreams.
  • B. She probably uses barbiturates to help her
    sleep every night.
  • C. This is normal most people never dream.
  • D. She stays up too late at night and gets up
    too early in the morning.

25
Dreams Freud
  • Sigmund Freud--The Interpretation of Dreams
    (1900)
  • wish fulfillment
  • discharge otherwise unacceptable feelings
  • Manifest Content
  • remembered story line
  • Latent Content
  • underlying meaning

26
Dreams
  • As Information Processing
  • helps facilitate memories
  • As a Physiological Function
  • periodic brain stimulation
  • REM Rebound
  • REM sleep increases following REM sleep
    deprivation
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com