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States of Consciousness

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Title: States of Consciousness


1
States of Consciousness
2
Sleep, Dreams, and Body Rhythms
3
Consciousness
  • Awareness of oneself and ones environment

4
Body Rhythms
5
Biological Rhythms
  • Periodic physiological fluctuations
  • Can affect physiological functioning
  • Fall into three main categories
  • Circadian Rhythms
  • Ultradian Rhythms
  • Infradian Rhythms

6
Circadian Rhythms
  • Biological rhythms that occur approximately every
    24 hours
  • Example Sleep-wake cycle

7
Ultradian Rhythms
  • Biological rhythms that occur more than once each
    day
  • Example Stages of sleep throughout the night

8
Infradian Rhythms
  • Biological rhythms that occur once a month or
    once a season
  • Example Womens menstrual cycle

9
Sleep and Sleep Deficit
10
Sleep Deprivation Effects
  • Decreases efficiency of immune system functioning
  • Safety and accident issues
  • Contributes to hypertension, impaired
    concentration, irritability, etc.

11
Sleep Deprivation(National Transportation Safety
Board, 1995)
12
Why We Sleep
13
Hypothalamus
  • Sleep control center in the brain
  • Monitors changes in light or dark in the
    environment
  • Changes levels of hormones in the body

14
Melatonin
  • A hormone that helps regulate daily biological
    rhythms
  • Linked to the sleep-wake cycle
  • Melatonin level increases during the night and
    decreases with exposure to morning light

15
Reasons for Sleep
  • Two primary reasons
  • Preservation keep us protected from the dangers
    of the night
  • Restoration recuperate from the wear and tear of
    the day

16
Sleep Stages, REM, and DreamingThe Stages of
Sleep
17
Electroencephalograph (EEG)
  • A machine that amplifies and records waves of
    electrical activity that sweep across the brains
    surface
  • Electrodes are placed on the persons scalp to
    measure the waves
  • Used as a means to measure the stages of sleep

18
EEG
19
Stage 1 Sleep
  • Breathing is slowed.
  • Brain waves become irregular.
  • It is easy to wake the person, who will insist
    they are not asleep.
  • Person will report they have dreamlike
    sensations, such as falling.

20
Stage 1
21
Stages of Sleep
22
Stage 1
23
Stage 2 Sleep
  • Brain wave cycle slows.
  • EEG spindles (small brain wave bursts) develop.
  • First time through stage 2 last about 20 minutes.

24
Stage 2
25
Stages 3 and 4 Sleep
  • Increase in delta waves (large and slow waves per
    second)
  • First time through stage 4 is about 30 minutes
    and is where one gets rejuvenated

26
Stage 3
27
Stage 4
28
Sleep Stages, REM, and DreamingREM Sleep
29
REM Sleep
  • Stages 1 - 4 considered N-REM (non-REM sleep)
  • Rapid eye movement (REM Sleep) as eyes move
    quickly back and forth
  • Most dreaming occurs in REM sleep

30
REM Sleep
31
Paradoxical Sleep
  • During REM sleep brain wave patterns are similar
    to when a person is awake
  • Pulse and breathing quickens.
  • REM sleep is sometimes called paradoxical sleep
    as ones physiology is close to that of being
    awake but the brainstem blocks all muscle movement

32
Typical Nights Sleep
33
Stage 4/REM Changes
34
Sleep Changes through Life
35
Sleep Stages, REM, and DreamingWhy Do We Dream?
36
Information-Processing Theory
  • Dreams serve an important memory- related
    function by sorting and sifting through the days
    experiences
  • Research suggests REM sleep helps memory storage.

37
Physiological Function Theory
  • Neural activity during REM sleep provides
    periodic stimulation of the brain.

38
Activation-Synthesis Theory
  • Dreams are the minds attempt to make sense of
    random neural firings in the brain as one sleeps.

39
Sleep Disorders and Sleep ProblemsInsomnia
40
Insomnia
  • Recurring problems falling asleep or staying
    asleep
  • Sleeping pills tend to inhibit or suppress REM
    sleep worsen the problem
  • Alcohol suppresses REM sleep also worsens the
    problem
  • Studies show most people overestimate how long it
    took them to get to sleep

41
Sleep Disorders and Sleep ProblemsSleep Apnea
42
Sleep Apnea
  • A sleep disorder characterized by temporary
    cessations of breathing during sleep and
    consequent momentary reawakenings.
  • Tend to be loud snorers
  • Continuous Positive Airway Pressure machine

43
Sleep Disorders and Sleep ProblemsNarcolepsy
44
Narcolepsy
  • A sleep disorder characterized by uncontrollable
    sleep attacks
  • Person goes directly into REM sleep
  • Nervous system getting aroused tends to trigger
    the sleep attack

45
Sleep Disorders and Sleep ProblemsOther Sleep
Problems
46
Somnambulism
  • Formal name for sleepwalking
  • Starts in the deep stages of N-REM sleep
  • Person can walk or talk but remembers nothing of
    the experience

47
Night Terrors
  • Sleep disorder characterized by high arousal and
    appearance of being terrified
  • Happens during stage 4 sleep mostly children
  • The children seldom remember the event.

48
Other Sleep Disorders
  • Bruxism teeth grinding
  • Enuresis bed wetting
  • Myoclonus sudden jerk of a body part occurring
    during stage 1 sleep
  • Everyone has occasional episodes of myoclonus

49
Hypnosis
50
What is Hypnosis?
51
Hypnosis
  • A social interaction in which one person (the
    hypnotist) makes suggestions about perceptions,
    feelings, thoughts, or behaviors, and another
    person (the subject) follows those suggestions

52
What is Hypnosis?Social Influence Theory
53
Social Influence Theory
  • Powerful social influences produce a state of
    hypnosis.
  • This theory notes that a persons physiological
    state does not change under hypnosis.
  • Social factors influence people to believe
    hypnosis will work.

54
What is Hypnosis?Divided Consciousness Theory
55
Divided Consciousness Theory
  • During hypnosis our consciousness splits so that
    one aspect of consciousness is not aware of the
    role that other parts are playing.
  • Promoted by Ernest Hilgard (1904-2001)

56
Hypnotic Techniques
57
Hypnotic Induction
  • The process by which a hypnotist creates a state
    of hypnosis in a subject
  • Usually done by voicing a series of suggestions
  • Voice is usually calm and of a rhythmic tone

58
Hypnotizability
  • Differences in the ability of people to become
    hypnotized
  • Varies from person to person
  • Varies from situation to situation

59
Hypnotizability
60
Hypnotic TechniquesHypnotic Suggestions
61
Limits to Hypnotic Suggestions
  • Suggestions usually involve sensations, thoughts,
    emotions, and a wide variety of behaviors.
  • Hypnosis does not cause behaviors.
  • Hypnosis can lead people to certain behaviors but
    so can ordinary suggestions.

62
Hypnotic TechniquesPosthypnotic Suggestions
63
Posthypnotic Suggestions
  • A suggestion, made during a hypnosis session,
    that the subject will carry out when no longer
    hypnotized
  • Technique can be used to encourage helpful
    behavior changes, such as stopping smoking or
    losing weight.

64
Hypnotic Amnesia
  • Inability to remember what happened during
    hypnosis because the hypnotist suggests that the
    subject will have no memory of that period of
    time

65
Applications of HypnosisHypnosis and Memory
66
Hypnosis and Memory
  • There are isolated cases of hypnosis helping
    recall.
  • Cannot be sure if the memory came back due to
    hypnosis
  • Cannot be sure if the memory is accurate or one
    that is created to please the hypnotist

67
Applications of HypnosisHypnosis and Pain
Control
68
Pain and Hypnosis
  • Hypnosis does work as a means to control pain.
  • Has a number of practical applications

69
Applications of HypnosisOther Hypnotic Claims
70
Placebo Effect
  • Improvement due only to the power of positive
    expectations
  • People think they will get better so they do

71
Feats of Strength
  • Many feats of strength done under hypnosis can be
    accomplished without hypnosis.

72
Feats of Strength
73
Age Regression
  • Under hypnosis, the supposed ability to remember
    earlier periods of time in ones life
  • Psychologists consider age regression
    demonstrations unreliable.

74
Drugs
75
Psychoactivity and Dependence
76
Psychoactive Drug
  • A chemical substance that alters perceptions,
    mood, or behavior
  • Three common psychoactive drugs
  • Caffeine
  • Alcohol
  • Nicotine
  • Induce an altered state of consciousness

77
Dependence
  • A state of physiological and/or psychological
    need to take more of a substance after continued
    use.
  • Withdrawal follows if the drug is discontinued

78
Withdrawal
  • The discomfort and distress that follow when a
    person who is dependent on a drug discontinues
    the use of the drug
  • Withdrawal symptoms are usually the reverse of
    the drugs effects.

79
Tolerance
  • Reduced responsiveness to a drug, prompting the
    user to increase the dosage to achieve effects
    previously obtained by lower doses of the drug

80
Tolerance
81
Drugs and Neurotransmission
82
Neurotransmission
  • The process whereby neurons communicate with each
    other
  • Neurotransmission, especially in the brain and
    spinal cord, helps explain the effects of
    psychoactive drugs.
  • Psychoactive drugs interfere with normal
    neurotransmission.

83
Neurotransmitters
  • Chemical messengers that cross synaptic gaps
    between neurons
  • When released by the sending neuron,
    neurotransmitters travel across the synapse and
    bind to receptor sites on the receiving neuron,
    setting up the next link in the chain of
    communication.

84
Synapse
  • The junction between the tip of the sending
    neuron and the receptor sites on the receiving
    neuron
  • Call the synaptic gap or cleft

85
Neural Activity
86
Neurotransmitters and the Synapse
87
Reuptake
  • Process where the unused neurotransmitter
    chemical is reabsorbed by the sending neuron

88
Reuptake
89
Psychoactive Drugs and Synapses
  • Psychoactive drugs affect synapses and
    neurotransmitters in three ways
  • Binding with receptors
  • Blocking receptor site
  • Blocking neurotransmitters reuptake

90
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91
Drug Classifications
92
Five Psychoactive Drug Categories
  • Five different categories we will study
  • Depressants
  • Opiates
  • Stimulants
  • Hallucinogens
  • Marijuana

93
Drug Classifications Depressants
94
Depressants
  • Drugs that reduce neural activity and slow body
    functioning
  • Includes alcohol and sedatives

95
Alcohol (ethyl alcohol)
  • Found in beer, wine, and liquor
  • The second most used psychoactive drug (caffeine
    first)
  • Slows thinking, and impairs physical activity

96
Blood Alcohol Content (BAC)
  • A measure of how much alcohol is in a persons
    bloodstream
  • BAC of .8 considered legal intoxication in most
    states

97
Euphoric Affects of Alcohol
  • Alcohol impairs the parts of the brain
    responsible for controlling inhibitions and
    making judgments

98
Alcohol, Memory, and Sleep
  • Studies have shown that alcohol impairs memory by
    suppressing the processing of events into long
    term memory.
  • Alcohol impairs REM sleep, further disrupting
    memory storage.

99
Sedatives
  • Drugs that reduce anxiety or induce sleep
  • Also called tranquilizers
  • Include barbiturates and benzodiazepines

100
Barbiturates
  • Drugs that depress the activity of the central
    nervous system and thereby reduce anxiety
  • Can be lethal in overdose and interact with other
    drugs, especially alcohol
  • Impair both memory and judgment
  • Can create tolerance and dependence

101
Benzodiazepines
  • Drugs that depress that activity of the central
    nervous system without most of the side effects
    associated with barbiturates
  • Include Valium and Xanax
  • Can create dependency

102
Drug Classifications Opiates
103
Opiates
  • Drugs that depress neural activity, temporarily
    lesson pain and anxiety
  • Include opium, morphine, and heroin

104
Morphine
  • Strong sedative and pain-relieving drug derived
    from opium
  • Works by preventing pain neurons from firing or
    releasing pain-signaling neurotransmitters into
    the synapse

105
Endorphins
  • Natural, opiate-like neurotransmitters linked to
    pain control and to pleasure
  • Bodys natural pain killers

106
Drug Classifications Stimulants
107
Stimulants
  • Drugs that excite neural activity and speed up
    body functions
  • Include caffeine, nicotine, amphetamines, and
    cocaine

108
Caffeine
  • Stimulant found in coffee, chocolate, tea, and
    some soft drinks
  • Provides user with a sense of increased energy,
    mental alertness, and forced wakefulness
  • Blocks neurological receptor sites that , if
    activated, sedate the central nervous system

109
Nicotine
  • Stimulant found in tobacco
  • Effects similar to those of caffeine
  • Very addictive and does not stay in the body very
    long

110
Cocaine
  • Stimulant derived from leaves of the coca plant
  • Crack cocaine crystals
  • Blocks the reuptake of certain neurotransmitters
  • Dependency is quick and severe places extreme
    strain on cardiovascular system

111
Amphetamines
  • Drugs that stimulate neural activity, speeding up
    body functions, with associated energy and mood
    changes
  • Includes speed, uppers, and methamphetamines
  • Mimic adrenaline
  • Can cause irreversible changes in mood

112
Drug Classifications Hallucinogens
113
Hallucinogens
  • Drugs that distort perceptions and evoke sensory
    images in the absence of sensory input
  • Include LSD and ecstasy
  • Sometimes called psychedelics

114
Lysergic Acid Diethylamide (LSD)
  • Powerful hallucinogenic drug
  • Also known as acid
  • The effects vary from person to person
  • Users can be dangerous to themselves and others.

115
Ecstasy
  • Hallucinogenic drug that produces lower
    inhibitions, pleasant feelings, and greater
    acceptance of others
  • Also called MDMA
  • Even moderate users may experience permanent
    brain damage.

116
Drug Classifications Marijuana
117
Marijuana
  • Leaves, stems, resin, and flowers form the hemp
    plant that, when smoked, lower inhibitions and
    produce feelings of relaxation and mild euphoria
  • THC (delta-9-tetrahydrocannabinol) is the active
    ingredient
  • Disrupts memory lung damage from smoke

118
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119
Prevention
120
High School Drug Use(Johnston others, 2002)
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