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Consciousness

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Consciousness & Altered States of Consciousness Consciousness Sleep Hypnosis Drugs – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Consciousness


1
Consciousness Altered States of Consciousness
  • Consciousness
  • Sleep
  • Hypnosis
  • Drugs

2
Definitions of Consciousness Allow Its Empirical
Study
  • Subjectivity and qualia
  • How do we know that your idea of red and my idea
    of red are the same idea?
  • Access to Information
  • We have access to some information in our minds
    (i.e., our consciousness), but we dont have
    access to other information in our minds (i.e.,
    our unconscious)
  • Unitary Experience
  • The outputs of our sensory systems are unified
    into a phenomenal experience that is continuous
    over time

3
Manipulating objects with the mind
  • Implant small electrodes in the frontal and
    parietal lobe of a monkey
  • Record electrical activity in those areas while
    the monkey is using a joystick to manipulate a
    robotic arm
  • Create an index for the robotic arm, such that
    certain patterns of brain activity indicate
    certain movements
  • Unplug the joystick and make movement of the
    robotic arm completely dependent on brain
    activity
  • Within days, the monkey was able to control the
    robotic arm with only its thoughts

4
Variations in conscious experience
  • Automatic vs. controlled processing
  • Typically, automatic processing is fast and is
    done without much conscious effort (e.g., driving
    on a dry highway without much traffic)
  • Typically, controlled processing is slower and is
    done with conscious effort (e.g., driving on a
    wet highway with a lot of traffic)
  • Comas vegetative to minimally conscious
  • Brain imaging can help determine the nature of
    the coma
  • Thalamic stimulation

5
The Corpus Callosum
  • Millions of myelinated axons connecting the
    brains hemispheres
  • Provides a pathway for communication between the
    hemispheres
  • If surgically severed for treatment of epilepsy,
    hemispheres cannot communicate directly

6
Visual Processing
  • Both eyes send information to both hemispheres
  • Right half of the visual field goes to the left
    hemisphere
  • Left half of the visual field goes to the right
    hemisphere

7
Sperrys Split-Brain Experiment
  • Split-brain subjects could not name objects shown
    only to the right hemisphere
  • If asked to select these objects with their left
    hand, they succeeded but they could not say why
  • The right side of the brain doesnt control speech

8
The interpreter
  • The left hemisphere likes to construct a world
    that makes sense.
  • It may even seek patterns that might not exist.

9
Unconscious Processing Influences Awareness
  • The case for unconscious influence
  • Subliminal perception (see next slide)
  • Freudian slips
  • Priming
  • The smart unconscious
  • Incubation effects
  • Verbal overshadowing
  • Blindsight
  • Global workspace model of consciousness

10
Subliminal Perception
  • Priming is quicker retrieval of words related to
    previous stimuli
  • Priming works even if previous words are
    presented subliminally
  • That is, the words are presented in such a way
    that the subject claims not to have perceived
    them.
  • This is more evidence for the influence
    unconscious processing on awareness.

11
Sleep and Dreams
  • Measuring Sleep
  • Stages of Sleep
  • Why Do We Sleep?
  • Dreams
  • Sleep Disturbances

12
Measuring Sleep
  • Electrodes measure
  • eye movements
  • EMG
  • Electromyogram
  • EEG
  • Electroencephalogram
  • A camera may also record body movements

13
Stages of Sleep
14
A Typical Nights Sleep
  • Typically 4-5 episodes of REM sleep per night
  • Later episodes are longer and farther apart
  • Most deep sleep (stages 3 4) occurs early

15
Sleep disorders
  • Insomnia
  • Pseudoinsomnia
  • Worrying
  • Cognitive-behavioral therapy can help
  • Sleep apnea
  • Narcolepsy
  • Sleepwalking (somnambulism)

16
Why do we sleep
  • Restoration
  • Sleep allows the body to repair itself.
  • Sleep deprivation
  • Microsleeps
  • Can cause problems with mood and cognitive
    performance
  • Circadian Rhythms
  • Keep animals quiet and inactive during the most
    dangerous part of the day (night for humans)
  • Consolidation
  • Neuronal connections that serve as the basis for
    new learning is strengthened during sleep.

17
Who Sleeps How Much?
18
Dreams
  • Recalling dreams is rare, but dreaming isnt
  • A normal person may dream 150,000 times in their
    lifetime
  • People report dreams 80 of the time during REM
    sleep, but less than 50 of the time during other
    stages
  • REM dreams are more bizarre non-REM dreams are
    often boring
  • People have less REM sleep with age
  • In newborns, 50 of sleep is REM
  • In the elderly, about 20 of sleep is REM

19
What Do We Dream About?
  • 64 of dreams associated with sadness, fear, or
    anger
  • Aggressive acts outnumbered friendly acts by 21
  • 18 of dreams were happy or exciting
  • 29 of dreams were in color

20
Dream Theories
  • Sigmund Freud believed that dreams expressed
    wishes, often disguised
  • Manifest Content
  • Conscious dream content that is remembered after
    awakening
  • Latent Content
  • The unconscious, uncensored meaning of a dream
  • Alan Hobson activation-synthesis theory
  • Random activation from the pons and the amygdala
    activate visual systems and memory systems and
    the mind attempts to interpret these random
    patterns

21
Sleep Disturbances
  • Insomnia
  • Inability to fall asleep, stay asleep, or get
    enough sleep to function during the day
  • Hypersomnia (Narcolepsy)
  • A type of irresistible, sudden attacks of
    drowsiness during the day
  • Parasomnia (Sleep disturbance)
  • Apnea Repeated cessation of breathing during
    sleep

22
Hypnosis
23
Hypnosis
  • Hypnotic induction
  • Attention-focusing procedures in which changes in
    a persons behavior or mental state are suggested
  • Hypnotic Susceptibility
  • The extent to which an individual is
    characteristically responsive to hypnosis
  • Posthypnotic suggestion
  • A suggestion made to a subject in hypnosis to be
    carried out after the induction session is over

24
Can Hypnosis Enhance Eyewitness Testimony?
  • Participants saw videotape of a staged bank
    robbery
  • Half were then hypnotized
  • Re-intervivew mentioned robber wore a mask
  • There was no mask
  • In highly hypnotizable subjects, 63 had false
    memories

25
The Hidden Observer
  • Subjects held a hand in ice water and reported
    pain
  • Hypnotized subjects reported lower pain
  • Hypnotized subjects reported a hidden observer
    that was aware of the pain

26
How Do Drugs Affect Consciousness?
  • People Useand AbuseMany Psychoactive Drugs
  • Alcohol Is the Most Widely Abused Drug
  • Addiction Has Psychological and Physical Aspects

27
People Useand AbuseMany Psychoactive Drugs
  • Marijuana
  • most widely used illegal drug
  • Stimulants
  • Cocaine and amphetamines (speed, meth, etc.)
  • improve mood
  • cause restlessness and disrupt sleep
  • MDMA (ecstasy)
  • similar effects as stimulants, with slight
    hallucinations
  • Opiates
  • Heroin, morphine, codeine
  • Highly addictive due to dual activation of
    dopamine and opiate receptors

28
Alcohol Is the Most Widely Abused Drug
  • Alcoholism is the third largest health problem,
    following heart disease and cancer
  • Currently 5 of all Americans are active
    alcoholics
  • Another 3 are addicted to other drugs
  • Lifetime prevalence is 10-20
  • Americans have a love/hate relationship with
    alcohol
  • On the one hand, moderate drinking is an accepted
    aspect of normal social interaction and may even
    be good for health.
  • On the other hand, alcohol is a major contributor
    to many of our societal problems, such as spousal
    abuse and other forms of violence.

29
Alcohol Is the Most Widely Abused Drug
  • Expectations
  • alcohol reduces anxiety
  • alcohol increases social skills, sexual pleasure,
    confidence, and power
  • Reality
  • large doses of alcohol result in negative moods
    and focus on problems and anxieties
  • Alcohol impairs motor processes, information
    processing, mood, sexual performance
  • Learned beliefs about intoxication influence
    behavior

30
Addiction Has Psychological and Physical Aspects
  • Addiction
  • a physiological state in which failing to ingest
    a substance leads to symptoms of withdrawal, a
    state characterized by anxiety, tension, and
    craving
  • Physical dependence
  • associated with tolerance, so that a person needs
    to consume more of the substance to achieve the
    same subjective effect
  • Psychological dependence
  • habitual and compulsive engagement despite the
    consequences
  • people can be psychologically dependent without
    showing tolerance or withdrawal
  • individuals can be psychologically dependent on
    behaviors like gambling, shopping, exercising, or
    internet use
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