4 th Edition Copyright 2004 Prentice Hall4-1 States of Consciousness Chapter 4.

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Copyright 2004 Prentice H all 4-1 4 th Edition States of Consciousness Chapter 4

Transcript of 4 th Edition Copyright 2004 Prentice Hall4-1 States of Consciousness Chapter 4.

Page 1: 4 th Edition Copyright 2004 Prentice Hall4-1 States of Consciousness Chapter 4.

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4th Edition

States of Consciousness

Chapter 4

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What Is Consciousness

• Consciousness is personal awareness of feelings, sensations, and thoughts.

• Changes from normal consciousness are known as altered states of consciousness.

• One common change in consciousness is daydreaming.

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The Rhythms of Life

• A number of biological processes follow regular rhythms or cycles that vary in length.

• The study of biological rhythms, chronobiology, includes research on the effects of such cycles on the diagnosis and treatment of diseases.

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The Rhythms of Life

• Circadian rhythms are biological changes that occur on a daily schedule, including the sleep-wake cycle and the body temperature cycle.

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The Rhythms of Life

• Circadian rhythms are controlled by the suprachiasmatic nucleus (SCN) which is located in the hypothalamus and acts as an internal clock.

• Levels of a hormone secreted by the pineal gland, melatonin, are affected by light and darkness; thus melatonin may play a role in controlling biological rhythms.

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The Rhythms of Life

• By isolating volunteers in an environment without time cues, researchers have found the free-running sleep-wake cycle extends to about 25 hours.

• To correspond to the 24-hour day, the cycle must be reset every day by external cues, especially sunlight.

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The Rhythms of Life

• Jet travel and shift work can disrupt the sleep-wake cycle.

• The symptoms of Jet leg result from the difference between our internal clock and the time in our environment.

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The Rhythms of Life

• It is easier to adapt to phase delays (east-west travel) than to phase advances (west-east travel).

• Rotating shifts can be improved by using a clockwise rotation (days to evenings to nights), which involves a series of phase delays.

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The Study of Sleep

• The major breakthrough in the study of sleep was the observation of rapid eye movements (REM).

• Measures of physiological processes such as the electroencephalograph (EEG) also aid sleep research.

• A sleep cycle lasts approximately 90 minutes and starts with non-REM (NREM) sleep.

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The Study of Sleep

• We descend through NREM Stages I to 4 and then ascend through them to rapid eye movement (REM) sleep.

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The Study of Sleep

• The average adult repeats this cycle about four to six times each night.

• Sleep decreases from about 16 hours at birth to about 7 to 8 hours in young adulthood, with little change thereafter.

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The Study of Sleep

• Observations of sleeping people suggest that many people are not getting enough sleep.

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The Study of Sleep

• Sleep efficiency (time in bed actually asleep) is lower among elderly people, who experience less slow-wave sleep and spend increased time in the lighter stages of sleep.

• Naps are more common than many people believe.

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The Study of Sleep

• Sleep-deprived persons experience microsleeps, which can cause poor performance on tasks requiring attention.

• REM sleep deprivation leads to the REM rebound, an increase in the amount of REM sleep.

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The Study of Sleep

• Infants spend about 50% of their sleep in REM, perhaps to provide stimulation needed for brain development.

• Sleep may have evolved to fill time, but the amount of sleep in each species depends on vulnerability to predators and the need to find food.

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The Study of Sleep

• Most cases of insomnia are of short duration.

• Sleeping pills have limited usefulness and should be used with care.

• The stimulus control method is an effective treatment for sleep onset insomnia.

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The Study of Sleep

• Hypersomnias are sleep disorders marked by excessive daytime sleepiness.

• Narcolepsy is characterized by daytime sleepiness, cataplexy, and other symptoms consistent with the intrusion of REM sleep into waking hours.

• Overweight, middle-aged men are susceptible to sleep apnea, which consists of frequent pauses in breathing during the night.

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The Study of Sleep

• Parasomnias are sleep disturbances other than insomnia and hypersomnias.

• Enuresis (bedwetting) is a common disorder in childhood that can be treated with the urine alarm.

• Sleepwalking and sleep terrors are associated with Stage 4 sleep, tend to occur in children, and usually disappear without treatment.

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The Study of Sleep

• REM sleep behavior disorder occurs in older men and consists of aggressive actions during REM sleep.

• Nightmares are bad dreams that occur during REM sleep.

• Sudden Infant death syndrome (SIDS) is the leading cause of death among infants between 1 month and 1 year of age.

• Placing infants to sleep on the back may reduce the incidence of SIDS.

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The Study of Sleep

• As typically defined, dreams are associated with REM sleep, although N REM sleep is not a mental void.

• Freud suggested that dreams serve to fulfill sexual and aggressive wishes and that we forget dreams due to repression.

• Analysis of the manifest content of a dream yields the dream's latent content, or supposed true meaning.

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The Study of Sleep

• Research has not supported Freud's views on dreams.

• For example, forgetting dreams seems better explained by waking activities that can interfere with recall of dreams than by repression.

• Dreams often reflect cultural characteristics such as a focus on relationships and levels of aggression in a culture.

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The Study of Sleep

• The activation-synthesis hypothesis suggests that dreams result from attempts by the brain to make sense of high levels of neuronal activity.

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Altering Consciousness With Drugs

• Psychoactive substances are drugs that affect consciousness, perception, mood, and behavior.

• Regular and excessive use can lead to substance abuse or substance dependence.

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Altering Consciousness With Drugs

• Alcohol use is associated with a range of medical and psychological consequences.

• One major effect is on parts of the brain responsible for inhibiting behavior.

• The effects of alcohol are related to blood alcohol concentration (BAC), an indication of the amount of alcohol in the blood.

• Your BAC is determined by how much you drink, the time you take to drink it, your weight, and whether you have consumed food before or while drinking.

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Altering Consciousness With Drugs

• Expectations about the effects of alcohol can influence drinking patterns.

• The relation of alcohol to violence, however, seems to be due to its biological effects, not to expectations.

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Altering Consciousness With Drugs

• The rate of alcohol abuse and dependence is higher in men than in women.

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Altering Consciousness With Drugs

• Like alcohol, barbiturates and benzodiazepines are depressants that slow the activity of the central nervous system.

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Altering Consciousness With Drugs

• Stimulants such as amphetamines speed up the activity of the nervous system.

• One of the most widely used stimulants is caffeine, which is found in foods such as chocolate and beverages such as coffee.

• Nicotine, a major component of tobacco smoke, is associated with preventable diseases such as heart disease.

• Cocaine can get to the brain quickly and cause a powerful high followed by a dramatic low.

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Altering Consciousness With Drugs

• Opiates, such as morphine and codeine, are derived from the seedpod of the poppy plant; their primary medical use is to reduce pain.

• Heroin is a semi-synthetic compound derived from morphine.

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Altering Consciousness With Drugs

• Hallucinogens can cause changes in perception, including hallucinations.

• Among the best-known hallucinogens are lysergic acid diethylamide (LSD) and phencyclidine piperidine (PCP).

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Altering Consciousness With Drugs

• Marijuana consists of dried leaves and flowers from the Cannabis sativa plant.

• The active psychoactive ingredient in marijuana is delta-9-tetrahydrocannabinol (THC).

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Altering Consciousness With Drugs

• MDMA or ecstasy is one of the designer drugs that is manufactured from readily available ingredients.

• There is growing evidence that MDMA can have dramatic effects on memory and attention.

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Hypnosis

• Hypnosis, a heightened state of suggestibility, can be traced to the 18th century, when Franz Anton Mesmer claimed he had the power to induce magnetic equilibrium in the bodies of his patients.

• In contrast to the popular view that hypnosis is an altered state of consciousness, evidence suggests it does not differ from a state of relaxation.

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Hypnosis

• Hypnosis has been used to reduce pain in various kinds of medical treatments.

• It is not clear, however, what aspect of hypnosis may be responsible for pain reduction; relaxation, distraction, and expectations seem to play significant roles.

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Hypnosis

• Hypnosis has been used to improve recall.

• However, hypnotically refreshed memories tend to contain distortions and false reports.

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Hypnosis

• In hypnotic age regression, a hypnotized person appears to return to childhood or perhaps even to past lives.

• Research indicates age regression results in the reporting of fantasies or memories suggested by the hypnotist.

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Hypnosis

• The cognitive-social explanation suggests that the observed phenomena can be explained by the relationship between the hypnotist and the hypnotized person, as well as by widely shared expectations about the procedure.

• Another explanation, offered by Ernest Hilgard, suggests that dissociation, or a splitting of consciousness, may be at work in hypnosis.