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PSYCHOLOGY

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The clock can be reset but only by appropriately timed cues only by 1 or 2 hours ... Death. Death. Death. Death. Is Sleep Important? YES! ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: PSYCHOLOGY


1
PSYCHOLOGY
  • FALL 2006
  • Mrs. Bailey

2
SLEEP
  • Sleep is a behavioral state that is a natural
    part of every individuals life.
  • We spent about 1/3 of our lives asleep - it is
    a required activity
  • It is not normal for people to feel sleepy at
    times when he or she expects to be awake

3
DIFFICULTIES
  • Concentrating
  • Memory lapses
  • Loss of energy
  • Learning
  • Fatigue
  • Lethargy
  • Emotional instability
  • Thinking

One large study found that in over 50 of fall
asleep crashes, the driver was 25 years old or
younger and are especially common among young
male drivers.
4
Asleep at the wheel.
  • APPROXIMATELY 100,000 AUTOMOBILE CRASHES EACH
    YEAR RESULT FROM SLEEPY DRIVERS
  • Drowsy Driving impairs
  • Reaction time
  • Vigilance
  • Ability to make sound judgments

Many adolescents are chronically sleep-deprived
and hence at high risk of drowsy-driving crashes.
5
Misconception 1
  • Sleep is time for the body in general and the
    brain specifically to shut down for rest.
    FALSE!
  • In REM sleep, many parts of the brain are as
    active when you are awake

6
Misconception 2
  • Getting just one hour less sleep per night than
    needed will not have any effect on daytime
    functioning. FALSE!
  • sleep debt accumulates across days
  • Powerful effects on daytime performance,
    thinking, and mood

7
Misconception 3
  • The body adjusts quickly to different sleep
    schedules. FALSE!
  • Biological clock times and controls a persons
    sleep/wake cycle
  • The clock can be reset but only by appropriately
    timed cues only by 1 or 2 hours

8
Biological clock is located in the
suprachiasmatic nucleus
9
Clock Problems
  • Monday morning blues
  • Changing your sleep patterns on the weekend
    messes up our internal clock
  • Seasonal affective disorders (SAD)
  • Loss of daylight some individuals develop
    symptoms similar to jet lag, but more severe
  • Shift work

10
Misconception 4
  • People need less sleep as they grow older.
    FALSE!
  • The need remains the same, but the ability to
    sleep for long periods of time and to get into
    the deep, restful stages of sleep decreases with
    age.
  • Easily disturbed by light, noise, medical
    conditions and pain

11
Misconception 5
  • A good nights sleep can cure problems with
    excessive daytime sleepiness. FALSE!
  • Disorders such as sleep apnea, insomnia, and
    narcolepsy, may require behavioral,
    pharmacological, or even surgical intervention.
  • Other medical conditions

12
Biology of Sleep
  • Sleep is a dynamic process.
  • Scientists study sleep by measuring the
    electrical changes n the brain
  • EEG
  • EOG
  • EMG
  • Recorded simultaneously patterns of the
    activities in these three systems provide the
    basis for classifying the different types of sleep

13
Figure 2. Placement of electrodes to determine
EEG, EOG, and EMG
14
Two Basic Stages of Sleep
  • Non-rapid eye movement or NREM
  • Contains 4 stages
  • Muscle activity is low
  • Bodys physiology is similar to the wake state
  • Rapid eye movement or REM
  • We are almost completely paralyzed in REM sleep
  • Heart, diaphragm, eye muscles, intestines, and
    blood vessels continue to function

15
Figure 3. Characteristic EEG, EOG, and EMG
patterns for wakefulness, REM sleep, and NREM
sleep. Each of the nine patterns was made over a
period of about three seconds.
16
Organ Systems Linked to Sleep Cycle
  • Endocrine system
  • Renal system kidney filtration
  • Alimentary activity

17
Sleep and the Brain
  • Hypothalamus is important for controlling NREM
    sleep and may be the region keeping track of
    awake hours and sleep debt
  • Pons critical for initiating REM sleep

Figure 5. Pathways of brain activity during REM
sleep.
18
  • Regions inactive include those that
  • regulate intelligence
  • conscious thought
  • higher-order reasoning

Figure 12. Areas of the brain active during REM
sleep dreaming.
19
Hypotheses related to sleep
  • Restoration and recovery of body systems
  • Energy conservation
  • Memory consolidation
  • Protection from predation
  • Brain development
  • Discharge of emotion

20
Mammals, birds, and reptiles need sleep although
there are variances in the following
  • Sleep patterns
  • Sleep habits
  • Sleep postures
  • Sleep places

21
Is Sleep Important?
  • If I am deprived of the outcome
    is

Breathing Drinking Eating Sleeping
Death Death Death Death
YES!
22
  • Facts, figures, and information taken from NIH
    Curriculum Sleep, Sleep Disorders, and
    Biological Rhythms Supplement Series for Grades
    9-12.
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