Title: Myers
1Myers PSYCHOLOGY (7th Ed)
- Chapter 7
- States of Consciousness
- James A. McCubbin, PhD
- Clemson University
- Worth Publishers
2Ch. 7 Consciousness Waking Consciousness
Consciousness our awareness of ourselves our
environments
- Focused concentration
- Novel (new) things require more focus
- 3 Levels of info processing
- Consciousness,
- Subconscious as see something, we also process
things we arent aware of (color, shape, etc.) - Unconscious Freud
3Freud (froid) Personality Structure
Superego, Ego, and the Id
- Freuds idea of the minds structure Iceberg
analogy - Conscious what we are aware of
- Preconscious (aka subconscious) just at or
below the surface - Unconscious below the surfacewhat we hide from
ourselves
Superego
4Freuds iceberg of personality
5- Daydreams/fantasies Secret Life of Walter
Mitty - We identify w/ this b/c we all daydream
- Daydreams can be adaptive can let out impulsive
behavior in fantasy rather than real life - Fantasies
- Young tend to have sex fantasies more men do
way more than women it is not frustration - Sleep Dreams
- Biological Rhythms ANY periodic physiological
fluctuations (ups downs)annual28 day24 hr.
90 min. --see PMS p. 270 - This keeps our biological clock .. one kind
is circadian rhythm -
6- Circadian Rhythm (around a day)
- regular bodily rhythms that occur on a 24-hour
cycle, like in wakefulness body temperature,
eliminating wastes, etc. - 2 major ways to disrupt cir. rhythm
- 1) shift work 2) long flights (jet
lag) - Entrainment trained to follow schedules do
things at certain times... - potty? baby sleeping thru night?
- Suprachiasmic nucleus (SCN) neural center of
the hypothalamus when light hits it, it alters
production of chemicals like melatonin (mfgr. by
pineal gland) - It affects our sleep patterns
7Premenstrual Syndrome Many do have this, but
many more seem to be perceiving it more than
actually showing itnotice it more at that time
3
Recalled mood is worse than earlier reported
Negative mood score
2
1
Premenstrual Menstrual Intermenstrual
Menstrual phase
Recalled mood
Actual
8Sleep and Dreams
- Sleep periodic, natural, reversible loss of
consciousness - REM (Rapid Eye Movement) Sleep a recurring
sleep stage vivid dreams, more frequent dreams - a.k.a. paradoxical sleep b/c muscles are
generally relaxed, but other body systems are
active - Although theres more eye movt., theres less
physical movt. b/c of paralysis
9Sleep Dreams HOW sleep is studied
- Measuring sleep activity
- Eye movt. (REM) EMG (neck/jaw muscle movt.)
EEG
10Brain Waves Sleep Stages
- Alpha ? Theta Waves
- slow waves of a relaxed, awake brain
- Sleep Spindles
- Delta Waves
- large, slow waves of deep sleep
- Hallucinations
- false sensory experiences
11Stages in a Typical Nights Sleep Stg. 4
(then 3) decreases, REM increases as night goes
on
12- Another view of the sleep cycle
13Why Do We Sleep?
- Variations in sleeping patterns
- Cultural influences
- Sleep debt
14Stages in a Typical Nights Sleep
15Sleep Deprivation (sleep debt or dep.)
- Effects of Sleep Loss
- fatigue
- impaired concentration
- depressed immune system
- greater vulnerability to accidents
- More susceptible to drugs effects
- Extreme loss can hallucinations later death
16Sleep DeprivationNote the values not the same,
but still statistically significant
17Why Do We Sleep?The Effects of Sleep Loss
18Why Do We Sleep?The Effects of Sleep Loss
19Sleep Disorders
- Insomnia (279 how to treat)
- persistent problems in falling or staying asleep
- Usually get more than you think you do, but those
who complain do get less - Narcolepsy
- uncontrollable sleep attacks
- Usually genetic causes (heritable)
- Usually lasts less than 5 min. often go
straight to REM sleep - Sleep Apnea
- temporary cessation of breathing
- momentary re-awakenings
- Causes overweigt, heart, respiratory alcohol
use can trigger/contribute,
20Night Terrors (Stg. 4) Nightmares (REM)
- Night Terrors
- occur within 2 or 3 hours of falling asleep,
usually during Stage 4 - high arousal-- appearance of being terrified
sweating, crying out, shaking, etc - often very unclear
- Sleep-walking (somnambulism) talking also
more likely in stg. 4 - Both usually go away as we get older
21- Dreams
- sequence of images, emotions, and thoughts
passing through a sleeping persons mind - hallucinatory imagery
- discontinuities
- incongruities
- delusional acceptance of the content
- difficulties remembering
- Nightmares usually in REM sleep, more defined
than night terrors ?stage 4
22Incubus succubus in medieval beliefs Stealing
a soul in the nighttime
23Dreams Freud
- Sigmund FreudFamous book
- The Interpretation of Dreams (1900)
- wish fulfillment
- discharge otherwise unacceptable feelings
- accesses the unconscious hopes desires
- Manifest Content
- remembered story line
- Latent Content
- underlying meaning
- Freud said most was erotic wishesEX guns ?
- Freud saw dreams as a gateway to the
unconscious, that part of ourselves we hide from
even us
24Dreams What We Dream
- Dreams
- Manifest content
- Latent content
25- New theories as to why we dream
- As Info Processing
- Helps facilitate memories sift, sort, fix
days experience into memory - Dreaming to rememberlearned task better if you
sleep - Students sleep bulimia (binges) Why is it
NOT an effective way to sleep? (Grades A B
students vs. C, D, F?) - Physiological functions random neural activity
happens, we try to organize it into some
story-lineto make sense of it... - -This is activation synthesis dreams are
brains interpretation of its own activity - --since limbic system is involved in sleep,
can get emotional sexual also
26Why Do We Sleep? Sleep Theories
- Sleep theories
- Sleep protects In prehistoric times, sleep
meant we would not be out at night-timeso we
survived - Sleep helps recuperation Restores repairs
brain tissues resting neurons repair unused
connections weaken - Memory storage Restores/rebuilds experiences of
the day into memoriesLEARNING! - Sleep and creative thinking Can sometimes solve
issues and/or problems have been working
onSleep on it - Sleep and growth pituitarys growth hormone
secreted during sleep
27DreamsWhy We Dream
- To satisfy our own wishes
- To file away memories
- To develop/preserve neural pathways
- To make sense of neural static
- To reflect cognitive development
- REM rebound
28Critical Considerations Does not address the
neuroscience of dreams.
29- REM Rebound trying to catch up
- -REM sleep increases following REM sleep
deprivation - -causes functions are deeply biological
- -Researchers agree we need REM sleep (which
animals have REM?) - -biological vs. psychological?
- -dreams the abstract?
30Sleep Across the Lifespan
31- Hypnosis
- A social interaction in which one person (the
hypnotist) suggests to another (the subject)
that certain perceptions, feelings, thoughts, or
behaviors will spontaneously occur - Un-hypnotized persons can also do this ? ?
32Facts and Falsehoods
- Can Anyone Experience Hypnosis?
- Postural sway
- Susceptibility
- Can Hypnosis Enhance Recall of Forgotten Events?
- Age regression
- Can Hypnosis Force People to Act Against Their
Will? - Can Hypnosis Be Therapeutic?
- Hypnotherapists
- Posthypnotic suggestion
- Can Hypnosis Alleviate Pain?
33Hypnosis
- Posthypnotic Amnesia supposed inability to
recall what one experienced during hypnosis - induced by the hypnotists suggestion
- Posthypnotic Suggestion
- suggestion to be carried out after the subject is
no longer hypnotized - Post-hypnosis amnesia?
- Used by some clinicians to control undesired
symptoms behaviorspain control
gate-control theory - Memory hypnosis? a suggestion, made during a
hypnosis session, to be carried out after the
subject is no longer hypnotized used by some
clinicians to help control undesired symptoms and
behaviors.
34What hypnosis is and what it is NOTWhat it CAN
help what it CANNOT help
- DOES works well w/ pain control AND
- DOES work well for some in controlling eating to
help w/ obesity - It will NOT lead ppl to act uncontrollably be
dangerously manipulated by others - Is NOT generally dangerous (Some ppl have
believed get there cannot get back) - NOT particularly good with controlling alcohol,
nicotine, other drug addictions - Does NOT increase accuracy of memory in fact
can lead ppl to accept false memories
35Major theories of Hypnosis
- First to study try to scientifically sort thru
hypnosis was Hilgard at Stanford Univer.
(1930s) - Hidden Observer Hilgards term describing a
hypnotized subjects awareness of experiences,
such as pain, that go unreported during hypnosis - Divided Consciousness Theory Dissociation of
consciousnesswe separate ourselves out.. - Think of day-dreaming in a classyou KNOW you are
in classbut you go somewhere else - Dissociation pain
- a split in consciousness
- This allows you to close out the pain
stop feeling it on one level - allows some thoughts behaviors to occur
simultaneously w/ others - Selective Attention pain? Remember this aspect?
36- Hypnosis Social Roles or Social expectations
- We respond as we think a hypnotized subject
would respond - Social Influence Theory Just like demon
possession D.I.D. instances, a strong
expectation of behavior CAN affect ppl
psychologically - (Think of the Zimbardo Stanford Prison
study) - Orne Evans (1965)
- control group instructed to pretend
- Un-hypnotized subjects performed same acts as the
hypnotized ones - Biopsychosocial Aspect of Hypnosis
- The social aspects (expected behaviors)--suggest
iveness of a social role.how we should act - Psychological aspects EX selective
attention - Biological aspects of pain (gate control
theory? Endorphins block pain sensation?)
37Explaining the Hypnotic State
- Hypnosis as Divided Consciousness
- Hilgard Hypnosis Dissociation
- Unified account of hypnosis
- Hypnosis as a Social Phenomenon
- Good hypnotic subjects
- Social
- influence
- theory
38Levels of Analysis for Hypnosis
39Explaining Hypnosis
40Psychoactive drugs
- A chemical substance that alters perceptions
mood
41Drugs and Consciousness
- Physical Dependence
- physiological need for a drug
- marked by unpleasant, physical withdrawal
symptoms - Psychological Dependence
- a psychological need to use a drug
- for example, to relieve negative emotions like
depression, anger, anxiety, etc.
42Dependence Addiction
- Tolerance
- diminishing effect with regular use
- So you need more to get the same effect as b4
- Withdrawal
- discomfort distress that follow discontinued
use - Can be physical or psychological
43Psychoactive Drugs (p. 301, t)
44Categories of Psychoactive Drugs
- Depressants
- drugs that reduce neural activity
- slow body functions
- alcohol, barbiturates (Valium, etc.), opiates
- alcohol is the single most abused drug in
western cultures - Stimulants
- drugs that excite neural activity
- speed up body functionsheart, breathing, etc.
- caffeine, nicotine, amphetamines, cocaine
- Hallucinogens
- psychedelic (mind-manifesting) drugs that distort
perceptions evoke sensory images in the absence
of sensory input (hallucinations)
45- Hallucinogens
- Psychedelic (mind-manifesting) drugs that
- distort perceptions
- evoke sensory images in the absence of sensory
input (hallucinations) - Marijuana A mildly hallucinogenic drug from the
cannabis plant - THC the major active ingredient in
marijuana triggers a variety of effects,
including mild hallucinations. - (tetrahydrocannabinol)
- LSD a powerful hallucinogenic drug also known
as acid (lysergic acid diethylamide) - Peyote a hallucinogenic plant, a cactus
sometimes used in religious ceremonies for
certain Native American culture groups
46Psychoactive Drugs Stimulants
- Stimulants
- Amphetamines
- Methamphetamine (speed)
- Crystal meth
- Caffeine
47Psychoactive Drugs
- Amphetamines
- drugs that stimulate neural activity, causing
speeded-up body functions and associated energy
and mood changes - Methamphetamine a powerfully addictive drug
that stimulates the central nervous system, with
sped-up body functions and associated energy and
mood changes - Over time, appears to reduce baseline dopamine
levels. - Barbiturates
- drugs that depress the activity of the central
nervous system, reducing anxiety but impairing
memory and judgmentaka tranquilizers - Opiates opium its derivatives (morphine and
heroin) - opiates depress neural activity, temporarily
lessening pain anxiety - Which neurotransmitter do they mimic? ( that
makes it an a___?___)
48Opiates
- Opium its derivatives (especially morphine
and heroin) - Opiates depress neural activity, temporarily
lessening pain anxiety (depressant) - Which neurotransmitter do they mimic? ( that
makes it an a___?___) - Newer and very addictive forms prescription
derivatives drugs like - Hydrocodone (Lorcet, Lortab, Norco, Vicodin),
- Codeine (only available in generic form)
- Fentanyl (Actiq, Duragesic, Fentora)
- Hydromorphone (Dilaudid, Exalgo)
- Meperidineused to treat schizophrenia
(Demerol) - Methadoneused to treat heroine addiction
(Dolophine, Methadose), - Morphineused by hospitals to eleviate major pain
like post-surgery (Avinza, Kadian, MS Contin,
Ora-Morph SR), - Oxycodone (OxyContin, Oxyfast, Percocet,
Roxicodone)
49Cocaine Euphoria Crash
50- Ecstasy MDMA, or X, or
- 3,4-Methylenedioxymethamphetamine,
- Produces a euphoric state without hallucinations.
- Not a substitute for anti-depressants, because of
its ability to lift the user's moodbut may have
more intense depression after taking it - mild hallucinogen releases dopamine
- You Can Die! Usually from heat stroke brought on
by extended periods of dancing without
replenishing body fluids. - Other dangers liver damage, irregular heartbeat,
decreased memory and learning abilitysome
research shows 1 use holes in brain, i.e.,
damage - mixing worse effects
51- LSD lysergic acid diethylamide, a.k.a. acid
- a powerful hallucinogenic drugeuphoria,
detachment, panic? - THC delta-9-tetrahydrocannabinol
- the major active ingredient in marijuana (most
abused illegal drug) teen use is up somewhat - triggers a variety of effects, including mild
hallucinations - May allow your body to become addicted faster to
coke or heroingate-way drug..
52Psychoactive DrugsStimulants - Cocaine
53Dependence Addiction Misconceptions About
Addiction
- Addiction physiological or psychological
dependence on a drug - Compulsive craving, despite adverse
consequences - Worldwide, over 90 million are addicted to
alcohol /or other drugs - Myths
- Addictive drugs quickly corrupt Not all ppl
have same tendency to become addicted - Addictions cannot be overcome voluntarily without
therapy If seen as a disease, some may feel
they cannot overcome it - some benefit greatly from therapy and/or
support groups, but some CAN - The concept of addiction applies to all
pleasure-seeking behaviors addicted to working
out? - Nah. But for some gambling playing even
video games .show dysfunctional resistance to
control
54Psychoactive Drugs Depressants - Alcohol
- Disinhibition An angry person becoming
aggressive big spenders may leave excessively
high tips.risky behaviors increase - Slowed neural processing Reaction time
- Memory disruption
- Expectancy effectswe allow ourselves to be
drunk - Reduced self-awareness self-control
- Alcohol Sex The Perfect Storm Men become
more sexually aggressive women more prone to
casual sex -
- Regarding SEVERAL of these aspects More than
50 of convicted rapists who were surveyed
admitted to using alcohol before committing the
rapes.
55Trends in Drug Use Some good news some
not so good(p. 302)
56Influences of Drug Use Perceived Marijuana Risk
Those who have used tend to see less
riskRationalization? p.303
- Biological Influences
- Psychological and Social-Cultural Influences
57Psychoactive Drugs
58Psychoactive DrugsHallucinogens
- Hallucinogens (psychedelics)
- LSD (lysergic acid diethylamide)
- Acid
- Near-death experience
- Marijuana
- THC
59Levels of Analysis for Drug Use
60Near-Death Experiences
- Near-Death Experience an altered state of
consciousness reported after a very close brush
with death - often similar to drug-induced hallucinations
- Dualism the presumption that mind and body are
two distinct entities that interact - Monism the presumption that mind body are
different aspects of the same thing
61- Writing assignment Why do we dream?
- p. 282-284 DISCUSS the following
- 1) Information processing theory
- 2) New studies memory
- 3) Benefits for learning
- 4) Dreams as a physiological function
- 5) Activation synthesis theory
- 6) What do ALL the researchers seem to agree on?
- 7) Biological vs. psychological?