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Artificial States of Consciousness

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Artificial States of Consciousness Hypnosis Meditation Psychoactive Drugs – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Artificial States of Consciousness


1
Artificial States of Consciousness
  • Hypnosis
  • Meditation
  • Psychoactive Drugs

2
  • Hypnosis
  • ---Posthypnotic amnesia
  • ---Posthypnotic suggestions
  • Hypermnesia

3
  • 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
  • a relaxed state
  • Divided consciousness

4
  • Hypnosis is not a state of unconsciousness, nor
    is it complete mind control
  • Hypnosis is a heightened state of awareness and
    relaxation, combined with a large degree of
    openness to suggestion

5
Hypnotic Suggestibility
  • related to subjects openness to suggestion
  • ability to focus attention inwardly
  • ability to become imaginatively absorbed

6
Can you be hypnotized?
  • Imagine you are holding in your hand a lemon. A
    bright yellow lemon with shiny, puckered skin.
  • Bring it up to your nose and inhale the citrus
    smell.
  • Take your other hand and peel back a big piece of
    the skin to expose the white pith and the juicy
    fruit underneath.
  • Now bring the lemon up to your mouth and bite
    right down into it, sucking in all the juices.
  • Salivating? If you are Like most people, you
    probably started salivating once I asked you to
    imagine a lemon in your hand. You have just used
    the power of your mind to create a physical
    change in your body in about 15 seconds. 

7
Posthypnotic Amnesia
  • supposed inability to recall what one experienced
    during hypnosis
  • induced by the hypnotists suggestion

8
Posthypnotic Suggestion
  • suggestion to be carried out after the subject is
    no longer hypnotized
  • used by some clinicians to control undesired
    symptoms and behaviors

9
Hypermnesia
  • supposed enhancement of a persons memory for
    past events through a hypnotic suggestion

You Are Getting Sleepy
10
Can hypnosis enhance recall of forgotten events?
  • Age regression therapy (the ability to re-live
    childhood memories) is very limited in its
    effectiveness..
  • age regressed people may act as they think a a
    6-year old would, but most often they combine new
    memories and fantasy with what may have been
    reality

11
Can hypnosis force people to act against their
will?
  • Hypnotee is aware of everything the hypnotist
    says at all times while they are experiencing
    hypnosis.
  • Directly proposed hypnotic suggestions cannot
    make you do anything against your morals,
    religion, or self-preservation.
  • An authoritative person in a legitimate context
    can induce people, hypnotized or not, to perform
    some unlikely acts

12
Can hypnosis alleviate pain?
  • Dissociation is a split in consciousness, which
    allows some thoughts and behaviors to occur
    simultaneously with others
  • IE. An unhypnotized patient will feel the pain
    of an ice bath in less than 25 seconds. A
    hypnotized patient will feel the cold, but not
    the pain, though their sensory systems will
    register the activity is present

13
Help Through Hypnosis
  • Reduce pain
  • Reduce stress
  • Improve concentration and motivation
  • Modify behavior in eating disorders
  • Suppress the gag reflex (dentist)
  • Eliminate recurring nightmares
  • .much more!

14
Hypnosis in Action
  • Forgetting!
  • At the Dentist!

15
Meditation
  • Any one of a number of sustained concentration
    techniques that focus attention and heighten
    awareness

16
Two Forms of Meditation
  • All forms of meditation have the goal of
    controlling or retraining attention
  • Concentration Techniques
  • Mantra (focus)
  • Opening Up Techniques
  • Quiet awareness of the here and now

17
Drug-Altered Consciousness
  • Psychoactive Drugs- change moods and perceptions

18
Substance Abuse
  • Recurrent substance use that results in
    disruption of academic, social or occupational
    functioning or in legal or psychological problems

19
Physical Dependence
  • A condition in which a person has physically
    adapted to a drug so that he or she must take the
    drug regularly in order to avoid withdrawal
    symptoms

20
Tolerance
  • Increasing amounts of a physically addictive
    drug are needed to produce the original, desired
    effect

21
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22
Withdrawal Symptoms
  • Unpleasant physical reactions, combined with
    intense drug cravings
  • Occur when abstaining from a drug when physically
    dependent

23
Drug Rebound Effect
  • Withdrawal symptoms are opposite to the drugs
    action

24
Do I Have A Drug Problem?
  • Dependence is defined as exhibiting three of the
    following seven symptoms over a 12-month period
    of time

25
  • Developing tolerance
  • Experiencing withdrawal symptoms when attempting
    to stop
  • Using a substance for a longer period, or in
    greater quantities, than originally intended
  • Making repeated attempts to stop or cut-back on
    drug usage

26
  • Devoting a great deal of time attempting to
    obtain or use a substance
  • Giving up or reducing social, occupational, or
    recreational activities as a result of drug use
  • Continuing to use a substance even after negative
    physical or psychological effects have occurred,
    or will continue to occur with usage

27
Depressants
  • drugs that reduce
  • neural activity
  • slow body function
  • Alcohol- widely used, abuse common
  • Barbiturates- sedation meds
  • Tranquilizers - Valium

28
Pain Killers/Opiates
  • Mimics endorphines
  • Opiates- mostly illegal, produce euphoria alters
    the brains reaction to pain
  • Opium
  • Morphine
  • Heroin the most frequently abused opiate

29
  • Stimulants
  • drugs that excite neural activity
  • speed up body function
  • produce feelings of optimism and boundless
    energy, arouse behavior, and increase mental
    awareness stimulates the cerebral cortex

30
  • Stimulants
  • Caffeine- widely used, addictive
  • Nicotine- widely used, addictive
  • Amphetamines- euphoria/crash
  • Cocaine- coca bush

31
IE. Cocaine
  • Cocaine blocks the reuptake of dopamine
    (pleasure), norepinepherine (energy), and
    serotonin (arousal), so the feelings generated by
    those neurotransmitters intensifies as they
    linger in the synapse longer

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33
  • Psychedelics/Hallucinogens
  • psychedelic (mind-manifesting) drugs that distort
    perceptions and evoke sensory images in the
    absence of sensory input
  • LSD- psychotic state similarity
  • Marijuana- cannabis plant, THC similar to LSD
  • Mescaline
  • Peyote

34
Why is marijuana considered a hallucinogen?
  • It relaxes, disinhibits, and may cause a euphoric
    high like alcohol, but it may also amplify
    sensitivity to colors, sounds, tastes, and smells

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Click Brain for Mouse Party
40
  • Drug Type Pleasurable
    Effects Adverse Effects
  • Alcohol Depressant Initial high
    followed by Depression, memory loss, organ
  • relaxation and
    disinhibition damage, impaired reactions
  • Heroin Depressant Rush of euphoria,
    relief from Depressed physiology,

  • pain agonizing withdrawal
  • Caffeine Stimulant Increased
    alertness and Anxiety, restlessness, and

  • wakefulness insomnia in high doses
  • uncomfortable
    withdrawal
  • Metham- Stimulant Euphoria,
    alertness, energy Irritability,
    insomnia,
  • phetamine hypertension, seizures
  • Cocaine Stimulant Rush of
    euphoria, confidence, Cardiovascular stress,

  • energy suspiciousness,


  • depressive crash
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