Title: Unit 4: Sensation, Perception and States of Consciousness
1Unit 4 Sensation, Perception and States of
Consciousness
- Essential Task 4-7 Describe various states of
consciousness and their impact on behavior.
2(No Transcript)
3Circadian Rhythm
Stages/REM
Disorders
Hidden Observer
Actor
Sleep
Hypnosis
Dreams
Meditation
We are here
Waking Consciousness
Daydreaming and Fantasy
Altered States of Consciousness
Drug-Altered Consciousness
Substance Abuse
Depressants
Stimulants
Hallucinogens
4Essential Task 4-7
Outline
- Consciousness
- Waking Consciousness
- Theories of Consciousness
- Evolutionary Explanation
- Tripartite Theory
- Stream of Consciousness
- Chord of subconscious brain events
- Subconscious Processing
- Altered States of Consciousness
- Meditation
- Sleep
- Dreams
- Hypnosis
- Daydreaming / Fantasy
5Consciousness
- Waking consciousness
- Our awareness of ourselves and our environment
- Thoughts, feelings, and perceptions that occur
when we are awake and alert - Allows us to reflect and plan
- Altered States of Consciousness
- A mental state that differs noticeably from
normal waking consciousness
6Subconscious processing
- Well-learned tasks become automatic
- Driving
- Typing
- When you meet people you unconsciously react to
their gender, age and appearance - Subconscious processing
- Bird (color, form, movement, distance)
- Unconscious processing is parallel while
conscious is linear but good at novel problems
7Forms of Altered-Consciousness
Sleep
8History of Consciousness
- Psychology began as a science of consciousness.
(Titchner and Structuralism) - Behaviorists argued about alienating
consciousness from psychology. - However, after 1960, mental concepts
(consciousness) started reentering psychology.
9What is waking consciousness?
- Picture this It is a beautiful spring day and
you are walking down a country lane, absorbed in
thought. Birds are chirping, roses are in bloom
and the sun feels warm on your face. Suddenly,
you hear a dog bark and you switch your attention
to seeing if the animal means to bite. - Adapted from How the Brain Might Work A New
Theory of Consciousness By SANDRA BLAKESLEE
10How do you read how does the brain - bind these
fragmented sensory signals and perceptions into a
single coherent image? I am at the park about
to get eaten by Cujo.
What is waking consciousness?
11Evolutionary Reason for Consciousness
- Consciousness as an adaptation allowing us to get
along with others in our group (humans) - Allows us to see ourselves and therefore
moderate our behavior.
12Tripartite Theory - Freud
13The Stream of Consciousness
- Consciousness results from the activity of the
thalamus which analyzes and interprets
information in the cerebral cortex. - sweeping or scanning total a rate of 40 times
per second - Each sweep results in a single image or moment
of consciousness - Intralaminar nucleus, a kind of doughnut of cells
within the thalamus, has nerve cells that send
out long axons that reach to every part of the
cerebral cortex. Significantly, there are also
returning axons that come down from all areas of
the cortex back to the intralaminar nucleus.
14Consciousness as a Chord of Subconscious brain
events.
- Neuroscientists believe that consciousness
emerges from the interaction of individual
subconscious brain events much like a chord that
is created from different musical notes. - Move wrist - 0.2 seconds prior to moving your
wrist, you must decide to move the wrist since it
takes that long to travel to the wrist. - But it isnt until 0.35 seconds after that your
brain waves jump - If told to hit a button after a tone you can
respond in 1/10th of a second, but wont show the
jump in brain waves until .35 seconds. - You live in the past but only by a bit
15Daydreaming and Fantasy
- Spontaneous shifts attention away from the here
and now into a make-believe world - Urge to daydream peaks about every 90 minutes and
is highest between 1200 and 200pm - Almost half of your waking hours?
- Daydreams may provide stress relief and encourage
creativity